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The Wild West, 1874-1887
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Richard Coke
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Timeline
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January 15, 1874 -
December 1, 1876
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Born: March 13, 1829 in Williamsburg, Virginia
Early Career: Coke graduated from the College of William and Mary
and began practicing law before moving to Waco, Texas in 1850. In
1859 he was a member of a commission which removed the Brazos Reservation
Indians to the Indian Territory. After serving in the Secession
Convention of 1861, Coke rose in the ranks of the Confederate Army
from private to captain. In 1865 he was appointed district judge,
and in 1866 was elected Supreme Court justice, but was removed by
General Philip Sheridan in 1867 as an "impediment to reconstruction."
In 1873, Coke won the governor's chair over E.J. Davis. Several
tense days in January 1874 saw the state capitol turned into an
armed camp, with two rival legislatures, as Davis refused to surrender
his office. When President U.S. Grant would not support Davis' request
for troops, Davis conceded and Coke was inaugurated.
Accomplishments: During Coke's term in office, he faced a state
government which was in debt and without funds, an unprotected frontier,
and problems with Indians and Mexican bandits. Coke reduced expenditures
and made a new beginning of the public school system. He was reelected
in 1876 after the Constitution of 1876 had returned the governor's
term of office to two years. Later the same year, he was elected
to the U.S. Senate, and so resigned the governorship on December
1, 1876.
Later years: Coke served three terms in the Senate (1877-1895)
and died in Waco on May 14, 1897.
Handbook
of Texas article
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Jan
17 1874
Reconstruction ends in Texas
Jun 27 1874
Quanah Parker and Lone Wolf defeated at Adobe Walls trading post
Aug 30 1874
First battle of Red River War, which eventually broke Indian power
in the Panhandle
Sept 28 1874
Defeat of south Plains Indians at Battle of Palo Duro Canyon, south
of Amarillo
Sep 16 1875
Hurricane destroys port of Indianola
Luther Burbank pioneers crossbreeding
in agriculture
Feb 15 1876
Present state constitution is adopted
Jun 22 1876
Santa Anna dies of old age in Mexico City
U.S. Centennial
Battle of Little Bighorn
Twain's Adventures of Tom Sawyer
Oct 4 1876
Agricultural and Mechanical College (later Texas A&M) opens
Nov 7 1876
Texas Rangers end the "Hoodoo War" in Mason County, a
blood feud that had killed 18 people
Alexander Graham Bell invents the
telephone
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Letter from a grieving
father about John Wesley Hardin and other "desperados"
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Letter from Brownwood asking
for a restriction on the carrying of six-shooters
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Richard B. Hubbard
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Timeline
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December 1, 1876 -
January 21, 1879
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Born: November 1, 1832 in Georgia
Early Career: Hubbard graduated from Mercer College (1851) and
Harvard Law School (1853). Hubbard then moved to Texas and began
practicing law in Tyler. While campaigning for James Buchanan in
the presidential election of 1856, Hubbard's oratorical skill earned
him the nickname of "the Demosthenes of Texas." He was appointed
U.S. district attorney for the Western District of Texas in 1858,
and elected state representative in 1859. After serving as a colonel
in the Confederate Army, Hubbard farmed until he could resume his
law practice upon being pardoned. He was elected Richard Coke's
lieutenant governor in 1873 and 1876. When Coke resigned in December
1876 to become U.S. Senator, Hubbard became governor and served
out his term.
Accomplishments: No legislatures met during this period. Besides
an enormous public debt, Hubbard had to contend with renewed feuding
and outlawry in the state. Other issues included the penitentiary
lease system, the rise of the Grange and the Greenback Party, and
the first experiments with the party primary. Hubbard received a
majority of votes for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination in
July 1878, but did not receive a two-thirds majority. He was passed
over in favor of the compromise candidate, Oran Roberts.
Later years: President Grover Cleveland appointed Hubbard U.S.
minister to Japan from 1885-1889. In 1899, Hubbard's book The
United States and the Far East was published. He died in Tyler
in 1901.
Handbook
of Texas article
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Ku Klux Klan terrorism across the
South
Feb 16 1877
First train service to San Antonio
Jun 18 1877
Charles Goodnight establishes first ranch in Panhandle
Chief Joseph's
Nez Perce defeated in Idaho
Sep 1877
Months of mob violence begin over salt mining rights in the El Paso
Salt War
Great Railroad Strike
Root beer invented
Jim Crow laws
in the South
Edison invents the phonograph
Jul 21 1878
Outlaw Sam Bass killed by Texas Rangers in Round Rock
Yellow fever epidemic throughout
the South
Lumber business begins to clear the
forests of the Midwest and West
Oct 11 1878
Outlaw Bill Longley, killer of 32 men, hanged in Giddings
Cheyenne finally defeated in Dull
Knife campaign in Wyoming
Carnegie consolidates steel industry
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Telegrams on a riot at
Sandy Point near Houston
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Letter on the 1877 troubles
that almost led to war with Mexico
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Oran M. Roberts
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Timeline
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January 21, 1879 -
January 16, 1883
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Born: July 1815 in South Carolina
Early Career: Roberts was raised in Alabama from the age of three.
By the time he graduated in 1836, he was librarian of the University
of Alabama. Roberts was admitted to the bar the next year, and served
a term in the Alabama Legislature. In 1841 Roberts moved to San
Augustine, Texas, where he became district attorney (1844) and district
judge (1846-1851). He was a member of the board of trustees and
the faculty of the University of San Augustine when he was appointed
to the Supreme Court of Texas (1857). Roberts was elected president
of the Secession Convention of 1861, led an infantry regiment during
the Civil War, and briefly served as chief justice of the Supreme
Court (1864-1865). After serving in the Constitutional Convention
of 1866, he was elected to the U.S. Senate, but was refused his
seat by that radical Republican body. Roberts practiced law in Tyler
and Gilmer until he was reappointed to the Supreme Court in 1874.
