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Sam Houston
SHouston 2

5th Governor of Texas
In office
December 31, 1859[1] – March 28, 1861
Lieutenant Edward Clark
Preceded by Hardin Richard Runnels
Succeeded by Edward Clark

In office
February 26, 1846 – March 5, 1859
Preceded by None
Succeeded by John Hemphill

1st and 3rd President of the Republic of Texas
In office
December 21, 1841 – December 9, 1844
Vice President Edward Burleson
Preceded by Mirabeau B. Lamar
Succeeded by Anson Jones
In office
October 22, 1836 – December 10, 1838
Vice President Mirabeau B. Lamar
Preceded by David G. Burnet (ad interim)
Succeeded by Mirabeau B. Lamar

6th Governor of Tennessee
In office
October 1, 1827 – April 16, 1829
Lieutenant William Hall
Preceded by William Carroll
Succeeded by William Hall

Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Tennessee's 7th district
In office
March 4, 1823 – March 4, 1827
Preceded by None (district created)
Succeeded by John Bell

Born March 2, 1793(1793-03-02)
Rockbridge County, Virginia
Died July 26, 1863 (age 70)
Huntsville, Texas
Political party Democratic
Signature Sam Houston signature

Samuel "Sam" Houston (March 2, 1793 – July 26, 1863) was a nineteenth-century American statesman, politician, and soldier. He is best known for his leading role in bringing Texas into the United States.

He was born in Timber Ridge in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia, of Scots-Irish descent. Houston became a key figure in the history of Texas and was elected as the first and third President of the Republic of Texas, U.S. Senator for Texas after it joined the United States, and finally as a governor of the state. He refused to swear loyalty to the Confederacy when Texas seceded from the Union in 1861 with the outbreak of the American Civil War, and was removed from office.[2] To avoid bloodshed, he refused an offer of a Union army to put down the Confederate rebellion. Instead, he retired to Huntsville, Texas, where he died before the end of the Civil War.

His earlier life included migration to Tennessee from Virginia, time spent with the Cherokee Nation (into which he later was adopted as a citizen and into which he married), military service in the War of 1812, and successful participation in Tennessee politics. In 1827, Houston was elected Governor of Tennessee as a Jacksonian.[3] In 1829, Houston resigned as governor and relocated to Arkansas Territory.[4] In 1832, Houston was involved in an altercation with a U.S. Congressman, followed by a high-profile trial.[5]

Shortly afterwards, he relocated to Coahuila y Tejas, then a Mexican state, and became a leader of the Texas Revolution.[6] Sam Houston supported annexation by the United States.[7] When he assumed the governorship of Texas in 1859, Houston became the only person to have become the governor of two different U.S. states through direct, popular election, as well as the only state governor to have been a foreign head of state.

Namesake of the fourth largest city in the U.S., Houston's reputation was sufficiently large that he was honored in numerous ways after his death, among them: a memorial museum, four U.S. warships named USS Houston (AK-1, CA-80, CL81 and SSN-713), a U.S. Army base, a national forest, a historical park, a university and a prominent roadside statue outside of Huntsville.

Early life and family heritage[]

Houstonbirthplacemarker

Birthplace Marker in Rockbridge County, Virginia

Sam Houston was the son of Major Samuel Houston and Elizabeth Paxton. Houston's ancestry is often traced to his great-great grandfather Sir John Houston, who built a family estate in Scotland in the late seventeenth century. His second son John Houston emigrated to Ulster, Ireland, during the plantation period. Under the system of primogeniture, he did not inherit the estate. After several years in Ireland, John Houston emigrated in 1735 with his family to the North American colonies, where they first settled in Pennsylvania. As it filled with Lutheran German immigrants, Houston decided to move his family with other Scots-Irish who were migrating to lands in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia.[8] A historic plaque in Townland tells the story of the Houston family. It is located in Ballyboley Forest Park near the site of the original John Houston estate. It is dedicated to "One whose roots lay in these hills whose ancestor John Houston emigrated from this area."

The Shenandoah Valley had many farms of Scots-Irish migrants. Newcomers included the Lyle family of the Raloo area, who helped found Timber Ridge Presbyterian Church. The Houston family settled nearby. Gradually John developed his land and purchased slaves.[8] Their son Robert inherited his father's land. His youngest of five sons was Samuel Houston. Samuel Houston became a member of Morgan's Rifle Brigade and was commissioned a major during the American Revolutionary War. At the time militia officers were expected to pay their own expenses. He had married Elizabeth Paxton and inherited his father's land, but he was not a good manager and got into debt, in part because of his militia service.[8] Their children were born on his family's plantation near Timber Ridge Church, including Sam Houston on March 2, 1793, the fifth of nine children and the fifth son born: Children - Paxton 1783, Robert 1787, James 1788, John Paxton 1790 (first clerk of Izard County, Arkansas 1819-1838), Samuel 1793, William 1794, Isabella 1796, Mary Blair 1797, and Elizabeth Ann 1800.

