Bill Text: TX HCR138 | 2011-2012 | 82nd Legislature | Introduced
Bill Title: Honoring the African Americans who fought in the Texas Revolution.
Sponsorship: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2011-04-18 - Referred to Culture, Recreation & Tourism [HCR138 Detail]
Download: Texas-2011-HCR138-Introduced.html
| 82R19792 BPG-D | ||
| By: Deshotel | H.C.R. No. 138 | |
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| WHEREAS, The observance of San Jacinto Day on April 21, 2011, | ||
| provides an ideal opportunity to honor the African Americans who | ||
| fought bravely on the side of the Texians in the War of Independence | ||
| from Mexico; and | ||
| WHEREAS, In 1835-36, numerous African Americans, free, | ||
| enslaved, and indentured alike, joined in the Texas Revolution; | ||
| they were counted among those who died defending the Alamo, and they | ||
| fought in every battle, including Velasco, Goliad, Bexar, and San | ||
| Jacinto; although early histories generally ignored these vital | ||
| contributions, individual acts of courage and patriotism were | ||
| recorded for posterity; and | ||
| WHEREAS, The first Texan casualty of the revolution was most | ||
| probably Samuel McCullouch, Jr., a free African American soldier; | ||
| after enlisting in the Matagorda Volunteer Company, he was severely | ||
| wounded at Goliad during the storming of the Mexican officers' | ||
| quarters; another African American, Hendrick Arnold, distinguished | ||
| himself as a guide and soldier for Ben Milam's Texas army at the | ||
| Siege of Bexar and later at the Battle of San Jacinto; and | ||
| WHEREAS, Throughout the War of Independence, blacksmith, | ||
| innkeeper, and skilled negotiator William Goyens, a free man of | ||
| color, was charged with maintaining good relations with the | ||
| Cherokees; he served as the interpreter for General Sam Houston and | ||
| his party in securing an important treaty; one of the few Texan | ||
| survivors of the Alamo was Joe Travis, the slave of William B. | ||
| Travis, who delivered to the Texas cabinet a report on the battle | ||
| and the strength of General Santa Anna's army; and | ||
| WHEREAS, The early chroniclers of the Texas Revolution failed | ||
| to obtain the testimony of key witnesses to momentous events and | ||
| left holes in the histories passed down to us; as a result, | ||
| generations of Texas schoolchildren grew up without learning about | ||
| the role African Americans played in the founding of their state; | ||
| however, through surviving accounts of the remarkable deeds of men | ||
| such as Joe Travis, William Goyens, Hendrick Arnold, and Samuel | ||
| McCullouch, Jr., citizens of the Lone Star State can gain fuller | ||
| knowledge and an appreciation for those who contributed to the | ||
| struggle for Texas independence; now, therefore, be it | ||
| RESOLVED, That the 82nd Legislature of the State of Texas | ||
| hereby honor the African Americans who fought for the Republic of | ||
| Texas in the War of Independence from Mexico and encourage all | ||
| citizens to learn more about their contributions. | ||
