A plaque remaining from the Big Apple Night Club at West 135th Street and Seventh Avenue in Harlem.

Above, a 1934 plaque from the Big Apple Night Club at West 135th Street and Seventh Avenue in Harlem. Discarded as trash in 2006. Now a Popeyes fast food restaurant on Google Maps.

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Entry from December 29, 2006
“Who will join old Ben Milam in storming the Alamo?”

“Who will join old Ben Milam in storming the Alamo?” (usually quoted as “Who will go with old Ben Milam into San Antonio?”) was the appeal of Texas soldier Benjamin Rush Milam in December 1835 for the Battle of Bexar. Milam died in the battle, but Texans took control San Antonio (until the battle of the Alamo in March 1836).
 
Ben Milam was born in Frankfort, Kentucky, and later went to New Orleans. He fought for Mexican independence from Spain, and then he helped to capture Goliad for Texas in October 1835.
 
An 1897 marker with his famous words was placed at his grave in Milam Park in San Antonio.
 
 
Handbook of Texas Online
MILAM, BENJAMIN RUSH (1788-1835). Ben Milam, soldier, colonizer, and entrepreneur, was born in Frankfort, Kentucky, on October 20, 1788, the fifth of the six children of Moses and Elizabeth Pattie (Boyd) Milam. He had little or no formal schooling. He enlisted in the Kentucky militia and fought for several months in the War of 1812. When his period of enlistment was completed he returned to Frankfort. In 1818 he was in Texas trading with the Comanche Indians on the Colorado River when he met David G. Burnet. The two became friends. In New Orleans in 1819 Milam met José Félix Trespalacios and James Long, who were planning an expedition to help the revolutionaries in Mexico and Texas gain independence from Spain. Milam joined Trespalacios and was commissioned a colonel. While they sailed to Veracruz, Long marched to La Bahía, which he easily captured, only to discover that the people and soldiers there were revolutionaries, not Royalists. They gave him a hostile reception, and he moved on to San Antonio. In Veracruz and Mexico City, Trespalacios and Milam met with the same reception that Long had received and were imprisoned. Ultimately, with General Long, they were able to legitimatize their purposes and intentions to the new revolutionary government which, in turn, accepted and treated them with respect and generosity. Long was shot and killed by a guard under circumstances that convinced Milam that the killing was plotted by Trespalacios. Milam and several friends then planned to kill Trespalacios. The plot was discovered, however, and Milam and his friends were imprisoned in Mexico City. Through the influence of Joel R. Poinsett, United States minister, all were released.
 
By the spring of 1824 Milam returned to Mexico, which now had adopted the Constitution of 1824 and had a republican form of government. In Mexico City he met Arthur G. Wavell, an Englishman who had become a general in the Mexican army. Trespalacios, now prominent in the new government also, made overtures to Milam to renew their friendship, and Milam accepted. He was granted Mexican citizenship and commissioned a colonel in the Mexican army in 1824. In 1825-26 he became Wavell’s partner in a silver mine in Nuevo León; the two also obtained empresario grants in Texas. Wavell managed the mining in Mexico and leased the most productive mine to an English company, which by 1828 was unable to fulfill the terms of their contract. In 1829 Milam sought to organize a new mining company in partnership with David G. Burnet, but they were unable to raise the necessary capital.
 
In April 1830 the Mexican Congress passed a law prohibiting further immigration of United States citizens into Texas (see LAW OF APRIL 6, 1830). This was one reason why Milam, as Wavell’s agent for his Red River colony, and Robert M. Williamson, as agent for Milam’s colony, were not able to introduce the required number of settlers specified in their empresario contracts, which were due to expire in 1832. During this time Milam removed the great Red River raft of debris, which for years had blocked traffic in the upper part of the Red River for all vessels except canoes and small, flat-bottomed boats. He then purchased a steamboat, the Alps, the first of its kind to pass through the channel.

