120th Annual Meeting 120th Annual Meeting

Transcription

120th Annual Meeting 120th Annual Meeting
1120th
20th Annual
Annual Meeting
Meeting
March
M
arch 3-5,
3-5, 2016
2016
Omni
O
mni Mandalay
Mandalay Hotel
Hotel at
at Las
Las Colinas
Colinas
Annual Meeting Sponsors
Gold
Frost Bank
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Silver
Nancy and Ted Paup
Session Sponsor
Center for Greater Southwestern Studies,
University of Texas Arlington
Crinkstuff
Margaret Furse
Texas Supreme Court Historical Society
7H[DV*HQHUDO/DQG2I¿FH
Texas Folklore Society
Graduate Student Mixer
Nancy and Ted Paup
Presidential Reception
Bud Light/Silver Eagle Distributers
Texas Independence Relay Reception
Nancy and Ted Paup
Women in Texas History Luncheon
Frances B. Vick
Ellen C. Temple
Platinum
Dr. John Parker
Exhibitors
Abigail Press
Adobe Book Collection
Cradleboard Ranch
Craig Hokenson Bookseller
Crinkstuff
Galvan Creek Postcards
Hill College Press
Heritage Auctions
Lone Star Chapter APG
Marian Barber
Southern Methodist University William P.
Clements Center for Southwest Studies
Southern Methodist University DeGoyler
Library
TCU Press
Texas A&M University Press
Texas State Genealogical Society
Texas Tech University Press
The Book Collector
The Dust Jacket
University of New Mexico Press
University of North Texas Libraries
University of North Texas Press
University of Oklahoma Press
University of Texas Press
William Allison Books
TSHA is Proudly Supported by
Bank of America Global
Advisory Council
Mr. James Bertz
Mr. John C. Britt
Broadway Bank
Mr. J. P. Bryan, Jr.
Mr. H. Scott Caven, Jr.
Mr. James H. Clement, III
Communities Foundation of
Texas
Mr. Peter Coneway
Mr. & Mrs. John Connally
Mr. Stephen C. Cook
Mr. Ross Crampton
Mr. Oliver W. Crinkelmeyer
Mr. Stewart Cureton
Dodge Jones Foundation
The Elkins Foundation
Ms. Caroline Forgason
Mr. and Mrs. Tim J. Goff
Ms. Elizabeth GreenwadeQualls
Mr. Ed Grusnis
Dr. Carlos R. Hamilton, Jr.
Mr. M. Hauser
Heritage Auctions, Inc.
Mrs. Sarita A. Hixon
Houston Endowment Inc.
Humanities Texas
Inman Foundation
Chief Justice Wallace Jefferson
The Kayser Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. John J. Lendrum,
III
Locke Lord, LLP
Mr. and Mrs. Red McCombs
Mr. and Mrs. John McStay
Mr. George Morris
National Christian Foundation
Mr. John L. Nau, III
Mr. Patrick C. Oxford
Dr. John M. Parker
Ms. Kate Paxton
The Honorable and Mrs.
Thomas R. Phillips
Texas Presbyterian Foundation
The Rees-Jones Foundation
Ms. Sarah Reveley
Summerfield G. Roberts
Foundation
Smithsonian Institution
Strake Foundation
The Summerlee Foundation
T. L. L. Temple Foundation
Texas Capital Bank
Texas Presbyterian Foundation
Mr. Ralph B. Thomas
The University of Texas at
Austin
Mr. Julio C. Villarreal Trevino
Mr. John B. Walker
Dr. William R. Weaver
The Gil and Dody Weaver
Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. William P. Wright
Jr.
Cover photo provided by Omni Mandalay Hotel at Las Colinas
Welcome to the 120th Annual Meeting
N
ow is the time to make plans to gather at the Omni Mandalay Hotel in Las Colinas,
in Irving, for the Texas State Historical Association’s 120th Annual Meeting.
