Texas 2009 81st Regular

Texas House Bill HCR71 Senate Committee Report / Bill

Filed 02/01/2025

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                    By: Kolkhorst (Senate Sponsor - Hegar) H.C.R. No. 71
 (In the Senate - Received from the House April 22, 2009;
 May 6, 2009, read first time and referred to Committee on
 Government Organization; May 20, 2009, reported favorably by the
 following vote: Yeas 6, Nays 0; May 20, 2009, sent to printer.)


 HOUSE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
 WHEREAS, The State of Texas has customarily recognized a
 variety of official state symbols as tangible representations of
 the state's historical and cultural heritage; and
 WHEREAS, The Burton Cotton Gin & Museum, in Burton,
 Washington County, is home to what is believed to be the only
 restored gin of its time period in the United States that remains in
 its original building, on its original site, and that operates with
 equipment that was in the facility when the gin closed; beyond its
 uniqueness, this plant represents a significant chapter in Texas
 agricultural and economic history; and
 WHEREAS, First grown in Texas by Spanish missionaries, cotton
 became an important source of income in the state in the 19th
 century and has remained a significant part of the state's economy;
 Texas has led the nation in cotton production in almost every year
 since 1880, and the state's annual cotton harvest today constitutes
 approximately a quarter of all the cotton raised in the United
 States; the largest cash crop in Texas, cotton has been designated
 the official State Fiber and Fabric; and
 WHEREAS, Beginning in the 1870s, cotton culture in Texas
 expanded dramatically: between 1869 and 1879, the number of bales
 produced in the state rose from approximately 350,000 to more than
 800,000, and by 1900 the number of bales reached more than 3.5
 million; this soaring volume placed a heavy strain on the existing
 gins and their mode of operation; even if steam engines were used
 instead of animals to power the gin machinery, manual labor was
 still needed to shift the cotton from one operation to another, and
 as cotton harvests increased, impatient farmers were forced to wait
 in ever longer lines at the gin; and
 WHEREAS, To cope with the upsurge in production, Robert S.
 Munger, of Mexia, devised a radically new process that became known
 as system ginning; over the period from 1883 to 1892, he created
 pneumatic technology that would move the cotton in a continuous
 manner, directly from the wagon to the gin stand and then to the
 baling press; modern-day cotton gins still use the process that he
 pioneered; and
 WHEREAS, Though highly successful, Mr. Munger's technology
 was too expensive for a single individual to install, and so local
 farmers would establish associations to build system gins; in 1913,
 a group of Burton agriculturists, most of them German Texans,
 incorporated to construct and operate the Burton Farmers Gin;
 designed by the Lummus Cotton Gin Company, the gin relied on Mr.
 Munger's pneumatic system, together with special air-blast
 equipment to doff lint from the gin saws; and
 WHEREAS, During the 1920s, the mechanization of cotton
 harvesting necessitated the addition of still further machinery at
 the Burton gin, in order to remove the increased volume of trash
 from the seed cotton; the total power requirement then exceeded the
 capacity of the gin's original steam engine, and the latter was thus
 supplanted in 1925 by a Bessemer Type IV diesel engine with 125
 horsepower; after that engine failed in 1963, it was replaced by an
 electric motor, though the diesel engine was repaired and kept as a
 standby power source; and
 WHEREAS, The Burton Farmers Gin operated from 1914 to 1974,
 by which time cotton production in the area had almost wholly given
 way to the raising of livestock; efforts by local citizens to
 preserve the gin and return it to its 1930s condition began in 1986;
 as part of the initial phase, the complete gin records, which
 chronicle cotton production and sales by area farmers as well as the
 history of the physical plant, were indexed and archived; later,
 staff from the Smithsonian Institution assisted with the
 restoration of the gin's Bessemer engine, the "Lady B," which is
 considered to be "the largest operating internal combustion engine
 of [its] vintage in the southern United States," and one of the
 "few, if [indeed there are] any, engines of this age and horsepower
 in operation outside of a museum"; and
 WHEREAS, Today, the Burton Farmers Gin constitutes the main
 structure in the nine-acre complex known as the Burton Cotton Gin &
 Museum; the gin itself is open for tours year-round and is activated
 twice a year, during the Cotton Gin Festival in April and the First
 Bale Celebration in October; listed on the National Register of
 Historic Places, the Burton Farmers Gin has also been designated a
 Texas Historic Landmark by the Texas Historical Commission and a
 National Historic Engineering Landmark by the American Society of
 Mechanical Engineers; and
 WHEREAS, A key element of the cotton industry, gins were once
 a fixture in countless rural Texas communities and a fundamental
 part of their local economy; today, the Burton Cotton Gin & Museum
 evokes that earlier time and offers a rare window into a critical
 technological advance, one that continues to benefit the Lone Star
 State; now, therefore, be it
 RESOLVED, That the 81st Legislature of the State of Texas
 hereby designate the Burton Cotton Gin & Museum as the official
 Cotton Gin Museum of Texas.
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