Planning to move on as people did on the frontier to leave debts behind, the elder Samuel Houston patented land in Maryville the county seat of Blount Co.in East Tennessee near relatives. He died in 1807 before he could move with his family, and they moved on without him: Elizabeth taking their five sons and three daughters to the new state.[8] Having received only a basic education on the frontier, young Sam was 14 when his family moved to Maryville.[9] In 1809, at age 16, Houston ran away from home, because he was dissatisfied to work as a shop clerk in his older brothers' store.

He went southwest, where he lived for a few years with the Cherokee tribe led by Ahuludegi (also spelled Oolooteka) on Hiwassee Island, on the Hiwassee River above its confluence with the Tennessee. Having become chief after his brother moved west in 1809, Ahuludegi was known to the European Americans as John Jolly. He became an adoptive father to Houston, giving him the Cherokee name of Colonneh, meaning "the Raven".[10] Houston learned fluent Cherokee, while visiting his family in Maryville every several months. Finally he returned to Maryville in 1812, and at age 19, Houston founded a one-room schoolhouse in Knox county between Maryville and Knoxville.[8] This was the first school built in Tennessee, which had become a state in 1796.

War of 1812[]

In 1812 Houston reported to a training camp in Knoxville, Tennessee,[9] and enlisted in the 39th Infantry Regiment to fight the British in the War of 1812. By December of that year, he had risen from private to third lieutenant. At the Battle of Horseshoe Bend in March 1814, he was wounded in the groin by a Creek arrow. His wound was bandaged, and he rejoined the fight. When Andrew Jackson called on volunteers to dislodge a group of Red Sticks from their breastwork, Houston volunteered, but during the assault he was struck by bullets in the shoulder and arm. He returned to Maryville as a disabled veteran, but later took the army's offer of free surgery and convalesced in a New Orleans, Louisiana hospital.[11]

Houston became close to Jackson, who was impressed with him and acted as a mentor. In 1817 Jackson appointed him sub-agent in managing the business relating to Jackson's removal of the Cherokees from East Tennessee to a reservation in what is now Arkansas. He had differences with John C. Calhoun, then Secretary of War, who chided him for appearing dressed as a Cherokee at a meeting. More significantly, an inquiry was begun into charges related to Houston's administration of supplies for the Native Americans. Offended, he resigned in 1818.[12]

Tennessee politics[]

Following six months of study at the office of Judge James Trimble, Houston passed the bar examination in Nashville, after which he opened a legal practice in Lebanon, Tennessee.[13] In 1818 Houston was appointed as the local prosecutor in Nashville,[14] and was also given a command in the state militia.

In 1822 Houston was elected to the US House of Representatives for Tennessee, where he was a staunch supporter of fellow Tennessean and Democrat Andrew Jackson. He was widely considered to be Jackson's political protégé, although their ideas about appropriate treatment of Native Americans differed greatly. Houston was a Congressman from 1823 to 1827, re-elected in 1824. In 1827 he declined to run for re-election to Congress. Instead he ran for, and won, the office of governor of Tennessee, defeating the former governor, William Carroll. He planned to stand for re-election in 1829, but resigned after the dissolution of his first marriage.

Marriage, family, and religion[]

On January 22, 1829, at the age of 35, Houston married 19-year-old Eliza Allen, the daughter of the well-connected planter Colonel John Allen (1776–1833) of Gallatin, Tennessee, who was a friend of Andrew Jackson. Houston is believed to have loved the girl sincerely, but Eliza left him shortly after their marriage and publicly announced that he had sustained the "dreadful injury" of emasculation in the Creek War of 1814. Subsequent to Eliza's announcement, Houston resigned the governorship of Tennessee.[15] Neither Houston nor Eliza Allen ever discussed the reasons for their separation; speculation and gossip accredited their split to Eliza being in love with another man, though the aforementioned public announcement along with Houston's resignation allow for a clearer picture.[8] Houston seemed to care greatly for his wife's reputation and took great care to forestall any possible allegations of infidelity on their parts, writing to her father:

April 9, 1829
Mr. Allen, the most unpleasant & unhappy circumstance has just taken place in the family, & one that was entirely unnecessary at this time. Whatever had been my feelings or opinions in relation to Eliza at one time, I have been satisfied & it is now unfit that anything should be averted to....The only way this matter can now be overcome will be for us all to meet as tho it had never occurred, & this will keep the world, as it should ever be, ignorant that such thoughts ever were. Eliza stands acquitted by me. I have received her as a virtuous wife, & as such I pray God I may ever regard her, & trust I ever shall.
She was cold to me, and I thought did not love me. She owns that such was one cause of my unhappiness. You can judge how unhappy I was to think I was united to a woman that did not love me. This time is now past, & my future happiness can only exist in the assurance that Eliza and myself can be happy & that Mrs. Allen & you can forget the past, —forgive all & and find your lost peace & you may rest assured that nothing on my part shall be wanting to restore it. Let me know what is to be done.

