This Day In Texas History - February 16
Posted: Sat Feb 16, 2019 10:49 am
1685 - French explorer Rene-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle, looking for the mouth of the Mississippi River, lands in Texas by mistake. He establishes a colony, Fort St. Louis, on Garcitas Creek in present-day Victoria County.
1836 - Jonathan Hampton (J. Hampton, Hamp) Kuykendall, riding overland from Matamoros, arrived at Goliad with news of Gen. Antonio López de Santa Anna's intention to subdue Texas by invading Texas in 3 divisions and was moving on Bexar. At great personal risk he escaped from Mexico to warn the colonists of their danger. His report to Col. James Walker Fannin was probably the first authentic news of the impending attack.
1836 - James Bonham was sent by Travis to obtain aid for the garrison at Bexar.
1846 - The First Legislature of the state of Texas convened with 20 senators and 66 representatives. Senators and representatives in the first legislature earned a compensation of $3 a day and had a mileage allowance of $3 for every 25 miles they traveled to and from the Capitol. The Democratic Party had the most members in the legislature. The Know-Nothing, or American Party, an anti foreign and anti-Catholic society, also had a presence in the legislature with about 20 representatives and five senators. During it's time in session, the first legislature elected the states' first two U.S. senators: Sam Houston and Thomas J. Rusk. The legislature was in session for three months and adjourned on May 13.
1852 - The Texas State government passed a bill that authorized the governor to negotiate with the federal government to create territory for Indian reservations in Texas.
1852 - A joint resolution was introduced into the Texas legislature proposing that Texas be divided into East Texas and West Texas, thus creating 2 States, but the measure was defeated by a vote of 33 to 15. The congressional joint resolution for the annexation of Texas, passed on March 1, 1845, provided that new states, not to exceed four, could be carved out of Texas, the new states to be entitled to admission to the Union, with or without slavery if south of the Missouri Compromise line, and without slavery if north of that line. There were many such proposals in Texas history.
1852 - The Texas Western Railroad Company, later to be know as the Texas & Pacific Railway, was chartered. The Texas and Pacific Railway Company was the only railroad in Texas, and one of the few in the United States, to operate under a federal charter.
1861 - Just two weeks before Texas seceded from the Union, a band of Texans led by Benjamin McCulloch, a veteran Texas Ranger and Mexican War hero and now colonel of Texas cavalry, led at least 500 volunteers into San Antonio, where they surrounded Twiggs and his headquarters garrison. Maj. Gen. David E. Twiggs, the commander of United States troops stationed in Texas, agreed to surrender all federal property in Texas and evacuate the 2,700 Union troops scattered in frontier forts throughout the state.
1871 - Texas received title to 180,000 acres of land in Colorado. The land was sold for seventy-five cents an acre and produced $156,000 that was then invested in 7 percent gold frontier defense bonds of Texas, which, with the discount, had a face value of $174,000. The state legislature approved a bill providing for the organization of the Texas Agricultural and Mechanical College on April 17, 1871, and appropriated $75,000 from those bonds, for the construction of academic buildings and suitable accommodations.
1877 - The Galveston, Harrisburg and San Antonio Railway reached San Antonio. Formerly named the Buffalo Bayou, Brazos and Colorado Railroad, the name and Charter were changed to lay rails to San Antonio instead of Austin (it's original destination). Within six years, the lines would extend to West Texas where it met up with the Southern Pacific Railroad near Langtry, becoming part of SP's New Orleans to Los Angeles "Sunset Limited" route.
1893 - Hattie Henenberg, associate justice of the state All-Woman Supreme Court, was born in Ennis, Texas, on February 16, 1893, to Samuel and Rosa (Trebitsch) Henenberg. Before she reached school age the family moved to Dallas, where she attended public schools. She studied law at the Dallas Law School (affiliated with Southern Methodist University), then gained admission to the Texas bar in 1916. When Governor Pat M. Neff sought qualified attorneys in 1925 for a special Supreme Court composed solely of women, he chose Hattie Henenberg to be a justice. After serving on the All-Woman Supreme Court and then in 1928 on the state Democratic party executive committee, she became a Texas assistant attorney general and held the post from 1929 to 1931.
1927 - Arthur Jerome Drossaerts was consecrated as the first archbishop of the Catholic Archdiocese of San Antonio in San Fernando de Béxar Cathedral. He kept the old Spanish missions alive and went without salary in order to assist poor parishes with expenses. During his tenure as archbishop, he dedicated about 134 churches and religious buildings.
1943 - Aloe Army Air Field, an advanced single-engine training field for fighter pilots, was opened in January 1943 on a 1,820-acre tract five miles southwest of Victoria. The field, named for a nearby railway station, became the new home of the Lake Charles Army Flying School from Lake Charles, Louisiana; Lt. Col. Charles B. Harvin was director. Using the North American AT-6 "Texas" and Curtis P-40 trainers, cadets were schooled in flying and in ground and aerial gunnery. The first class of pilots graduated on February 16, 1943. Soon after V-J Day the government made plans to reassign the field as a subpost of Foster Army Air Field, but both Aloe and Foster were closed on October 31, 1945. Aloe Field, with its 304 buildings, was transferred to Victoria County by the War Assets Administration in 1948, after which the site became Victoria County Airport. In 1960 the airport was moved to Foster Field, and Aloe returned to private ownership.
1949 - The body of Private Felix Longoria of Three Rivers, Texas, was buried in Arlington National Cemetery. Longoria had died in the Philippines near the end of World War II. When his recovered remains were sent to Three Rivers for burial, the funeral director refused the use of his chapel for a "Mexican." After action by the American G.I. Forum and Lyndon Johnson, Longoria was buried in Arlington. The affair provided a model case in the Mexican-American struggle for civil rights.
