America’s National Parks Podcast
Society & Culture:Places & Travel
The Alamo is certainly San Antonio’s most famous landmark, perhaps even the most famous building in Texas, because of its pivotal role in the 1836 Texas Revolution. But the Alamo was built over a century prior as Mission San Antonio de Valero, by Spanish settlers on the banks of the San Antonio River. Beginning in 1690, Spanish friars established missions in what is now East Texas as a buffer against the threat of French incursion into Spanish territory from Louisiana. The Alamo is a Texas state historic site, but nearby, four sister missions, all still working Catholic churches, are protected by the National Park Service as the San Antonio Missions National Historical Park.
This episode follows four people connected to the Missions: a stonemason, a historian, a descendant, and a former church administrator. Their stories comprise Michael Nye's "Four Voices" exhibit on display at Mission Concepción.
Alone on a Winter's Island
On the Oregon Trail
"We were standing on Ground Zero of World War III"
Cataloochee - The Center of the World
A Presidential Barbecue
River on Fire
Guardian of the Gulf
A Race to a Tie
The Strange World of National Park Gift Stores
The Night the Mountain Fell
A Rescue in the Grand Tetons
Apostle of the Cacti
9:02 A.M.
Rover
"Goodbye, Death Valley."
A Century of Progress
A Great Obelisk
Fighting on Arrival, Fighting for Survival
The Chestnut Blight
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