Houston also requested that one of her relatives: "...publish in the Nashville papers that if any wretch ever dares to utter a word against the purity of Mrs. Houston I will come back and write the libel in his heart's blood."

In April 1829, in part due to the embarrassment of his well known separation, Houston resigned as governor of Tennessee and went west with the Cherokee to exile in Arkansas Territory. That year he was adopted as a citizen in the nation. There Houston married, in Indian tradition, with Tiana Rogers, daughter of Chief John Headman Hellfire Rogers (1740-1833) and Jennie Due (1764-1806), sister of Chief John Jolly who had adopted Houston into the Cherokee tribe. Tiana was the mixed-blood widow of David Gentry, Jr. in her mid-30s. She had two children from her previous marriage: Gabriel, born 1819 and Joanna, born 1822. She and Houston lived together for several years, and although he was still married to Eliza Allen under civil law, he married Tiana under the Cherokee law. Tiana and Sam had one known child: Margaret Lewis Head Houston, born 1830. Tiana is buried at Fort Gibson National Cemetery.[8] After declining to accompany Houston to Texas in 1832, she later married John McGrady. Houston officially divorced Eliza Allen in 1837; the following year 1838, Tiana died of pneumonia. (Eliza Allen remarried in 1840, becoming the wife of Dr. Elmore Douglass and stepmother to his 10 children; she bore him 4 children and died in 1861.)[16]

In 1833, in the living room of the Adolphus Sterne House in Nacogdoches, Houston was baptized into the Catholic faith in order to qualify under the existing law for property ownership in Coahuila y Tejas.[17][18][19]

On May 9, 1840, Houston, aged 47, married for a third time. The bride was 21-year-old Margaret Moffette Lea of Marion, Alabama. The union was far longer-lived than his two previous unions and produced eight children born between Houston's 50th and 67th years. Margaret Houston acted as a tempering influence on her much older husband and even convinced him to stop drinking. Although the Houstons had numerous houses, they kept only one continuously, Cedar Point (1840–1863) on Trinity Bay.

Samuel houston

Sam Houston, 1858

Their children were the following:

  • Sam Houston, Jr., 1843–1894
  • Nancy "Nannie" Elizabeth, 1846–1920 (named after her grandmothers)
Nannie married Joseph Clay Stiles Morrow.[20] Their daughter Margaret Houston Morrow was in attendance and introduced as "Mrs. Robert A. John" during Price Daniel's election as Speaker of the Texas House of Representatives.[21][22] Margaret and Robert's daughter Jean Houston John married Franklin T. Baldwin, and they were the parents of Texas First Lady Jean Houston Baldwin Daniel (1916-2002).[23]
  • Margaret Lea, 1848–1906
  • Mary William, 1850–1931
  • Antoinette Power, 1852–1932 (named after Margaret's sister)
  • Andrew Jackson Houston, 1854-1941 (U.S. Senator from Texas)
  • William Rogers, 1858–1920
  • Temple Lea Houston, 1860–1905 (named after Margaret's father) (state senator of Texas legislature, 1885–1888)

By 1854, Margaret had spent 14 years trying to convert Sam to the Baptist denomination. With the assistance of George Washington Baines, she was able to convince Sam. Word had spread about the upcoming Baptism, bringing spectators from neighboring communities into Independence to witness the event. On November 19, 1854, Sam was baptized in Little Rocky Creek, two miles southeast of Independence.[24][25] The baptismal site is marked by the Texas Historical Commission as located on Farm to Market Road 150 at Sam Houston Road.[26]

Indian Territory[]

In 1829, Houston went west and lived again among the Cherokee in the Arkansas Territory, who in October 1829 formally adopted him as a citizen of their nation.[12] He set up a trading post (Wigwam Neosho) near Fort Gibson, Cherokee Nation, by the Verdigris River near its confluence with the Arkansas. The Cherokee gave him a nickname "Golanv" meaning "The Raven."[27] During this time Houston was interviewed by the author Alexis de Tocqueville, who was traveling in the United States and its territories. Houston's abandonment of his gubernatorial office and his wife all caused a rift with his mentor President Jackson. They were not reconciled for several years.

