Paul Lyon's Alamo (7 Viewers)

Paul J. Lyon

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Mar 19, 2010
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The diorama uses 54 and 60mm metal and plastic figures from all of the main companies-- Marx, Barzso, Conte, TSSD, Britains, King & Country-- and from many of their lines, including Civil War and Napoleonic.

The fort is the proper scale but for the length of the main plaza, which is approximately 80%. This distortion was necessary to get the thing into a 20X20 garage. I have a complete Mexican army, though 2/3 of it is still unpainted.

Currently I am working on the landscaping and a troop of lancers.

I have used the model as a valuable research aid for my book From Under God's Wing (Eakin Press, 2008), available on Amazon.

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Very nicely done Paul and looking for to what you have in store for us next....The Lt.
 
Paul...

that is a fantastic Alamo and diorama...please give us more pictures if you would...I really have enjoyed what you have shown us so far...
 
Thanks for the great feedback and support. I will post more within the next day or so-- I've just done a bunch of pictures of the north wall.

I can also post maps if they help to show what's going on in the pictures.
 
Welcome to the forum Paul. I enjoy viewing your diorama in 54mm. I give you credit for all the work (or Fun) into making the Alamo and also painting many figures and accessories. Hope to see more. Leadmen
 
WOW! Numbers and the details of the building. Thanks for posting.
 
Hi Paul,

Your Alamo diorama is most impressive and it clearly reflects the work of a skilled craftsman. I realize the diorama is a work in progress and I most certainly look forward to watching you continue its development. Nevertheless, I want to say "Congratulations for a job well done!"

By the way, I would enjoy those maps you mentioned. Keep up the excellent work!

Warmest personal regards,

Pat :)
 
A very impressive Alamo. Congratulations on your fine work and welcome to the forum. -- Al
 
Another nice round of photos Paul of the battle scenes of your Alamo....The Lt.
 
Thanks again for all of the positive remarks! I will show them to my wife when it comes time to expand into the patio...

The scale is 1:32, but the larger figures tend to a 1:30 size. Luckily the old missions had doorways for shorter individuals-- even back then, frontiersmen would tend to bump their heads, and I'm sure a lot of hats got knocked off.
 
Thanks again for all of the positive remarks! I will show them to my wife when it comes time to expand into the patio...

The scale is 1:32, but the larger figures tend to a 1:30 size. Luckily the old missions had doorways for shorter individuals-- even back then, frontiersmen would tend to bump their heads, and I'm sure a lot of hats got knocked off.

Wow! It must be huge!:eek: I was thinking this was 25mm like George Guerrerro's wonderful set ups. Very Cool!:cool::cool::cool::cool:
 
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These pictures are all of a previous version of the model. This one shows the breach of the north wall, and most of these pictures are meant to show the bad light of twilight dawn, since the attack started about 5 a.m. The Mexican army in a force of about a thousand broke through the north wall and "poured through like sheep" according to a witness.

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The attack on the palisade-reinforced east wall that ended badly; it's my belief that a number of Mexican soldiers at this point fled the scene and were killed by their own lancers lurking behind the Alamo. The attacking column was in any event deflected and swung around the corner to go in at the breach.

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Interior of the Alamo chapel, showing the long ramp and three guns that covered the eastern side of the fort and inflicted high casualties on the Mexican army. My chapel is currently undergoing drastic rebuilding.

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Shameless recreation of the death of Crockett.

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The last three pictures show an assault on the palisade and abatis at the south end of the Alamo; sorry to say that this didn't take place like this even though it's in every movie. What did happen here is some action involving cavalry and lancers, some of them dismounted, who were ordered to approach "within pistol shot," but also to cut down anyone (of either side) who tried to leave the battle. In reality, some of them went in on foot in order to do some looting if possible; but it all turned bad when the alarm was sounded.

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You can see some of the cavalry in the background-- some of them dismounted and firing at the barricade. The palisade, it turns out, was a single row of cedar logs instead of the double row packed with dirt. This seems to have been settled by an archeological dig at the site in the 1970s, and I've since rebuilt it.

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The structure in the background (adobe, on the right) is the mission kitchen building, but I have now rebuilt it to show it more accurately as a larger but more ruined building. The stone building on the right is the east end of the "low barracks" which was demolished in the late 1800s to put in a trolley line. The abatis is simply uprooted small trees (in this case, probably fruit trees that once grew within the fort) grown down to force attackers to climb through or over dead branches aimed at them. Timing is crucial; an extra minute fumbling through debris is another fusilade, the chance for the defenders to reload one more time.
 
Wow! It must be huge!:eek: I was thinking this was 25mm like George Guerrerro's wonderful set ups. Very Cool!:cool::cool::cool::cool:

Well, this is why my 20X20 garage is full, though I can still fit a couple of bicycles in. The Alamo platform is 12X15 feet. What you realize when you build a model of the fort is that it was way too big-- a line of defensive works 500 feet long, 300 feet deep. Very little of it is left today.
 
Once again Paul thanks for sharing your Alamo with the latest batch of photos....The Lt.
 

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