Pollard was born on October 29, 1803, in
Ashburnham, Massachusetts, to Jonas and Martha (Martin) Pollard. He grew up in
Surry, New Hampshire, and in 1825 he graduated from the medical school of the
Vermont Academy in
Castleton, Vermont. After residing for a period in
Blauvelt, New York, Pollard then removed to Manhattan where he spent the years 1825 to 1834 practicing medicine at various locations. He married Fanny Parker in 1828, and they had one daughter before his wife's death in 1831. In 1834 Pollard traveled to
Texas by way of
New Orleans. He moved to
Gonzales, Texas, and on October 2, 1835, he took part in the fight for the "
Come and Take It" cannon in Gonzales, which was the opening battle of the
Texas Revolution. "Pollard later went to San Antonio de Béxar as a private in Capt. John York's volunteer company. On October 23, 1835, he was appointed surgeon of the regiment by
Stephen F. Austin." "After the siege of Bexar, Pollard remained in the town as chief surgeon of the Texan garrison, on the staff of Lt. Col. James C. Neill. He cared for the sick and wounded of the garrison and also set up a hospital within the Alamo. On February 23, 1836,
Antonio López de Santa Anna's Mexican army besieged the Alamo. Pollard died in the
Battle of the Alamo on March 6, 1836, probably defending the Alamo hospital. A portrait of him was done sometime before he moved to Texas. Besides
William Travis,
Jim Bowie, and
Davy Crockett, he is the only Alamo defender of whom a portrait was done from life. A copy of the portrait is on display in the Alamo." ==Sources==