The past year has been a transformative one for the organization in several areas.
Most importantly, TSHA returned to The University of Texas at Austin, where the
Association was founded in 1897 and operated for 108 years. We are grateful for the
effort led by Past-President John Nau and Board member Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison
with assistance from the Association Board, members and friends state-wide. The
announcement was celebrated jointly by the University of Texas and TSHA on May 8
in the Governor’s Reception Room at the Capitol. CEO Brian Bolinger and many of the
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and at Lake Austin Boulevard. I hope you will join me in extending a welcome to our
newest staff members, including Handbook Managing Editor Brett Derbes and Director
of Development Collin Acock.
Equally exciting is our renewed partnership with the History Department at UT.
The TSHA Chief Historian will be a tenured member of the faculty, continuing our
commitment to ensure the highest academic standards for programming and publications.
As I write this letter, the search for the Chief Historian is actively in progress. Randolph
B. Campbell, Regent’s Professor of History at the University of North Texas and the
inaugural Lone Star Chair, will continue as Chief Historian through August 2016 to
ensure a smooth transition. We owe a huge debt of gratitude to Mike for his careful
stewardship and dedication to the mission of TSHA.
I am also pleased to share that the Summerlee Foundation Chair in Texas History has
been established in the History Department to support the work of the Chief Historian.
This important milestone will be publically announced and formally hosted by University
of Texas President, Gregory L. Fenves on December 14. The sustained leadership by the
Summerlee Foundation in supporting Texas history and the TSHA is extraordinary. Their
gift, in concert with the leadership donations which established the original Lone Star
Chair, ensures the pivotal role of the Chief Historian as a productive scholar.
TSHA Press published several important books this year, including Wests of Texas by
Bruce M. Shackelford, now in its second printing. The Southwestern Historical Quarterly
remains the scholarly journal-of-record for Texas History and this year received the
Michael P. Malone Prize from the Western History Association for the best article on
state history in North America. The 2016-17 Texas Almanac is hot off the press and
brimming with current data about Texas in addition to special articles on Texas foodways
and the growing Texas wine industry. Thanks to the assistance of the 84th Texas
Legislature, we are now able to offer free digital copies of this widely used reference.
The Handbook of Texas Online continues to grow bigger and better with the passage of
time. Additional visual content is now incorporated and the Handbook staff continually
works to add additional content layers. The latest Handbook spinoff, The Handbook of
Texas Music, is now available on-line with the exciting added feature of supplementary
audio clips. At the Annual Meeting we will formally announce the Handbook of
Tejano History, which has been a year in the making. The latest spinoff project—the
Handbook of Houston History—is well underway.
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Our innovative programs for teachers and students at all levels support the Association’s
mission to ensure that the next generation of Texans will appreciate our state’s rich
and unique history. Newest among them is Texas Talks, a live web cast series featuring
scholarly presentations on diverse Texas history topics. Members can also access the
edited archives of each talk. The state-wide History Day competition continues to
produce budding scholars. Eleven students from Texas went on to win top honors at the
36th Annual National History Day, a five day history event for students in grades six
through twelve. Top awards included two First Place, two Second Place, and one Third
Place finish for our student participants.
This year’s program committee has once again done an outstanding job. Forty sessions
will explore virtually every topic and era of Texas history. Sessions on military, political,
religious, legal, labor, medical, environmental, business, sports, and Borderlands history
offer topics for everyone. No fewer than ten sessions focus on Spanish, Mexican, or
Tejano history. Seven sessions are devoted all or in part to women’s history. African
American history, slavery, or civil rights are the subjects of ten sessions. There are
sessions on the Texas Revolution and Republic, the Mexican War, the Civil War,
Reconstruction, and the cattle industry. Joint sessions with many other organizations
round out our program.
