Levy soon joined the
New Orleans Greys, a
voluntary militia group supporting the
Texas Revolution. After arriving in Texas, he was appointed chief surgeon of Texas' voluntary army. He was injured in the
Siege of Béxar but remained in the army until February 10, 1836, when he left to join the
Texas Navy. His career as a
naval surgeon included stints on the
Brutus and the
Independence. On April 17, 1837, Mexican forces captured the
Independence and took the crew prisoner. Three months later Levy escaped and returned to Texas on foot. Levy established a practice in
Matagorda and was appointed to the Medical Board of the
Republic of Texas in 1838. The same year he married another Episcopalian, Claudinia Olivia Gervais, with whom he had five children. He committed suicide in May 1848. The state of Texas commemorates Levy with a historical marker in Matagorda. The City of
Houston celebrated Albert Moses Levy Memorial Day on April 30, 1986, to honor Levy and other
Jewish Texans who fought for Texas independence. ==References==