This Day In Texas History - July 14

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joe817
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This Day In Texas History - July 14

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1805 - Charlotte Allen was born. She is known as the "Mother of Houston." Her and her brothers bought land along Buffalo Bayou to establish the town in 1836.

1832 - The expedition of José Antonio Mexía during the summer of 1832 had two purposes: the carrying into execution of the Plan of Vera Cruz against Anastacio Bustamante and absolutism in Mexico, and the preservation of Texas in the Mexican union. Mexía left Matamoros on July 14, 1832, on his way to Texas, after being joined by Stephen F. Austin, who was on his way home from a meeting of the legislature of Coahuila and Texas. Mexía had four hundred troops when he reached the mouth of the Brazos River on July 16.

1836 - After the Battle of San Jacinto, Major William Hester Patton was given custody of Antonio López de Santa Anna and was one of the commissioners selected to escort him to Washington, D.C. On July 14, 1836, Patton was one of eighteen officers who testified against President David G. Burnet on charges of usurpation and treason. Patton was General Houston's aide-de-camp.

1836 - James Clark(founder of Clarksville, Red River County), raised a company of mounted riflemen to join the fight for Texas independence. This company, known as the Red River Blues, was enlisted into service at Clark's home and was commanded by Capt. William Becknell. Clark served as first lieutenant. Though Clark was delayed along the way because of illness, the company traveled to the Lavaca River in South Texas and joined Gen. Thomas Jefferson Green's brigade.

1843 - The arrival of the Texas Navy warships the Austin and the Wharton at their home port of Galveston on July 14, 1843, effectively ended all operations of the Texas Navy.

1870 - On this date in 1870, the United State Congress approved a bill making Houston an official Port of Entry for the US. The bill includes funds to assist Houston in building a customs house, and surveys of a proposed ship channel.

1879 - The state of Texas authorized selling state land for fifty cents an acre. Half the proceeds were to go for reduction of the public debt and half to pay into the Permanent School Fund, established in 1876. The state sold 3,201,283 for $1,600,641.55 in fifty-two West Texas counties. On January 22, 1883, the Fifty Cent Act was repealed as a public necessity resulting from fraudulent speculation in the land.

1890 - The San Antonio and Aransas Pass Railway went into receivership, with Benjamin F. Yoakum as one of the two receivers. The SA&AP was chartered in 1884 to connect San Antonio with Aransas Bay, a distance of 135 miles. The SA&AP, which eventually built hundreds of miles of track in South and Central Texas, was a competitor in many areas with various Southern Pacific lines and was acquired by the SP in 1892.

1912 - Folk singer Woodrow Wilson "Woody" Guthrie was born in Oklahoma. During the Dust Bowl, his family moved to Pampa, Texas, where he met and married his first wife, Mary Jennings. Woody is best known for "This Land is Your Land" which is a national favorite.

1938 - Houston born Howard Hughes and a four-man crew landed their specially equipped Lockheed 14 in New York City, having circled the globe in three days, nineteen hours, and seventeen minutes. Along the way, they cut in half Charles Lindbergh's record for crossing the Atlantic.

1943 - Julius Bledsoe's performance of "Ol Man River" in Showboat in 1927, made the song an American Classic. On this date in 1943, Julius Bledsoe died in Hollywood. He was born in Waco where he is now buried.

1960 - In a surprise move on this date in 1960, John F Kennedy selected Lyndon B Johnson, Senator from Texas, as his Vice Presidential running mate, in a move that JFK hopes will solidify the Southern conservative vote. Kennedy and Johnson went on to win the 1960 Presidential election, defeating Richard Nixon, in one of the closest elections in American History.

