Bill Text: TX HR142 | 2023-2024 | 88th Legislature | Introduced
Bill Title: Commemorating the 150th anniversary of the death of State Representative Louis Franke.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2023-02-28 - Referred to Resolutions Calendars [HR142 Detail]
Download: Texas-2023-HR142-Introduced.html
88R10982 BPG-D | ||
By: Kitzman | H.R. No. 142 |
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WHEREAS, February 20, 2023, marks the 150th anniversary of | ||
the death of the Honorable Louis Franke; and | ||
WHEREAS, Born Ludwig Carl Ferdinand Francke in 1818, Louis | ||
Franke grew up in the Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin, which is now | ||
part of Germany; he studied music before earning a law degree from | ||
the University of Jena; in the mid-1840s, he joined the wave of his | ||
countrymen emigrating for the freedom and opportunity of the United | ||
States; he arrived at Galveston, and during the Mexican War, he | ||
served with the Texas Rangers; in 1853, he became a naturalized | ||
citizen and formally adopted an anglicized version of his name; | ||
that same year, he wed the former Bernhardine Helene Friederike | ||
Dorothea Romberg; and | ||
WHEREAS, Mr. and Mrs. Franke began their life together on a | ||
farm near Cedar but soon bought land from her family in the Black | ||
Jack Springs community in Fayette County; for several years, the | ||
couple also spent time at Independence, where Mr. Franke taught | ||
music, French, and German at the old Baylor College; after 1959, he | ||
focused on his farm while practicing law on the side; he served on | ||
the local grand jury and as a county commissioner and overseer of | ||
roads; becoming active in the local Lutheran community, the Frankes | ||
donated land for the establishment of an Evangelical-Lutheran | ||
academy; and | ||
WHEREAS, At the close of Reconstruction, in 1872, Mr. Franke | ||
was elected to the House of Representatives from what was then | ||
District 26, covering Bastrop and Fayette Counties; he served as | ||
chair of the Immigration Committee and as a member of the committees | ||
on Agriculture and Stock Raising, Redistricting, and Public Lands | ||
and Land Office; near the end of the session, on February 19, 1873, | ||
at seven in the evening, Mr. Franke was leaving the old Capitol | ||
Building to head to his committee meeting at the Land Office when he | ||
was brutally attacked by two men, who made off with the $260 in pay | ||
he had just received; although help came almost immediately, he had | ||
sustained a grave head injury and passed away at 3:30 the following | ||
morning; and | ||
WHEREAS, Stunned legislators in both parties deeply mourned | ||
the loss of a widely admired colleague; the expenses of his burial | ||
were borne by the government, and as he lay in state in the Hall of | ||
Representatives, the entire legislature attended the funeral | ||
service; his coffin was conveyed down Congress Avenue to the train | ||
station on Pecan Street in a long procession that included the | ||
lawmakers, the governor, the Supreme Court, a military escort, | ||
heads of departments, city fire companies and other societies, a | ||
band, and citizens in carriages, on horseback, and on foot; a | ||
deputation of representatives accompanied his remains on the final | ||
journey home to his family; and | ||
WHEREAS, Widowed at a young age, Mrs. Franke was left to | ||
raise eight children, the youngest still an infant; she proved a | ||
woman of steely fortitude, and with astute business sense and the | ||
help of her industrious offspring, she expanded the land holdings | ||
of the family and secured their prosperity; and | ||
WHEREAS, Louis Franke exemplified the boldness, resilience, | ||
and community spirit of the early Texans, and his tragic and | ||
untimely death robbed the state of a born leader and true public | ||
servant; now, therefore, be it | ||
RESOLVED, That the House of Representatives of the 88th Texas | ||
Legislature hereby commemorate the 150th anniversary of the death | ||
of State Representative Louis Franke. |