Controversy and trial[]

In 1830 and 1833 Houston visited Washington, DC, to expose the frauds which government agents committed against the Cherokee.[12] While he was in Washington in April 1832, anti-Jacksonian Congressman William Stanbery of Ohio made accusations about Houston in a speech on the floor of Congress. Attacking Jackson through his protégé, Stanbery accused Houston of being in league with John Van Fossen and Congressman Robert S. Rose. The three men had bid on supplying rations to the various tribes of Native Americans who were being forcibly relocated because of Jackson's Indian Removal Act of 1830. After Stanbery refused to answer Houston's letters about the accusation, Houston confronted him on Pennsylvania Avenue and beat him with a hickory cane. Stanbery drew one of his pistols and pulled the trigger—the gun misfired.

On April 17 Congress ordered Houston's arrest. During his trial at the District of Columbia City Hall, he pleaded self-defense and hired Francis Scott Key as his lawyer. Houston was found guilty, but thanks to highly placed friends (among them James K. Polk), he was only lightly reprimanded. Stanbery filed charges against Houston in civil court. Judge William Cranch found Houston liable and assessed him $500 in damages. Houston left the United States for Mexico without paying the judgment.

Republic of Texas[]


Sam Houston at San Jacinto
Houston at the Battle of San Jacinto
SantaAnnaSurrender
The painting Surrender of Santa Anna by William Henry Huddle shows the Mexican general Santa Anna's surrender to a wounded Sam Houston. It hangs in the Texas State Capitol.
General Sam Houston, the hero of San Jacinto

General Sam Houston (postcard, circa 1905)

The publicity surrounding the trial raised Houston's unfavorable political reputation. He asked his wife, Tiana Rodgers, to go with him to Mexican Texas, but she preferred to stay at their cabin and trading post in Oklahoma. She later married a man named John McGrady and died of pneumonia in 1838. Houston married again after her death.

Houston left for Texas in December 1832 and was immediately swept up in the politics of what was still a territory of the Mexican state of Coahuila. One possible theory speculates that Houston traveled to Texas at the behest of President Jackson in order to facilitate a U.S. annexation of the territory, yet this contention has not been verified with supporting evidence.[28] Attending the Convention of 1833 as representative for Nacogdoches, Houston emerged as a supporter of William Harris Wharton and his brother, who promoted independence from Mexico, the more radical position of the American settlers and Tejanos in Texas. He also attended the Consultation of 1835. The Texas Army commissioned him as Major General in November 1835. He negotiated a peace settlement with the Cherokee of East Texas in February 1836 to allay their fears about independence. At the convention to declare Texan Independence in March 1836, he was made Commander-in-Chief.

On March 2, 1836, his 43rd birthday, Houston signed the Texas Declaration of Independence. Mexican soldiers killed all those at the Alamo Mission at the end of the Siege of the Alamo on March 6. On March 11, Houston joined what constituted his army at Gonzales: 374 poorly equipped, trained, and supplied recruits.[29][30] Word of the defeat at the Alamo reached Houston there, and while he waited for confirmation, he organized the recruits as the 1st Regiment Volunteer Army of Texas. On March 13, short on rations, Houston retreated before the superior forces of Mexican General Antonio López de Santa Anna. Heavy rain fell nearly every day, causing severe morale problems among the exposed troops struggling in mud. After four days' march, near present-day LaGrange, Houston received additional troops and continued east two days later with 600 men. At Goliad, Santa Anna ordered the execution of approximately 400 volunteer Texas militia led by James Fannin, who had surrendered his forces on March 20. Near present-day Columbus on March 26, they were joined by 130 more men, and the next day learned of the Fannin disaster.

Houston continued his retreat eastward towards the Gulf coast, drawing criticism for his perceived lack of willingness to fight. On March 29, camped along the Brazos River, two companies refused to retreat further, and Houston decided to use the opportunity for rudimentary training and discipline of his force. On April 2 he organized the 2nd Regiment, received a battalion of regulars, and on April 11 ordered all troops along the Brazos to join the main army, approximately 1,500 men in all. He began crossing the Brazos on April 12.

Finally, Santa Anna caught up with Houston's army, but had split his own army into three separate forces in an attempt to encircle the Texans. At the Battle of San Jacinto on April 21, 1836, Houston surprised Santa Anna and the Mexican forces during their afternoon "siesta." The Texans won a decisive victory in under 18 minutes, suffering few casualties, although Houston's ankle was shattered by a stray bullet. Badly beaten, Santa Anna was forced to sign the Treaty of Velasco, granting Texas its independence. Although Houston stayed on briefly for negotiations, he returned to the United States for treatment of his ankle wound.