In 1835 Milam went to Monclova, the capital of Coahuila and Texas, to urge the new governor, Agustín Viesca, to send a land commissioner to Texas to provide the settlers with land titles. Viesca agreed to do this. However, before Milam could leave the city, word came that Antonio López de Santa Anna had overthrown the representative government of Mexico, had established a dictatorship, and was en route to Texas with an army. Viesca fled with Milam, but both were captured and imprisoned at Monterrey. Milam eventually escaped and headed for the Texas border, which he reached in October 1835. By accident he encountered a company of soldiers commanded by George Collinsworth, from whom he heard of the movement in Texas for independence. Milam joined them, helped capture Goliad, and then marched with them to join the main army to capture San Antonio. While returning from a scouting mission in the southwest on December 4, 1835, Milam learned that a majority of the army had decided not to attack San Antonio as planned but to go into winter quarters. Convinced that this decision would be a disaster for the cause of independence, Milam then made his famous, impassioned plea: “Who will go with old Ben Milam into San Antonio?” Three hundred volunteered, and the attack, which began at dawn on December 5, ended on December 9 with the surrender of Gen. Martín Perfecto de Cos and the Mexican army (see SIEGE OF BEXAR). Milam did not survive to witness the victory, however. On December 7 he was shot in the head by a sniper and died instantly. In 1897 the Daughters of the Republic of Texas erected a monument at Milam’s gravesite in Milam Park, San Antonio. The marker was moved in 1976, and the location of the grave was forgotten until 1993, when a burial was unearthed that archeologists think is probably Milam’s.

BIBLIOGRAPHY: Robert W. Amsler, “General Arthur G. Wavell: A Soldier of Fortune in Texas,” Southwestern Historical Quarterly 69 (July 1965). Lois A. Garver, “Benjamin Rush Milam,” Southwestern Historical Quarterly 38 (October 1934, January 1935). Lois A. Garver, The Life of Benjamin Rush Milam (M.A. thesis, University of Texas, 1931). Rex W. Strickland, Anglo-American Activities in Northeastern Texas, 1803-1845 (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Texas, 1937). Vertical Files, Barker Texas History Center, University of Texas at Austin.

Lois Garver

Who Will Go With Old Ben Milam?
THE SIEGE AND BATTLE OF BEJAR
“Who Will Go With Old Ben Milam Into San Antonio?”
By Franklin Hall
Originally published February 2, 1930, San Antonio Express newspaper.
 
This narrative of the life of Ben Milam begins at the close of the War of 1812, through which he had served with distinction in a voluntary company from Virginia.
 
It is late afternoon, in the year 1815, and we find him standing in the yard of his sister’s home in old Kentucky. He is gazing beyond the Mississippi, where the April sun is sinking behind a mysterious horizon. Again he raised the paper in his hand. It is a map of North America. Slowly Ben Milam traces with a painful finger the single word: written in huge letters, and stretching across the map from the Rio Grande to the Canadian border! UNEXPLORED.
 
A month later he and a companion purchased a barge, loaded it with flour, and floated down the river to New Orleans. Arriving at that city they found a poor market, so he immediately chartered a schooner and sailed for Maracaibo with their merchandise.
(...)
Burleson was still reluctant to attack, and next day at 3 p.m., Milam went to his tent and asked permission to call for volunteers to storm the city. This was readily given, so Milam stepped out in front of Burleson’s tent, called everyone out in the street, and yelled:
 
“Who will go with old Ben Milam into San Antonio?”
 
Nearly 400 men stepped forward and enrolled at once.
 
Making of America
Title: Bernard Lile; an historical romance, embracing the periods of the Texas revolution, and the Mexican war. By the Hon. Jeremiah Clemens.
Author:  Clemens, Jeremiah, 1814-1865.
Publication Info: Philadelphia,: J. B. Lippincott & co., 1856.
Collection: Making of America Books
Pg. 99:
On the fifth of December, a tall-gray-haired man, whose firm tread and swelling muscles told that time has stolen away none of his strength, stepped from the ranks, and held brief conference with the general. Then turning to where the citizen soldiery were drawn up in rude imitation of regular order, his voice swelled bold and high as he exclaimed, “Who will join Old Ben Milam in storming the Alamo?” There was no preface; no stirring appeal to their patriotism; no glowing pictures of glory to be
Pg. 100:
won in the perilous undertaking; but the simple question, repeated in a voice clearer and louder than the trumpet’s call, “Who will join Old Ben Milam in storming the Alamo?”

September 1901, Overland Monthly and Out West Magazine, “San Antonio, Texas, City of Parks” by Vinton S. James,  pp. 240-241:
General Burleson laid siege to San Antonio and after many efforts to capture the city he decided to abandon the fight when he received encouraging news from escaped American prisoners, but which was insufficient to inspire him to make another effort, when a hero stepped out from the ranks of his faltering comrades and exclaimed: “Who will follow Old Ben Milam into San Antonio?” On December 5th, 1835 ,the storming of Bexar commenced and Milam was killed. His monument, lettered with his inspiring words, adorns a beautiful park bearing the same name. His grave, surrounded by weeping willows, ornamented with beds of Beautiful flowers, lies almost in the shadow of some of San Antonio’s most modern and costly buildings.

Posted by Barry Popik
Texas (Lone Star State Dictionary) • Friday, December 29, 2006 • Permalink


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