Bill Text: TX HR204 | 2023-2024 | 88th Legislature | Introduced

NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: Commemorating the 175th anniversary of Fort Ringgold in Starr County.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)

Status: (Passed) 2023-03-07 - Reported enrolled [HR204 Detail]

Download: Texas-2023-HR204-Introduced.html
  88R11182 BPG-D
 
  By: Guillen H.R. No. 204
 
 
 
R E S O L U T I O N
         WHEREAS, Residents of Rio Grande City are celebrating the
  175th anniversary of the founding of Fort Ringgold in 2023; and
         WHEREAS, Following the Mexican War, U.S. Army engineers
  established a post on a high vantage point above the Rio Grande, on
  land initially leased from Rio Grande City's founder, Henry Clay
  Davis; Camp Ringgold, later Ringgold Barracks, was named in honor
  of Major Samuel Ringgold, an officer mortally wounded in the Battle
  of Palo Alto; and
         WHEREAS, The army used salvaged wood for the garrison's first
  building, a two-room, central-hall residence with a wraparound
  porch; during the Civil War, it was twice seized by Confederate
  troops; the U.S. Army later reclaimed the site, sending a
  detachment of the 29th Regiment U.S. Colored Troops; a more
  substantial brick headquarters with arched galleries was built,
  along with new barracks, officers' quarters, and a hospital, all
  flanking a palm-lined parade ground; the present-day name was
  adopted in 1878, when the government purchased the land from the
  Davis family for $20,000; and
         WHEREAS, The U.S. Colored Troops and their successors, the
  "Buffalo Soldiers," were assigned to the fort to safeguard against
  attacks and border unrest; although Rio Grande City residents
  welcomed the protection and economic benefits of the federal
  presence, Black troops were subject to racial harassment and
  restrictions, even after they returned victorious from the Battle
  of San Juan Hill in the Spanish-American War; tensions erupted in
  1899 between townspeople and Troop D of the Ninth U.S. Cavalry, and
  following a gunfire incident, the troop was deployed elsewhere; and
         WHEREAS, During World War II, the 124th Cavalry was sent from
  Fort Ringgold to Burma, and the army closed the post in 1944; five
  years later, the Rio Grande Consolidated Independent School
  District bought the property, which today serves as the district's
  administrative campus; the oldest building, once the commandant's
  quarters, is occupied by the Robert E. Lee House Museum, which
  acknowledges the fort's most famous visitor, the future Confederate
  general, who had business there while a lieutenant colonel in the
  U.S. Army; and
         WHEREAS, Fort Ringgold protected Rio Grande City for nearly a
  century, and the preservation of this important site facilitates a
  deeper understanding of the turbulent early history of the
  borderlands; now, therefore, be it
         RESOLVED, That the House of Representatives of the 88th Texas
  Legislature hereby commemorate the 175th anniversary of the
  establishment of Fort Ringgold in Starr County.
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