Houston was twice elected president of the Republic of Texas. On September 5, 1836, he defeated Stephen F. Austin and Henry Smith with a landslide of over 79% of the vote. Houston then served from October 22, 1836, to December 10, 1838, and again from December 12, 1841, to December 9, 1844. On December 20, 1837, Houston presided over the convention of Freemasons that formed the Grand Lodge of the Republic of Texas, now the Grand Lodge of Texas. While he initially sought annexation by the U.S., Houston dropped that goal during his first term. In his second term, he strove for fiscal prudence and worked to make peace with the Native Americans. He also struggled to avoid war with Mexico, whose forces invaded twice during 1842. In response to the Regulator-Moderator War of 1844, he sent in Republic militia to put down the warfare.

Settlement of Houston[]

SamHoustonMarkerDowntownHouston

Marker on the Harris County Annex 2 Building in Downtown Houston, indicating the site where Sam Houston lived from 1837 to 1838

The settlement of Houston was founded in August 1836 by brothers J.K. Allen and A.C. Allen. It was named in Houston's honor and served as capital. Gail Borden helped lay out Houston's streets.

In 1835, one year before being elected first President of the Republic of Texas, Sam Houston founded the Holland Masonic Lodge. The initial founding of the lodge took place in Brazoria and was relocated to what is now Houston in 1837.[31]

The city of Houston served as the capital until President Mirabeau Lamar signed a measure that moved the capital to Austin on January 14, 1839. Between his presidential terms (the constitution did not allow a president to serve consecutive terms), Houston was a representative in the Texas House of Representatives for San Augustine. He was a major critic of President Mirabeau Lamar, who advocated continuing independence of Texas, annihilation of American Indians and the extension of Texas's boundaries to the Pacific Ocean.

U.S. Senator from Texas[]

Sam Houston by Mathew Brady

Sam Houston as a U.S. senator.

After the annexation of Texas by the United States in 1845, Houston was elected to the U.S. Senate, along with Thomas Jefferson Rusk. Houston served from February 21, 1846, until March 4, 1859. He was a Senator during the Mexican-American War, when the U.S. defeated Mexico and acquired vast expanses of new territory in the Southwest as part of the concluding treaty.

Throughout his term in the Senate, Houston spoke out against the growing sectionalism of the country. He blamed the extremists of both the North and South, saying: "Whatever is calculated to weaken or impair the strength of [the] Union,– whether originating at the North or the South,– whether arising from the incendiary violence of abolitionists, or from the coalition of nullifiers, will never meet with my unqualified approval."

Houston supported the Oregon Bill in 1848, which was opposed by many Southerners. In his passionate speech in support of the Compromise of 1850, echoing Matthew 12:25, Houston said "A nation divided against itself cannot stand."[32] Eight years later, Abraham Lincoln would express the same sentiment. Houston opposed the Kansas-Nebraska Act in 1854, and correctly predicted that it would cause a sectional rift in the country that would eventually lead to war, saying: " ... what fields of blood, what scenes of horror, what mighty cities in smoke and ruins– it is brother murdering brother ... I see my beloved South go down in the unequal contest, in a sea of blood and smoking ruin."[33] He was one of only two Southern senators (the other was John Bell of Tennessee) to vote against the act. At the time, he was considered a potential candidate for President of the United States. But, despite the fact that he was a slave-owner, his strong Unionism and opposition to the extension of slavery alienated the Texas legislature and other southern States.

Governor of Texas[]

Sam Houston by Elizabeth Ney

Bust of Houston by Elisabet Ney.

Houston ran twice for governor of Texas as a Unionist, unsuccessfully in 1857, and successfully against Hardin R. Runnels in 1859. Upon election, he became the only person elected to serve as governor of two U.S. states by popular vote. (Whereas Thomas McKean and John Dickinson had each served as chief executives of Delaware and then of Pennsylvania in the late 18th century, and other state governors had also served as governors of American territory, they achieved at least one of their positions by indirect election or appointment.)

Although Houston was a slave owner and opposed abolition, he opposed the secession of Texas from the Union. An elected convention voted to secede from the United States on February 1, 1861, and Texas joined the Confederate States of America on March 2, 1861. Houston refused to recognize its legality, but the Texas legislature upheld the legitimacy of secession. The political forces that brought about Texas's secession were powerful enough to replace the state's Unionist governor. Houston chose not to resist, stating, "I love Texas too well to bring civil strife and bloodshed upon her. To avert this calamity, I shall make no endeavor to maintain my authority as Chief Executive of this State, except by the peaceful exercise of my functions ... " He was evicted from his office on March 16, 1861, for refusing to take an oath of loyalty to the Confederacy, writing,

"Fellow-Citizens, in the name of your rights and liberties, which I believe have been trampled upon, I refuse to take this oath. In the name of the nationality of Texas, which has been betrayed by the Convention, I refuse to take this oath. In the name of the Constitution of Texas, I refuse to take this oath. In the name of my own conscience and manhood, which this Convention would degrade by dragging me before it, to pander to the malice of my enemies, I refuse to take this oath. I deny the power of this Convention to speak for Texas....I protest....against all the acts and doings of this convention and I declare them null and void.[34] "

He was replaced by Lieutenant Governor Edward Clark. To avoid more bloodshed in Texas, Houston turned down U.S. Col. Frederick W. Lander's offer from President Lincoln of 50,000 troops to prevent Texas's secession. He said, "Allow me to most respectfully decline any such assistance of the United States Government."

