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Created with Fabric.js 1.4.5 Entered South Carolina College in the fall of 1823 but never graduated.During his senior year he led a student protest against the poor food served at the college and the obligation of students to attend class in bad weather.Later was expelled Entered South Carolina College in the fall of 1823 but never graduated.Was expelled for protesting. double click to changethis text! Drag a cornerto scale proportionally. double click to changethis text! Drag a cornerto scale proportionally. Bonham took up the study of law and began practicing in Pendleton, South Carolina, in 1830. Bonham traveled to San Antonio de Bexar and the Alamo with James Bowie and arrived on January 19, 1836. He returned to the Alamo on March 3, bearing through the Mexican lines a letter from Robert M. Williamson assuring Travis that help was on its way and urging him to hold out. Bonham died in the battle of the Alamo on March 6, 1836 and believed to have died manning a cannon. Born at Red Banks (present-day Saluda), Edgefield County, South Carolina, on February 20, 1807. Bonham served as an aide to South Carolina governor James Hamilton, a position that brought him the rank of lieutenant colonel. Bonham's life and role in the siege and battle of the Alamo have been romanticized more than that of any other defender. James Butler Bonham1807-1836 He is called "Colonel" by Travis in two letters from the Alamo, but this was only a title of respect dating back to his days with the South Carolina militia. Bonham is wrongly remembered as bringing the news that Colonel Fannin was not coming to Travis's aid, when he actually brought word from Williamson that help was coming.
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