Texas 2025 89th Regular

Texas Senate Bill SR201 Introduced / Bill

Filed 02/28/2025

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                    89R12709 DSH-D
 By: Miles, et al. S.R. No. 201




 R E S O L U T I O N
 WHEREAS, Residents of Houston lost a giant of the civil
 rights movement and visionary community leader with the passing of
 the Reverend William A. Lawson on May 14, 2024, at the age of 95; and
 WHEREAS, In 1962, while serving as director of the Baptist
 Student Union at Texas Southern University, Reverend Lawson
 established Wheeler Avenue Baptist Church, which became a center
 for students engaged in nonviolent protests against
 discrimination; he befriended Martin Luther King Jr., inviting him
 to speak at the church; Reverend Lawson chartered the Houston
 chapter of Dr. King's Southern Christian Leadership Conference,
 which he would lead for more than three decades; in the midst of
 upheaval across the nation, he quietly met with local business
 leaders, slipping through the back door of the whites-only Rice
 Hotel; his serenity, compassion, and unfailing good humor were
 crucial in bringing people together and maintaining calm during the
 swift desegregation of public facilities; and
 WHEREAS, Reverend Lawson worked with other prominent faith
 leaders to address challenges confronting the city, among them
 homelessness, racism, and antisemitism; he persuaded other local
 religious institutions to commit to community development, and he
 set an example by including women as deacons and trustees of his
 church; even after retiring, he remained a tireless champion of the
 vulnerable and disenfranchised; the congregation named him
 founding pastor emeritus, and among myriad other accolades, the
 William A. Lawson Institute for Peace and Prosperity was
 established in his honor; he received honorary doctorates from
 Howard Payne University, the University of Houston, and TSU; and
 WHEREAS, The son of William Lawson Sr. and Clarisse Riggs,
 Bill Lawson was born in St. Louis, Missouri, on June 28, 1928; he
 was raised with three siblings in Kansas City, Kansas, by his mother
 and her second husband, Walter Cade; after graduating from
 Tennessee State University, he went on to complete a bachelor's and
 master's degree at Central Baptist Theological Seminary; on January
 30, 1954, he married the former Audrey Hoffman, and they were
 blessed with four children, Melanie, Cheryl, Eric, and Roxanne; he
 was preceded in death by his beloved wife and son; and
 WHEREAS, Reverend Lawson left an indelible imprint on the
 city of Houston, and although he will be deeply missed, he will
 remain a source of enduring inspiration to all who were privileged
 to know him; now, therefore, be it
 RESOLVED, That the Senate of the 89th Texas Legislature
 hereby pay tribute to the life of the Reverend William A. Lawson and
 extend sincere condolences to all who mourn his passing; and, be it
 further
 RESOLVED, That an official copy of this resolution be
 prepared for his family and that when the Texas Senate adjourns this
 day, it do so in memory of William Lawson.