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HOUSE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
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WHEREAS, March 16, 2011, marks the 150th anniversary of |
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Governor Sam Houston's refusal to take the oath of allegiance to the |
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Confederate States of America; and |
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WHEREAS, An ardent unionist, Sam Houston had spent much of |
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his life in public service; born in Virginia in 1793, he fought with |
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valor during the War of 1812 and afterward rose to prominence in |
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Tennessee, where he served as attorney general, won two elections |
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to the U.S. House of Representatives, and was elected governor; and |
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WHEREAS, After moving to Texas in 1832, he quickly became |
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involved in the struggle for independence; he served as a delegate |
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to the Convention of 1833, the Consultation of 1835, and the |
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Convention of 1836, during which he signed the Texas Declaration of |
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Independence and received appointment as commander in chief of the |
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Texas Army; his victory at the Battle of San Jacinto secured Texas' |
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independence from Mexico and led to his election as president of the |
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new republic; he then served in the Texas House of Representatives |
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before holding the presidency again for a second term; and |
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WHEREAS, With Texas' admission to the Union, Sam Houston |
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became one of the state's first two senators; his pro-Union stance, |
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however, cost him support in the Texas Legislature, which chose |
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John Hemphill to replace him when his term in the senate ended in |
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1859; Sam Houston then ran for the governorship of Texas and won, |
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assuming office on December 21, 1859; and |
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WHEREAS, The following year, the fear that Abraham Lincoln |
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and the Republican Party might capture the presidency and threaten |
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the institution of slavery gave further momentum to the |
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secessionist movement in the South; Sam Houston understood that |
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disunion would provoke a lengthy war, one the South would stand |
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little chance of winning; in the fall of 1860, he undertook a |
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speaking tour in an effort to rally adherence to the Union, even in |
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the event of a Republican victory in November; and |
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WHEREAS, Addressing an audience in Austin on September 22, |
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1860, Governor Houston told his listeners: "when . . . in 1836, I |
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volunteered to aid in transplanting American liberty to this soil, |
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it was with the belief that the Constitution and the Union were to |
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be perpetual blessings to the human race--that the success of the |
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experiment of our fathers was beyond dispute, and that whether |
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under the banner of the Lone Star or that many-starred banner of the |
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Union, I could point to the land of Washington, Jefferson, and |
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Jackson, as the land blest beyond all other lands, where freedom |
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would be eternal and Union unbroken. It concerns me deeply, as it |
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does everyone here, that these bright anticipations should be |
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realized; and that it should be continued not only the proudest |
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nationality the world has ever produced, but the freest and most |
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perfect"; and |
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WHEREAS, The tide of public sentiment was against him, |
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however, and on January 28, 1861, a convention convened in Austin to |
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take up the question of secession; several days later, speaking to a |
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committee of the convention, Governor Houston laid out the |
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consequences of their project in stark terms: "To secede from the |
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Union and set up another government would cause war. . . . If you |
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go to war with the United States, you will never conquer her, as she |
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has the money and the men. If she does not whip you by guns, powder, |
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and steel, she will starve you to death. . . . if you go to war, it |
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will take the flower of the country--the young men. . . . There |
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will be thousands and thousands who march away from our homes never |
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to come back"; and |
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WHEREAS, Notwithstanding his impassioned argument, the |
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delegates proceeded to adopt an ordinance of secession; after Texas |
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voters ratified that decision on February 23, 1861, the Secession |
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Convention reconvened and demanded that all current officeholders |
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take an oath of allegiance to the Confederacy; Governor Houston was |
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summoned to take the oath before the convention on March 16, but he |
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refused to appear; the delegates consequently declared the office |
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of governor vacant and swore in the lieutenant governor to take his |
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place; and |
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WHEREAS, Explaining his course of action in an address to the |
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public, Governor Houston avowed: "In the name of the Constitution |
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of Texas, which has been trampled upon, I refuse to take this oath"; |
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he went on, though, to say, "I love Texas too well to bring civil |
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strife and bloodshed upon her. To avert this calamity, I shall make |
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no endeavor to maintain my authority as Chief Executive of this |
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State. . . . "; and |
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WHEREAS, Sam Houston never again held public office; he |
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settled with his family in Huntsville, where he died on July 26, |
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1863; as he had predicted, the North blockaded southern ports, and |
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the greater manpower and industrial resources of the Union |
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contributed heavily to its ultimate victory; by the war's end, in |
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April 1865, total Confederate losses stood at approximately |
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258,000, and slavery as an institution was essentially dead; and |
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WHEREAS, In his biography of Sam Houston, one historian was |
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reminded of an observation made by the German philosopher G. W. F. |
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Hegel, who "wrote that the mark of a great man is his ability to tell |
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the people of his era what their will is and accomplish it"; "the |
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tragedy of Sam Houston['s life]," concluded the historian, "was |
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that he told his era what its will should have been and it cost him |
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everything"; now, therefore, be it |
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RESOLVED, That the 82nd Legislature of the State of Texas |
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hereby honor Sam Houston for his statesmanship on the 150th |
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anniversary of his refusal to take the oath of loyalty to the |
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Confederate States of America. |
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Branch |
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Straus |
Gonzalez |
Munoz, Jr. |
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Alvarado |
Hamilton |
Oliveira |
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Anderson of Dallas |
Hardcastle |
Otto |
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Anderson of McLennan |
Harless |
Parker |
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Aycock |
Harper-Brown |
Patrick |
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Berman |
Hernandez Luna |
Pena |
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Brown |
Howard of Fort Bend |
Pitts |
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Burkett |
Howard of Travis |
Price |
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Burnam |
Huberty |
Quintanilla |
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Christian |
King of Parker |
Scott |
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Coleman |
King of Taylor |
Sheets |
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Cook |
King of Zavala |
Sheffield |
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Craddick |
Kleinschmidt |
Shelton |
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Creighton |
Kolkhorst |
Simpson |
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Crownover |
Kuempel |
Smith of Harris |
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Darby |
Landtroop |
Smith of Tarrant |
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Davis of Dallas |
Larson |
Smithee |
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J. Davis of Harris |
Laubenberg |
Solomons |
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S. Davis of Harris |
Lavender |
Strama |
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Deshotel |
Legler |
Taylor of Collin |
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Driver |
Lewis |
Taylor of Galveston |
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Elkins |
Mallory Caraway |
Veasey |
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Frullo |
Martinez Fischer |
Weber |
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Giddings |
Miller of Comal |
Zedler |
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Gonzales of Hidalgo |
Miller of Erath |
Zerwas |
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Gonzales of Williamson |
Morrison |
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______________________________ |
______________________________ |
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President of the Senate |
Speaker of the House |
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I certify that H.C.R. No. 150 was adopted by the House on March |
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16, 2011, by a non-record vote. |
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______________________________ |
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Chief Clerk of the House |
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I certify that H.C.R. No. 150 was adopted by the Senate on April |
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4, 2011, by a viva-voce vote. |
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______________________________ |
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Secretary of the Senate |
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APPROVED: __________________ |
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Date |
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__________________ |
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Governor |