After leaving the Governor's mansion, Houston traveled to Galveston. Along the way, many people demanded an explanation for his refusal to support the Confederacy. On April 19, 1861 from a hotel window he told a crowd:

After the sacrifice of countless millions of treasure and hundreds of thousands of lives, you may win Southern independence if God be not against you, but I doubt it. I tell you that, while I believe with you in the doctrine of states rights, the North is determined to preserve this Union. They are not a fiery, impulsive people as you are, for they live in colder climates. But when they begin to move in a given direction, they move with the steady momentum and perseverance of a mighty avalanche; and what I fear is, they will overwhelm the South.[35]

Electoral history[]

1836 Texas Presidential Election
Party Candidate Votes Percentage
Independent Sam Houston 5,119 79.4%
Independent Henry Smith 743 11.5%
Independent Stephen F. Austin 587 9.1%

Later life[]

Sam Houston Grave

Sam Houston's grave in Huntsville, Texas.

In 1854, Houston was baptized by Rev. Rufus C. Burleson. At the time Burleson was the pastor of the Independence Baptist Church in Washington County, which Houston and his wife attended. Then the wealthiest community in Texas, Independence had won the bid for Baylor College, where Burleson served as second president.[36] Houston was also close friend of Rev. George Washington Baines, who preceded Burleson at the church. Baines was the maternal great-grandfather of President Lyndon B. Johnson.

In 1862, Houston returned to Huntsville, Texas, and rented the Steamboat House; the hills in Huntsville reminded him of his boyhood home in Tennessee. Houston was active in the Masonic Lodge, transferring his membership to Forrest Lodge #19. His health deteriorated in 1863 due to a persistent cough. In mid-July, Houston developed pneumonia. He died on July 26, 1863 at Steamboat House, with his wife Margaret by his side. His last recorded words were, "Texas! Texas! Margaret..."

The inscription on his tomb reads:

A Brave Soldier. A Fearless Statesman.
A Great Orator– A Pure Patriot.
A Faithful Friend, A Loyal Citizen.
A Devoted Husband and Father.
A Consistent Christian– An Honest Man.

Sam Houston was buried in Huntsville, Texas, where he lived in retirement.[37] After her death, his wife, Margaret Lea, was buried in Independence at her family's cemetery.[38]

Honors[]

  • Huntsville, Texas, is the home of the Sam Houston Memorial Museum, a 67 ft (20 m) statue, Sam Houston State University, and Houston's grave site. The statue is easily visible by motorists traveling on Interstate 45) and is also the title and subject of a country music song by Merle Haggard.
  • A bronze equestrian sculpture of Houston is located in Hermann Park in Houston, Texas This statue depicts Houston atop his horse with a single hand outstretched pointing directly towards San Jacinto.
  • The Sam Houston Wayside near Lexington, Virginia, is a 38,000-pound piece of Texas pink granite commemorating Houston's birthplace.
  • The Sam Houston Schoolhouse in Maryville, Tennessee, is Tennessee's oldest schoolhouse. In addition to the schoolhouse there is a museum on the grounds.
  • USS Sam Houston, an Ethan Allen class submarine, was named after Houston.
  • The Sam Houston National Forest, one of four national forests in Texas, was named after Houston.[39]
  • The Sam Houston Regional Library and Research Center, located outside of Liberty, Texas has the largest known collection of photographs and illustrations of Houston.
  • Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio, Texas, is named after Houston.
  • Many cities in the U.S. have a street, school, or park named for Houston; however, New York City's Houston Street is not named after Sam Houston. Instead, it is named after William Houstoun, and pronounced HOW-stin.
  • The State of Texas has placed a statue of Sam Houston inside Statuary Hall the United States Capitol.
  • The Sam Houston Coliseum (now demolished) in Houston, Texas, was named after Houston. The Beatles performed there in 1965.
  • There is a mural depicting Sam Houston on a gas tank near State Hwy 225 in Houston.[40]
  • Sam Houston High School,[41] in Lake Charles, Louisiana and in Arlington, Texas [42]
  • Sam Houston Middle School,[43] in Garland, Texas
  • Sam Houston Elementary Schools in Lebanon and Maryville, Tennessee; Eagle Pass, Huntsville, Conroe and Bryan,[44] Texas, and Houston, Texas [45]
  • A bust of Sam Houston is located inside the Virginia State Capitol Building in Richmond, Virginia
  • The eponymous cities in Texas, Mississippi, and Minnesota are named after Houston
  • A road encirling the city of Houston is named the Sam Houston Tollway
  • The song "SayHo" by Scott Miller is about Sam Houston
  • The State of Tennessee has a county (Erin, Tennessee is the county seat) named after Houston
  • In Texas, Houston County is named in honor of the renowned statesman. Its county seat is Crockett, Texas.
  • The County Seat of Texas County, Missouri is Houston, Missouri, named after Sam Houston.

