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Colonel Davy Crockett (1786-1836) was a heroic American congressman, Indian fighter, and soldier who participated in the Battle of the Alamo.

In 1836, Colonels Crockett, Travis, and Bowie, along with one hundred and eighty-eight soldiers from the Republic of Texas fortified the Alamo, an old Spanish mission in preparation for an attack from several thousand Mexican troops led by General Santa Anna.

After a thirteen day siege, Santa Anna attacked the mission on 6 March. Despite a heroic effort by Travis and his troops, Santa Anna would ultimately be victorious in eliminating all of the Texan rebels in what history would later remember as the Battle of the Alamo.

In 1960, the Battle of the Alamo was depicted in the movie titled The Alamo. Actor John Wayne portrayed the role of Crockett. (DS9: "Badda-Bing, Badda-Bang")

In 2374, a holosuite program recreating the battle was designed by Miles O'Brien and Julian Bashir aboard Deep Space 9. (DS9: "Wrongs Darker Than Death or Night") O'Brien was to play the role of Crockett, Bashir the role of Travis. Because Garak, who was contracted for making their clothes, was busy decoding messages for Starfleet Intelligence, Bashir offered the role of Crockett to Garak as incentive to hurry up on their costumes. O'Brien was not amused with the offer. (DS9: "Afterimage")

After experiencing the battle, they later had a heated discussion on the subject in Quark's. O'Brien believed that Santa Anna executed Crockett at the battle, supporting his position with the fact that Santa Anna didn't care about the "rules of war," and therefore would have considered the execution a point of pride.

Bashir, however, felt that Crockett was quite old for his time, and that his best days were behind him and that he was surviving on nothing but reputation. He believed that due to these factors, he would not be a man who would fight to his last breath in a clearly hopeless battle. He believed Crockett ultimately surrendered, to which O'Brien neither agreed nor disagreed with, noting that either way, there was no proof.

Worf, however believed that they were both wrong and that the only question is whether of not they believe in the legend of Crockett. If they did believe, then there would be no doubt in their minds that Crockett died the death of a hero. If they did not believe, then Crockett was just a man, and it did not matter how he died. (DS9: "Once More Unto the Breach")

There were a number of tall tales about Crockett. One was about how Crockett supposedly once put a target against a tree and arranged a series of tin frying pans nearby in a pattern so that he was going to shoot a bullet at one pan, and it would ricochet through the others to reach the target. A mythology also grew around Crockett and his rifle. (DS9: "Field of Fire")

In 2375, Bashir gave O'Brien a biography of Crockett. However, a month later O'Brien still hadn't read it. (DS9: "Field of Fire")

According to the Star Trek Encyclopedia (4th ed., vol. 1, p. 168), the Federation starship USS Crockett was named after Davy Crockett.

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