Bill Text: TX HCR13 | 2021-2022 | 87th Legislature | Introduced
NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: Designating San Marcos as the official Mermaid Capital of Texas for a 10-year period beginning in 2021.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2021-05-08 - Laid on the table subject to call [HCR13 Detail]
Download: Texas-2021-HCR13-Introduced.html
Bill Title: Designating San Marcos as the official Mermaid Capital of Texas for a 10-year period beginning in 2021.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2021-05-08 - Laid on the table subject to call [HCR13 Detail]
Download: Texas-2021-HCR13-Introduced.html
87R4707 CJM-D | ||
By: Zwiener | H.C.R. No. 13 |
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WHEREAS, For thousands of years, the mermaid has been one of | ||
the most striking symbols of humanity's connection with the natural | ||
world, and over the past century, this legendary figure has come to | ||
represent the city of San Marcos and its special relationship to the | ||
water resources of Central Texas; and | ||
WHEREAS, The story of the mermaid in San Marcos begins with | ||
the abundant springs that every day release 100 million gallons of | ||
freshwater from the Edwards Aquifer into the San Marcos River; | ||
considered a sacred place by Native Americans and regarded as the | ||
creation site of the Coahuiltecans, the springs have drawn people | ||
to their banks for more than 11,500 years, making this area what is | ||
thought to be one of the oldest continually inhabited sites in North | ||
America; and | ||
WHEREAS, In 1845, Edward Burleson, a former vice president of | ||
the Republic of Texas, dammed the headwaters of the San Marcos, | ||
thereby creating Spring Lake; over the ensuing years, the water | ||
from the lake powered gristmills, sawmills, an ice factory, and an | ||
electric light works; the San Marcos River also constituted an | ||
important water stop along the Chisholm Trail; and | ||
WHEREAS, A. B. Rogers bought the Burleson homestead in the | ||
1920s and built a resort hotel on the shore of the lake; he later | ||
began offering rides in glass-bottomed boats that allowed visitors | ||
to see through the crystal clear water to the bubbling springs | ||
beneath; his son Paul, who succeeded him, established the Aquarena | ||
Springs amusement park on the property, and in 1950 he built an | ||
underwater theater, where young women known as "aquamaids" staged | ||
exhibitions of synchronized swimming and underwater ballet; at the | ||
peak of its popularity, the park drew up to 350,000 visitors every | ||
year and was featured in Life magazine, with the submerged theater | ||
making it to the cover of Popular Mechanics; in time, the show came | ||
to include Glurpo, a pipe-smoking clown, and a swimming pig named | ||
Ralph; and | ||
WHEREAS, The performances continued until the 1990s, when | ||
Texas State University acquired the park and set a new course for | ||
the property; today, the site hosts the Meadows Center for Water and | ||
the Environment, which conducts research and educational programs | ||
focused on promoting sustainable water management and | ||
environmental stewardship; the critical nature of its work is | ||
underscored by the fact that the Edwards Aquifer supplies drinking | ||
water to nearly two million people and serves as the principal | ||
source of water for agriculture, industry, and recreation | ||
throughout the region; the aquifer system sustains over 40 highly | ||
adapted species, a number of which are either threatened or | ||
endangered, including several found in the San Marcos springs and a | ||
stretch of river just below; and | ||
WHEREAS, In 2016, the Mermaid Society of Texas, headquartered | ||
in San Marcos, was created to foster harmony between environmental | ||
sustainability, the arts, and economic growth; the society has | ||
established an annual Mermaid SPLASH festival, which includes a | ||
parade, the Mermaid Art Ball, and the riverside AquaFaire | ||
celebration; moreover, the city has funded mermaid-themed public | ||
art through a program supported by the hotel occupancy tax; among | ||
the works underwritten by this initiative are murals and a series of | ||
seven-foot-tall statues, each one decorated by a different artist; | ||
and | ||
WHEREAS, By adopting the mermaid as a symbol of the city, the | ||
people of San Marcos are encouraging public interest in the natural | ||
environment and highlighting the central role their community is | ||
playing in preserving the water resources of the Lone Star State; | ||
now, therefore, be it | ||
RESOLVED, That the 87th Legislature of the State of Texas | ||
hereby designate the city of San Marcos as the official Mermaid | ||
Capital of Texas; and, be it further | ||
RESOLVED, That, in accordance with the provisions of Section | ||
391.003(e), Government Code, this designation remain in effect | ||
until the 10th anniversary of the date this resolution is finally | ||
passed by the legislature. |