Notes[]

  1. ^ Williams, John H. (1994), Sam Houston: Life and Times of Liberator of Texas an Authentic American Hero, New York, NY: Touchstone, p. 316, ISBN 0-671-88071-3 
  2. ^ Magazine article, The Biggest Texan: A Profile of Sam Houston, by Margaret Coit, Boys' Life Magazine, April 1963
  3. ^ Sam Houston's Wife: A Biography of Margaret Lea Houston, by William Seale, 1992, page 21
  4. ^ Representing Texas, by Ben R. Guttery, 2008, page 83
  5. ^ Sam Houston's Texas, by Sue Flanagan, 1964, page 6
  6. ^ Texas Cemeteries, by Bill Harvey, 2003, page 158
  7. ^ Our Nation's Archive: The History of the United States in Documents, by Erik A. Bruun, 1999, page 268
  8. ^ a b c d e f g James L. Haley, Sam Houston, Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 2004 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Haley" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Haley" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Haley" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Haley" defined multiple times with different content
  9. ^ a b Neely, Jack. Knoxville's Secret History, Scruffy City Publishing, 1995.
  10. ^ Samuel Houston from the Handbook of Texas Online
  11. ^ Neely, Jack, Knoxville's Secret History, Scruffy City Publishing, 1995
  12. ^ a b c Wikisource-logo Chisholm, Hugh, ed (1911). "Houston, Sam". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. 
  13. ^ "Lebanon, Tennessee: A Tour of Our City" (PDF). Lebanon/Wilson County Chamber of Commerce. http://www.wilsoncountycvb.com/images/tour.pdf. Retrieved February 5, 2007. 
  14. ^ Office History, Nashville District Attorney General
  15. ^ Empires, Nations, and Families p. 51
  16. ^ "Eliza Allen". WNPT.org. http://www.wnpt.org/productions/samhouston/people/eliza.html. Retrieved 2012-01-25. 
  17. ^ Ramos, Mary G; Reavis, Dick; Vandivier, Kevin (2004). Compass American Guides: Texas. Compass America Guides. p. 146. ISBN 978-0-676-90502-1. 
  18. ^ By
  19. ^ Haley (2004) pp. 104,105
  20. ^ Nannie Elizabeth Houston Morrow at Find A Grave
  21. ^ (12 January 1943) "Election of Speaker". Texas House Journal. 
  22. ^ Margaret H. Morrow John at Find A Grave
  23. ^ "Sam Houston Descendants". Sam Houston State University. http://www.shsu.edu/~smm_www/Genealogy2/fam00023.html. Retrieved 12 January 2013. 
  24. ^ Augustin, Byron; Pitts, William L. "Independence, Texas". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association. http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/hli03. Retrieved 9 March 2012. 
  25. ^ Seale (1992) 167-171
  26. ^ "THC-Houston baptismal site". Texas Historical Commission. http://atlas.thc.state.tx.us/viewform.asp?atlas_num=5477008421&site_name=Houston%2C%20Sam&class=5000. Retrieved 7 March 2012. 
  27. ^ Joseph McElroy, Jefferson Davis, p. 79
  28. ^ Thomas H. Kreneck, "HOUSTON, SAMUEL," Handbook of Texas Online [1], accessed March 07, 2012. [Paragraph 11.]
  29. ^ Helen Burleson Kelso, "BURLESON, EDWARD," Handbook of Texas Online [2], accessed March 07, 2012.
  30. ^ Thomas H. Kreneck, "HOUSTON, SAMUEL," Handbook of Texas Online [3], accessed March 07, 2012.
  31. ^ "Holland Masonic Lodge - History". HollandLodge.org. http://www.hollandlodge.org/hlfamous.htm. Retrieved 2012-01-25. 
  32. ^ http://www.shsu.edu/~pin_www/samhouston/PresAm.html
  33. ^ Burleson, Mrs. Georgia J. (1901). "Part IV. Addresses and Articles of Dr. Burleson: General Sam Houston: Address Delivered Before The Texas Legislature, March 2, 1893, At the Memorial Services of the One Hundredth Anniversary of the Birth of Gen. Sam Houston, and the Fifty-Seventh of Texas Independence". The Life and Writings of Rufus C. Burleson, D.D., LL.D.. p. 579. http://books.google.com/books?id=-U9AAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA579&f=false#v=onepage&q&f=false.  at Google Books
  34. ^ James l. Haley. Sam Houston. University of Oklahoma Press, 2004, pp. 390-91.
  35. ^ James l. Haley, Sam Houston, University of Oklahoma Press, 2004, p. 397
  36. ^ USA (2008-07-15). "General Sam Houston - Texas State Historical Marker, Independence, Texas". StoppingPoints.com. http://www.stoppingpoints.com/texas/sights.cgi?marker=General+Sam+Houston&cnty=washington. Retrieved 2012-01-25. 
  37. ^ Find A Grave: Sam Houston. Retrieved 2012-10-01.
  38. ^ Find A Grave: Margaret Moffette Lea Houston. Retrieved 2012-10-01.
  39. ^ "Sam Houston National Forest". US Forest Service. Archived from the original on 2010-12-06. http://web.archive.org/web/20101206071547/http://www.fs.fed.us/r8/texas/recreation/sam_houston/samhouston_gen_info.shtml. Retrieved 2012-01-25. 
  40. ^ "Sam Houston mural". Flickr.com. 2008-03-03. http://www.flickr.com/photos/shannonstoney/sets/72157604042665290/. Retrieved 2012-01-25. 
  41. ^ http://samhouston.cpsb.org
  42. ^ "Sam Houston High School". Aisd.net. http://www.aisd.net/sam/. Retrieved 2012-01-25. 
  43. ^ "Garland ISD: Sam Houston Middle School". Garlandisdschools.net. 2011-09-19. http://www.garlandisdschools.net/page.cfm?p=563. Retrieved 2012-01-25. 
  44. ^ "Houston Elementary School, Bryan, Texas". Bryanisd.org. 2005-06-22. http://bryanisd.org/school.asp?schoolID=18. Retrieved 2012-01-25. 
  45. ^ http://www.galenaparkisd.com/campuspages/sam/index.htm

