Bill Text: TX SCR7 | 2019-2020 | 86th Legislature | Comm Sub
NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: Designating the second Saturday of September as Quanah Parker Day for a 10-year period beginning in 2019.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 2-0)
Status: (Passed) 2019-06-10 - Signed by the Governor [SCR7 Detail]
Download: Texas-2019-SCR7-Comm_Sub.html
Bill Title: Designating the second Saturday of September as Quanah Parker Day for a 10-year period beginning in 2019.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 2-0)
Status: (Passed) 2019-06-10 - Signed by the Governor [SCR7 Detail]
Download: Texas-2019-SCR7-Comm_Sub.html
By: Seliger | S.C.R. No. 7 | |
(In the Senate - Filed January 14, 2019; February 4, 2019, | ||
read first time and referred to Committee on Administration; | ||
April 15, 2019, reported favorably by the following vote: Yeas 6, | ||
Nays 0; April 15, 2019, sent to printer.) | ||
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WHEREAS, The life of the iconic Comanche leader Quanah Parker | ||
spanned the transition of his people from a traditional, nomadic | ||
way of life to their acceptance of a settled existence in the late | ||
19th century, and his leading role in this epic story is truly | ||
deserving of special recognition; and | ||
WHEREAS, Known as the "Lords of the Plains" for their | ||
outstanding horsemanship, the Comanche were roving hunters and | ||
gatherers who dominated the Southern Plains of North America, | ||
including large portions of Texas; individuals lived together in | ||
small bands and were free to join another group if they so desired; | ||
although they once roamed the plains in numbers "like the stars," by | ||
the mid-19th century the Comanche were threatened by the United | ||
States policy of Manifest Destiny and the eradication by Anglo | ||
American hunters of the bison, which were both the Comanche's main | ||
food source and the center of their spiritual life; and | ||
WHEREAS, Born either in Texas or Oklahoma sometime between | ||
1845 and 1852, Quanah Parker was the son of Peta Nocona, a war chief | ||
of the Noconi band of the Comanche, and Cynthia Ann Parker, who had | ||
been captured by the Comanche while still a child and who adopted | ||
their way of life, spending 25 years with the tribe; after his | ||
father was killed and his mother captured in a fight with the Texas | ||
Rangers in 1860, Quanah took refuge with the Quahada Comanche of the | ||
Llano Estacado region; and | ||
WHEREAS, Quanah Parker rose to become a powerful and | ||
influential chief among the Quahada, and for years he led the | ||
resistance to increased Anglo expansion in the Southern Plains; | ||
under his direction, the Comanche eluded the Fourth United States | ||
Cavalry in 1871 and 1872, but in 1874, an alliance of Comanche and | ||
several other tribes under his leadership was defeated during a | ||
raid at Adobe Walls in the Texas Panhandle; a year later, Quanah | ||
Parker and the Quahada surrendered and settled on the | ||
Kiowa-Comanche reservation in Oklahoma, where he was appointed as | ||
the new chief of the tribe; and | ||
WHEREAS, Leading by persuasion and example, Quanah Parker | ||
helped his people come to terms with their new existence; he | ||
promoted the creation of a ranching industry by working closely | ||
with Anglo ranchers, and as part of that effort, he negotiated a | ||
famous deal with the legendary Texas cattleman Charles Goodnight in | ||
1878, permitting the JA Ranch to expand while providing beef for the | ||
Comanche; a herd of surviving bison was allowed to continue roaming | ||
the JA rangeland, and more than a century later, this arrangement | ||
helped lead to the creation of the official State Bison Herd of | ||
Texas, which now resides at Caprock Canyons State Park; and | ||
WHEREAS, Quanah Parker's influence was also felt in other | ||
areas; he was a strong proponent of schooling for Comanche children | ||
and served on the tribal court and as the deputy sheriff of Lawton, | ||
Oklahoma; in time, he became a very successful rancher in his own | ||
right, and he remained a highly respected figure among the Comanche | ||
until his death in 1911; and | ||
WHEREAS, During one of the greatest social and cultural | ||
shifts in American history, Quanah Parker served the Comanche | ||
people first as a warrior and then as a statesman, helping them | ||
retain their identity while adapting to a different way of life, and | ||
he stands as a pivotal figure in the history of the Lone Star State; | ||
now, therefore, be it | ||
RESOLVED, That the 86th Legislature of the State of Texas | ||
hereby designate the second Saturday in September as Quanah Parker | ||
Day; and, be it further | ||
RESOLVED, That, in accordance with the provisions of Section | ||
391.004(d), Government Code, this designation remain in effect | ||
until the 10th anniversary of the date this resolution is finally | ||
passed by the legislature. | ||
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