1836 - Jonathan Hampton (J. Hampton, Hamp) Kuykendall, riding overland from Matamoros, arrived at Goliad with news of Gen. Antonio López de Santa Anna's intention to subdue Texas by invading Texas in 3 divisions and was moving on Bexar. At great personal risk he escaped from Mexico to warn the colonists of their danger. His report to Col. James Walker Fannin was probably the first authentic news of the impending attack.
1836 - James Bonham was sent by Travis to obtain aid for the garrison at Bexar.
1846 - The First Legislature of the state of Texas convened with 20 senators and 66 representatives. Senators and representatives in the first legislature earned a compensation of $3 a day and had a mileage allowance of $3 for every 25 miles they traveled to and from the Capitol. The Democratic Party had the most members in the legislature. The Know-Nothing, or American Party, an anti foreign and anti-Catholic society, also had a presence in the legislature with about 20 representatives and five senators. During it's time in session, the first legislature elected the states' first two U.S. senators: Sam Houston and Thomas J. Rusk. The legislature was in session for three months and adjourned on May 13.
1852 - The Texas State government passed a bill that authorized the governor to negotiate with the federal government to create territory for Indian reservations in Texas.
1852 - A joint resolution was introduced into the Texas legislature proposing that Texas be divided into East Texas and West Texas, thus creating 2 States, but the measure was defeated by a vote of 33 to 15. The congressional joint resolution for the annexation of Texas, passed on March 1, 1845, provided that new states, not to exceed four, could be carved out of Texas, the new states to be entitled to admission to the Union, with or without slavery if south of the Missouri Compromise line, and without slavery if north of that line. There were many such proposals in Texas history.
1852 - The Texas Western Railroad Company, later to be know as the Texas & Pacific Railway, was chartered. The Texas and Pacific Railway Company was the only railroad in Texas, and one of the few in the United States, to operate under a federal charter.
1861 - Just two weeks before Texas seceded from the Union, a band of Texans led by Benjamin McCulloch, a veteran Texas Ranger and Mexican War hero and now colonel of Texas cavalry, led at least 500 volunteers into San Antonio, where they surrounded Twiggs and his headquarters garrison. Maj. Gen. David E. Twiggs, the commander of United States troops stationed in Texas, agreed to surrender all federal property in Texas and evacuate the 2,700 Union troops scattered in frontier forts throughout the state.
1871 - Texas received title to 180,000 acres of land in Colorado. The land was sold for seventy-five cents an acre and produced $156,000 that was then invested in 7 percent gold frontier defense bonds of Texas, which, with the discount, had a face value of $174,000. The state legislature approved a bill providing for the organization of the Texas Agricultural and Mechanical College on April 17, 1871, and appropriated $75,000 from those bonds, for the construction of academic buildings and suitable accommodations.
1877 - The Galveston, Harrisburg and San Antonio Railway reached San Antonio. Formerly named the Buffalo Bayou, Brazos and Colorado Railroad, the name and Charter were changed to lay rails to San Antonio instead of Austin (it's original destination). Within six years, the lines would extend to West Texas where it met up with the Southern Pacific Railroad near Langtry, becoming part of SP's New Orleans to Los Angeles "Sunset Limited" route.
1893 - Hattie Henenberg, associate justice of the state All-Woman Supreme Court, was born in Ennis, Texas, on February 16, 1893, to Samuel and Rosa (Trebitsch) Henenberg. Before she reached school age the family moved to Dallas, where she attended public schools. She studied law at the Dallas Law School (affiliated with Southern Methodist University), then gained admission to the Texas bar in 1916. When Governor Pat M. Neff sought qualified attorneys in 1925 for a special Supreme Court composed solely of women, he chose Hattie Henenberg to be a justice. After serving on the All-Woman Supreme Court and then in 1928 on the state Democratic party executive committee, she became a Texas assistant attorney general and held the post from 1929 to 1931.
1927 - Arthur Jerome Drossaerts was consecrated as the first archbishop of the Catholic Archdiocese of San Antonio in San Fernando de Béxar Cathedral. He kept the old Spanish missions alive and went without salary in order to assist poor parishes with expenses. During his tenure as archbishop, he dedicated about 134 churches and religious buildings.
1943 - Aloe Army Air Field, an advanced single-engine training field for fighter pilots, was opened in January 1943 on a 1,820-acre tract five miles southwest of Victoria. The field, named for a nearby railway station, became the new home of the Lake Charles Army Flying School from Lake Charles, Louisiana; Lt. Col. Charles B. Harvin was director. Using the North American AT-6 "Texas" and Curtis P-40 trainers, cadets were schooled in flying and in ground and aerial gunnery. The first class of pilots graduated on February 16, 1943. Soon after V-J Day the government made plans to reassign the field as a subpost of Foster Army Air Field, but both Aloe and Foster were closed on October 31, 1945. Aloe Field, with its 304 buildings, was transferred to Victoria County by the War Assets Administration in 1948, after which the site became Victoria County Airport. In 1960 the airport was moved to Foster Field, and Aloe returned to private ownership.
1949 - The body of Private Felix Longoria of Three Rivers, Texas, was buried in Arlington National Cemetery. Longoria had died in the Philippines near the end of World War II. When his recovered remains were sent to Three Rivers for burial, the funeral director refused the use of his chapel for a "Mexican." After action by the American G.I. Forum and Lyndon Johnson, Longoria was buried in Arlington. The affair provided a model case in the Mexican-American struggle for civil rights.