Dead Men Singing – Remember the Alamo! H. Bedford-Jones turns his massive story-telling talents to the Texas Revolution and the Battle of the Alamo. One hundred years after the Texas Revolution, Henry Bedford-Jones penned this paean to the heroes of Texas Freedom, the defenders of the Alamo. The stories of Jim Bowie, Ben Milam and Davy Crockett are featured, along with James Fannin, William B. Travis and Sam Houston. Dead Men Singing – (1936) The Men Who Fought For Texas A Hundred Years Ago I. The Buffalo Hunter II. The Seventh Child III. The Jailbird IV. The Rifleman Henry James O’Brien Bedford-Jones was born in Napanee, Ontario, Canada in 1887. After being encouraged to try writing by his friend, writer William Wallace Cook, Bedford-Jones began writing dime novels and pulp magazine stories. Bedford-Jones was an enormously prolific writer; the pulp editor Harold Hersey once recalled meeting Bedford-Jones in Paris, where he was working on two novels simultaneously, each story on its own separate typewriter. Bedford-Jones wrote over 100 novels, earning him the nickname “King of the Pulps.” Dead Men Singing has 14 illustrations.