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  1. Mar 26, 2010 · The couple’s daughter, Angelina Elizabeth, was born in December 1834. Did you know? General Santa Anna interviewed Susannah Dickinson personally, and reportedly offered to adopt her daughter...

  2. Susanna Wilkerson Dickinson (c. 1814 – October 7, 1883) and her infant daughter, Angelina, were among the few American survivors of the 1836 Battle of the Alamo during the Texas Revolution. Her husband, Almaron Dickinson, and 185 other Texian defenders were killed by the Mexican Army.

  3. Dickinson is best known as the artillery officer of the small garrison, and the husband of one of the few non-Mexican survivors to live through the battle, Susanna Dickinson, as well as the father to their infant daughter Angelina, whose life was also spared.

  4. Jun 12, 2024 · Yes, Susanna had one child, Angelina Dickinson, who was with her during the siege at the Alamo. Angelina was often called the "Babe of the Alamo." Susanna went on to have more children with her subsequent husbands after the battle.

  5. On May 24, 1829, Susanna married Almaron Dickinson in Bolivar, Tennessee. The couple migrated to Texas in 1830, arriving in Gonzales on February 20, 1831. The couple’s only child, Angelina Elizabeth Dickinson, was born in Gonzales on December 14, 1834. Almaron was one of the “Old Gonzales Eighteen,” the small group of Gonzales citizens ...

  6. Oct 31, 2015 · On a cold March dawn in 1836, Mexican officers escorted a shaken young woman and her infant daughter past the heaps of dead in the Alamo courtyard to Mexican General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna....

  7. Dec 1, 1994 · Dickinson, Angelina Elizabeth (1834–1869). Angelina Dickinson, called the Babe of the Alamo, daughter of Almeron and Susanna (Wilkerson) Dickinson (also spelled Dickerson), was born on December 14, 1834, in Gonzales, Texas. By early 1836 her family had moved to San Antonio.

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