News about Davy Crockett
America's 'most disappointing' tourist attraction is getting a $550M makeover - but it's sparked FURY among locals as huge history project pushes out beloved businesses
www.dailymail.co.uk,
April 21, 2024
Texas' beloved Alamo is getting a $504 million expansion as work has started to return the Alamo to what it looked like during in 1836 and the Texas Revolution. But the famous battlefield's new iteration has created new fights, where businesses were bought out so that the buildings they were in could be torn down to make way for tourists.
Thousands of migrants pour in as extraordinary stand-off erupts between Federal Border Patrol and local forces who don't trust Biden's White House to keep out the masses: TOM LEONARD sees troubling echoes of the American Civil War in small-town Texas
www.dailymail.co.uk,
January 29, 2024
A group of National Guardsmen in full combat gear stands menacingly next to a gate built with a 20ft-high reinforced steel fence, surrounded by Humvee armoured cars and state police. It's not surprising to see the endless strife along America's southern border just a few hundred yards away, but it's not an unexpected sight in this rough-and-ready border town. However, these troops are not fighting Mexico. Rather, they're back in Texan town of Eagle Pass - and the United States as a whole. This particular display of military strength isn't meant to give the hordes of asylum seekers pouring into the country week after week. Rather, it would be to discourage the Biden administration's federal law enforcement agents from coming anywhere near.
PETER HITCHENS: If masks are pointless, will I get an apology?
www.dailymail.co.uk,
February 18, 2023
PETER HITCHENS: The study has been published. If you're a bank robber trying to mask his identifier, wearing bits of cloth over your mouth and nose is almost certainly pointless. A Cochrane Review, one of the most reliable and comprehensive forms of scientific research, has a report. It was discovered that wearing masks in the community makes no difference to influenza-like or Covid-19-like disease transmission.
Fess Parker, a Disney's Davy Crockett actor, was born in Palm Springs and has a $2 million home
www.dailymail.co.uk,
January 24, 2023
Fancy owning a slice of Disney history? Well, if you have a $2 million budget, you might have a chance to purchase a two-bedroom home that was once owned by actor Fess Parker. In several Disney productions in the 1950s, the late Texan found fame in playing Davy Crockett. He is best known for his hat, which he donated to the National Museum of American History. The property is located on a half-acre site in Palm Springs' historic Indian Canyons neighborhood, and it has a slick minimalist style with floor-to-ceiling windows and large open-plan rooms.
West Point defends controversial KKK plaque that 'documented tragedy and triumph'
www.dailymail.co.uk,
September 1, 2022
The plaque depicting a Ku Klux Klan member (left) was ordered to be demolished by the Naming Commission, which was an arm of the Department of Defense that is charged with reviewing and upgrading military assets that honor Confederate figures. Although the plaque's fate is uncertain because the Naming Commission has no information regarding non-Confederate figures and the US Army has declined to say whether or not they'll follow the order, West Point defended the monument. The plaque, according to a prestigious academy, is only a small part of a larger bronze mural (right) depicting both the good and evil of American history. Laura Gardin Fraser (inset), an American sculptor who was hired to design the panels and wanted to create art that represented the principal events of that time, thereby capturing both tragedy and triumph in our nation's history.'
At West Point, black troops view the KKK plaque, which says it's okay to keep up
www.dailymail.co.uk,
September 1, 2022
The engraving at the prestigious military academy, which is located in Upstate New York, 50 miles north of New York City, is part of a massive mural depicting various aspects of US history on one of the country's oldest campus buildings. The sprawling display, which was carved into three bronze plaques that adorned the structure's entrance, features a variety of images associated with Americana, including photographs of Civil War-era plantations and the Founding Fathers. The installation, which was more than a half-century old, was one of hundreds of structures flagged in a report issued by the Congressional Naming Commission on Monday, which was a task force established by Congress last year to send suggestions to the Department of Defense (DOD) on renaming US military installations associated with the rebel army. The paper was primarily devoted to Confederate markers at both West Point and the US Naval Academy in Maryland, and officials quoted over a dozen buildings between both bases, most of which depict Confederate figures such as Robert E. Lee. However, the commission has decided that it would not request the removal of the KKK decoration, which decorates the entrance of the Bartlett Hall Science Center, just months after the Civil War, and therefore falls outside of its jurisdiction. Rather, the commission has simply recommended that it be taken down. The sentiment has since sparked outrage around the world, with Americans pointing out the absurdity of a group that can freely nix names connected to their nation's history but not have the authority to remove an explicitly racist artifact. Despite being built in 1937, DailyMail.com shows the other aspects of the plaque, which also includes non-racist photos of important abolitionists and historical female figures, such as Clara Barton and Susan B. Anthony.