Texas 2013 83rd 2nd C.S.

Texas House Bill HR150 Introduced / Bill

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                    83S20600 BPG-D
 By: Branch H.R. No. 150


 R E S O L U T I O N
 WHEREAS, July 26, 2013, marks the 150th anniversary of the
 death of Sam Houston, a towering figure in Texas history; and
 WHEREAS, Born in Virginia on March 2, 1793, Houston emigrated
 to eastern Tennessee with his family after the death of his father,
 and as an adolescent, he left home to live for a time among the
 Cherokees; he joined the United States Army at the age of 20 and
 fought the British under Andrew Jackson's command in the Battle of
 Horseshoe Bend, receiving three near-fatal wounds; and
 WHEREAS, Houston subsequently studied law and opened a
 practice in Lebanon, Tennessee; with General Jackson's
 endorsement, he was named adjutant general of the state militia,
 and he was later elected attorney general for the District of
 Nashville in 1818; he went on to become major general of the state
 militia and then served two terms in the United States House of
 Representatives before becoming governor of Tennessee; and
 WHEREAS, In the wake of a brief, disastrous marriage, Houston
 resigned from office and went to live among the Cherokees in what is
 now Oklahoma; he took an active role in Native American affairs,
 working as a peacemaker among tribes and serving as a tribal
 emissary; after moving to Mexican Texas in 1832, he practiced law
 and became involved in the Anglo-Texan movement for independence;
 he served as a delegate from Nacogdoches to the Consultation of
 1835, which appointed him major general of the Texas army; and
 WHEREAS, In February 1836, Houston helped negotiate a treaty
 with the Cherokees as a commissioner for the provisional
 government; the following month, he served as a delegate from
 Refugio to the convention at Washington-on-the-Brazos, where the
 assembly adopted the Texas Declaration of Independence and
 appointed Houston commander in chief of the Texas army; Houston set
 high standards for his troops, and he ultimately led them to victory
 over the Mexican army at the Battle of San Jacinto on April 21,
 1836; and
 WHEREAS, Acclaimed as "Old Sam Jacinto," Houston became the
 first regularly elected president of the Republic of Texas; the
 town of Houston, which was named in his honor in 1836, served as
 capital of the Republic for most of his first administration;
 because the constitution barred him from succeeding himself, he
 represented San Augustine in the Texas House from 1839 to 1841
 before returning to serve a second term as president; and
 WHEREAS, When Texas joined the Union, Houston became one of
 its two United States senators and served for 13 years in that
 capacity; he was considered presidential material, but at home, his
 staunch commitment to the Union became increasingly controversial;
 although he was a slave owner himself, he drew the wrath of
 proslavery elements by supporting the 1820 Missouri Compromise, the
 1848 Oregon Bill, and the Compromise of 1850, all designed to limit
 slavery north of latitude 36 degrees 30 minutes; in 1855, the Texas
 Legislature officially condemned his opposition to the
 Kansas-Nebraska Act, which repealed the Missouri Compromise, and
 his future in the U.S. Senate was doomed; he met defeat in an 1857
 gubernatorial campaign but was returned to the Governor's Mansion
 two years later; and
 WHEREAS, Houston vehemently opposed the swelling secession
 movement during his term as governor, warning that civil war would
 lead to the destruction of the South; desperate to avoid bloodshed
 within Texas, however, he ultimately acquiesced to the secessionist
 tide, but he refused to take the oath of loyalty to the Confederate
 States of America and was removed from office; two years later, at
 the age of 70, he succumbed to pneumonia at his home in Huntsville;
 and
 WHEREAS, A proud Texan and a prominent, fiercely loyal
 American, Sam Houston played a monumental role in founding the Lone
 Star State and setting the course of its future, and his colorful
 life and extraordinary record of public service have continued to
 fascinate and inspire Texans to the present day; now, therefore, be
 it
 RESOLVED, That the House of Representatives of the 83rd Texas
 Legislature, 2nd Called Session, hereby commemorate the
 sesquicentennial of the death of Sam Houston.