[cc] Archeologists search for artifacts at the San Jacinto Battleground State Historic Site near Houston to learn more about the 1836 battle for Texas independence. For more information, visit http://www.tpwd.state.tx.us/spdest/findadest/parks/san_jacinto_battleground/
@sinsomphou me too.
Drizzyrr 1 month ago
@sinsomphou yeah...
dameplx79 2 months ago
Anybody else came here because of ITT-TECH?
sinsomphou 2 months ago
1836 "Battle of San Jacinto"- For a Freedom of Texas. Ok like many of you I am like who? and What is this. Some of us have never heard of this battle. If not a civil war buff many of you will be scratching your head like I was and saying wth? My take is it's great to find things and share what has been forgotten so others can know and learn.
mzrena1023 2 months ago
The video is kinda silent.. hm
SvarrChanston 2 months ago
What about the Alamo? If it were not for that battle, Sam Houston would MAYBE have not won at San Jacinto.
Hank81527 5 months ago
@340wbymag That sounds like a good find! Can i join you on a hunt?
777dingo 1 year ago
Why remove the reflection pool? What good would removing it do? I think it might make the park less attractive to the visitors if its removed.
777dingo 1 year ago
I found a small 1 1/2' diameter iron cannonball just 1/4 mile south-east from the capture site monument of General Santa Anna. There is no way to prove it, but it it may have been from one of Houston's Twin Sisters Cannons. We can be sure it wasn't from a Mexican Army cannon.
340wbymag 1 year ago
This is a very interesting video.
baytownbert2 2 years ago