Crisp, who as of 2011 is working on a new translation, calls the book "the longest and most vivid eyewitness account of the revolt by a Texan soldier".
Auburn was the site of a hospital for Texan Confederate soldiers.
Gen. Kelsey Douglass was charged with ensuring the removal and camped with about 500 Texan soldiers six miles south of the principal Cherokee settlement.
A monument to the Texan soldiers was dedicated at the site on the centennial of the Civil War battle in April 1964.
The issue explored the involvement of military personnel from Texas in the Iraq War, and included a list of Texan soldiers who had died in the conflict.
At the embassy, the Texan ambassador comes out and orders the Texan soldiers to keep the ASA military out.
Both the city and county were named for Richard Andrews, the first Texan soldier to die in the Texas Revolution.
Crisp calls the book "the longest and most vivid eyewitness account of the revolt by a Texan soldier".
The Texan soldiers formed a square against the Mexicans.
When the Texan soldiers eventually surrendered, they were told to cast down their weapons into a pile.