In 1878 Roberts was unanimously chosen candidate for governor by
the Democratic state convention after a week of deadlocked ballots.
Accomplishments: His motto was "pay as you go," and to reduce the
state debt inherited from the Davis and other administrations, he
reduced pensions to veterans of the Revolution. Roberts also discontinued
the payment of rewards for capture of criminals, liberally granted
pardons to relieve the overcrowded prisons, and reduced appropriations
for the public school system to save money. Despite this latter
measure, he helped found two normal schools (Sam Houston State and
Prairie View), revitalized Texas A&M, and helped create the University
of Texas, where classes began in 1883. An unexpected added expense
was the need to build a new state capitol building after the old
one burned in 1881.
Later years: After his second gubernatorial term ended in 1883,
Roberts taught law at the University of Texas for ten years. In
addition to writing several books, he helped create and lead the
Texas State Historical Association. Roberts died in Austin on May
19, 1898.
Handbook
of Texas article
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Edison invents lightbulb
Uncle Remus stories published
Bicycling becomes popular
Mar 15 1881
Agents for the Texas & Pacific railroad create the town of Abilene
May 31 1881
Fort Griffin, once headquarters for buffalo skinners, is abandoned
Jul 2 1881
President Garfield shot; dies of his wounds Sep 19
Booker T. Washington
founds Tuskeegee Institute
Clara Barton
founds Red Cross
Nov 19 1881
Texas state capitol building burns to the ground
Dec 16 1881
Texas & Pacific Railway reaches West Texas and joins Southern
Pacific tracks, forming second transcontinental railroad
Tuberculosis bacillus discovered
Rockefeller organizes Standard Oil
Trust
Electric fan invented
Strikes in iron and steel industry
Jul 25 1882
Judge Roy Bean opens the Jersey Lilly in Langtry, first saloon west
of the Pecos
Nov 28 1882
Norris Wright Cuney organizes black longshoremen in Galveston
Mass immigration from Europe
Boxing becomes popular
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Proclamation convening
the Board of Regents for the University of Texas
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Letter from detective offering
to hunt down the Sam Bass gang
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John Ireland
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Timeline
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January 16, 1883 -
January 18, 1887
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Born: January 1, 1827 in Kentucky
Early Career: While in his 20s, Ireland was constable and deputy
sheriff of his home county, and he studied law. In 1853 he moved
to Seguin, Texas, where he was elected mayor in 1858. After serving
in the Secession Convention of 1861, he joined the Confederate army
where he rose in rank from private to lieutenant colonel. Ireland
was a delegate to the Constitutional Convention of 1866, and a district
judge until removed by General Philip Sheridan as "an impediment
to reconstruction" (1867). In 1872 he was elected to the Texas
House of Representatives, and in 1874 to the Texas Senate. While
legislator (and later as governor), Ireland was known as "Ox Cart
John" for his opposition to railroad subsidies on the grounds of
their encouraging monopoly and privilege. He was briefly a Supreme
Court justice until the Constitution of 1876 eliminated his seat.
He was then defeated in a race for U.S. Senate (1876) and again
in a race for U.S. House of Representatives (1878). Ireland won
the gubernatorial race in 1882 over strong opposition from the Independent
candidate George W. "Wash" Jones.
Accomplishments: As governor, Ireland reversed Oran Roberts' policy
of rapid sale of public lands, arguing instead for a minimum price
and sale to the highest bidder. The proceeds from these sales went
into permanent funds for public schools, the state university, and
state institutions. The constitution was amended to provide school
districts with taxing power, and a state superintendent of education
was created. Ireland reduced the number of pardons, and called a
special session of the legislature in 1884 to deal with the fence-cutting
war. That same year, Ireland was reelected by a greater margin
than before. Ireland's suggestion to establish a railroad commission
failed to pass and he had to contend with strikes by the Knights
of Labor in 1885 and 1886. He refused to sign a contract to rebuild
the capitol unless native Texas stone was used.
Later years: Upon retirement in 1887, Ireland unsuccessfully ran
for the U.S. Senate against John H. Reagan. He then resumed the
practice of law in Seguin. Ireland died in San Antonio on March
15, 1896.
Handbook
of Texas article
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Brooklyn
Bridge opens
Krakatoa
volcanic explosion
Jul 4 1883
World's first rodeo held in Pecos
Twain's Life on the Mississippi
Pyle's The
Merry Adventures of Robin Hood
Sep 15 1883
University of Texas opens
Ladies' Home Journal founded
Stevenson's Treasure Island
Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show
1884
Fence-cutting wars lead to end of the open range
Twain's The
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
Washington Monument
completed
Burton's Arabian
Nights
First self-service
restaurant in New York City
Gilbert and
Sullivan's The Mikado
European colonization of Africa
Karl Benz builds motor cars in Germany
Aug 19-21 1886
Indianola destroyed a second time by hurricane and fire; town abandoned
Gottlieb Daimler builds motorcycles
in Germany
Statue of Liberty erected
Stevenson's Dr. Jekyll and Mr.
Hyde and Kidnapped
Haymarket Riot
American Federation of Labor founded
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Photo of Ireland and
other notables in front of the temporary Texas State Capitol
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Letter from the Adjutant
General on the fence-cutting wars
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Message to the legislature
on the new State Capitol
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