See also[]

  • Joshua Houston
  • History of slavery in Texas

References[]

The following are reference sources (alphabetical by author):

Further reading[]

  • Campbell, Randolph B.; Handlin, Oscar (1993), Sam Houston and the American Southwest, HarperCollins, ISBN 978-0-06-500688-9 
  • De Bruhl, Marshall (1993), Sword of San Jacinto: A Life of Sam Houston, Random House, ISBN 978-0-394-57623-7 
  • Haley, James L. (2004), Sam Houston, University of Oklahoma Press, ISBN 978-0-8061-3644-8 
  • James, Marquis (1988), The Raven: A Biography of Sam Houston, University of Texas Press, ISBN 978-0-292-77040-9 
  • Williams, John Hoyt (1993), Sam Houston: A Biography of the Father of Texas, Simon & Schuster, ISBN 978-0-671-74641-4 
  • Williams, John Hoyt (1994), Sam Houston: The Life and Times of the Liberator of Texas, an Authentic American Hero, Simon and Schuster, ISBN 978-0-671-88071-2 
  • John F. Kennedy: Profiles in Courage, 1956

External links[]

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United States House of Representatives
Preceded by
(none)
Member of the U.S. House of RepresentativesWp globe tiny
from Tennessee's 7th congressional districtWp globe tiny

March 4, 1823 – March 4, 1827
Succeeded by
John Bell
Political offices
Preceded by
William Carroll
Governor of Tennessee
1827–1829
Succeeded by
William Hall
Preceded by
David G. Burnet
(ad interim)
President of the Republic of Texas
1836–1838
Succeeded by
Mirabeau B. Lamar
Preceded by
Mirabeau B. Lamar
President of the Republic of Texas
1841–1844
Succeeded by
Anson Jones
Preceded by
Hardin R. Runnels
Governor of Texas
1859–1861
Succeeded by
Edward Clark
United States Senate
Preceded by
None
United States Senator (Class 2) from Texas
February 21, 1846 – March 4, 1859
Served alongside: Thomas J. Rusk, J. Pinckney Henderson and Matthias Ward
Succeeded by
John Hemphill

Template:TXPresidents


Persondata
NAME Houston, Sam
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION American politician
DATE OF BIRTH March 2, 1793
PLACE OF BIRTH Rockbridge County, Virginia
DATE OF DEATH July 26, 1863
PLACE OF DEATH Huntsville, Texas


This page uses content from the English language Wikipedia. The original content was at Sam Houston. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with this Familypedia wiki, the content of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons License.
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