1987 - On this date in 1987, Texas native George Strait scored a number one country with his song, All My Ex's Live in Texas, featured on his album, Open Front Property, also hit number one on the Country Album charts and broke into the pop charts. Strait who was born on May 18, 1952 in Poteet, Texas, a small town near San Antonio, spent his formative years in in the neighborhood town of Pearsall. He developed his interest in and love for music while a student at Pearsall High School.
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Re: This Day In Texas History - July 14

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:txflag:


p.s. I think the album/song is actually Ocean front property.
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Re: This Day In Texas History - July 14

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budroux2w wrote::txflag:


p.s. I think the album/song is actually Ocean front property.
:lol: Thanks for the clarification. Don't shoot the messenger! :oops: I'm not up to speed on C&W music.

I thought there was some pretty interesting stuff there today though. (to me some days are more interesting than others)
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Re: This Day In Texas History - July 14

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joe817 wrote:
budroux2w wrote::txflag:


p.s. I think the album/song is actually Ocean front property.
:lol: Thanks for the clarification. Don't shoot the messenger! :oops: I'm not up to speed on C&W music.

I thought there was some pretty interesting stuff there today though. (to me some days are more interesting than others)
:lol::

It was very interesting today, and again, thank you for taking the time to do these threads everyday. :txflag:
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Re: This Day In Texas History - July 14

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joe817 wrote: 1987 - On this date in 1987, Texas native George Strait scored a number one country with his song, All My Ex's Live in Texas
Has it been that long? :headscratch
That song is still going strong today.

I've been known to tap my foot to it a time or two. :mrgreen:
Last edited by USA1 on Wed Jul 14, 2010 3:42 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: This Day In Texas History - July 14

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budroux2w wrote::txflag:


p.s. I think the album/song is actually Ocean front property.
Another point for budroux2w ! :thumbs2:

I love it when you bust Joe on something. :lol:
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Re: This Day In Texas History - July 14

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joe817 wrote: 1879 - The state of Texas authorized selling state land for fifty cents an acre. Half the proceeds were to go for reduction of the public debt and half to pay into the Permanent School Fund, established in 1876. The state sold 3,201,283 for $1,600,641.55 in fifty-two West Texas counties. On January 22, 1883, the Fifty Cent Act was repealed as a public necessity resulting from fraudulent speculation in the land.
Boy oh boy...what I would give... :cryin
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Re: This Day In Texas History - July 14

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USA1 wrote:
budroux2w wrote: Another point for budroux2w ! :thumbs2:

I love it when you bust Joe on something. :lol:
:thumbs2:

pbwalker wrote:
joe817 wrote: 1879 - The state of Texas authorized selling state land for fifty cents an acre.
Boy oh boy...what I would give... :cryin
[/quote]

Oh no kidding! I might actually be able to afford some of that land!
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Re: This Day In Texas History - July 14

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USA1 wrote:
budroux2w wrote::txflag:


p.s. I think the album/song is actually Ocean front property.
Another point for budroux2w ! :thumbs2:

I love it when you bust Joe on something. :lol:
:totap: :grumble :bigmouth I weren't busted you ninny! I just didn't know no better! :smash: :rules:

(I'm more into Enya, Stevie Ray, and Beethoven than C&W) :rock"
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Re: This Day In Texas History - July 14

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joe817 wrote:
(I'm more into Enya, Stevie Ray, and Beethoven than C&W) :rock"
You go boy! :cheers2:
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Re: This Day In Texas History - July 14

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USA1 wrote:
joe817 wrote:
(I'm more into Enya, Stevie Ray, and Beethoven than C&W) :rock"
You go boy! :cheers2:
[in my best Elvis accent]:

Thank you. thank you vury mush.

Back in the 70's I was heavy into Willie, Ray Wylie, Jerry Jeff, Waylon.....you know TEXAS music. Not county, not rock...something in between. :txflag:

For an interesting read, and some of those names surprised me:

MUSIC OF TEXAS:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_of_Texas" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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Re: This Day In Texas History - July 14

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Texas country / red dirt is where it's at!

Saw ray wylie a few months ago and it was one of the best shows I've seen. If you like that style I know of a few newer bands from Texas that sing from their heart and makes for some good listenin.
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