Special events begin on Thursday, March 3 with the Women in Texas History Luncheon,
when the Liz Carpenter Award will be presented. On Thursday evening, the Presidential
Reception will welcome incoming TSHA President Stephen C. Cook. On Friday, March
4, the Fellows Luncheon and Awards Banquet provides an opportunity to celebrate new
scholarly publications in Texas history. That evening I will address you one last time as
President at the Presidential Banquet.
Highlights of this year’s meeting are an Appraisal Fair by Heritage Auctions and the
addition of the Texas Booksellers Association to the Exhibit Hall. Throughout the
meeting you can place bids in the Silent Auction, which includes private tours, rare
books, maps, and unique objects. Publications by some of the region’s leading publishers
of history and from rare book dealers will be for sale in the Exhibit Hall. Thank you to
our TSHA staff who consistently do a stellar job in planning and executing the meeting.
Please note the generous support provided to TSHA and the Annual Meeting by our
sponsors, whose names are listed on the preceding page. We also appreciate the support
of our long-time members and the new members who are joining at unprecedented
rates. As we enjoy the company of colleagues and long-standing friends in Irving, please
welcome and introduce yourself to new members and first time meeting participants.
Thank you for your membership in TSHA and for attending the Annual Meeting. I
hope you enjoy the sessions, the special events, the exhibit hall and the camaraderie
that suffuses the gathering, and may this 120th assembly be a source of inspiration and
renewed commitment to the study of Texas History.
With Texas Pride,
P. Lynn Denton
TSHA President
2
Dear TSHA Members and Friends,
W
e are proud to present the 120th consecutive Annual Meeting of the oldest learned
society in Texas. Since 1897, TSHA has fostered the appreciation, understanding,
and teaching of the rich and unique history of Texas. It is our hope that attendees will
create connections and conversations that will continue after the meeting ends.
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DWWHQGHGP\¿UVW$QQXDO0HHWLQJODVW0DUFK,PHWQXPHURXVSHRSOHKHDUGLQQRYDWLYH
UHVHDUFKDQGZLWQHVVHG¿UVWKDQGWKHHQWKXVLDVPIRU7H[DVKLVWRU\WKDWKDVNHSWWKLV
association active for 120 years. In response to that passion for Texas history, TSHA has
initiated new programs, launched the Handbook of Texas Music, produced the Texas
Almanac 2016-2017, added much new content to the Members Only Digital Library,
and will introduce two new books in early 2016. You can expect many new faces at the
Annual Meeting, due to the unprecedented number of new members who have joined
TSHA this year.
In Corpus Christi, we announced that TSHA would move to The University of Texas
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appreciate the loyal staff who moved with us and the new hires who bring a fresh
enthusiasm to the Association. We express special thanks to The University of Texas for
welcoming us home.
With a collection of diverse and original topics for the sessions and events this year, the
Annual Meeting will be the perfect place to renew your interest in Texas history. I am
grateful for the leadership of President Lynn Denton and the Board of Directors for their
support and encouragement. Finally, I want to thank the members of TSHA for keeping
interest in Texas history alive and thriving.
I am excited to attend my second Annual Meeting with TSHA. I look forward to seeing
everyone from last year and building new relationships this year. See you in Irving!
With Texas Pride,
Brian A. Bolinger
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The Association is grateful to the Local Arrangements Committee and the Program
Committee for their commitment and assistance with putting together a great Annual
Meeting.
Local Arrangements Committee
Debbie Liles
Sam Ratcliffe
Matthew Babcock
Gregg Cantrell
Ben Husemen
Program Committee
Virginia Bernhard, Chair
Armando Alonzo
James Crisp
Victoria Cummins
Sean Cunningham
Glen Ely
Patrick Foley
Jody E. Ginn
Kenneth Hafertepe
Nancy Baker Jones
Cynthia Orozco
Guadalupe San Miguel
Mark Stanley
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Travel Discounts and Directions
Hotel Reservations
TSHA Annual Meeting guests wishing to stay at the Omni Mandalay Hotel at Las
Colinas at a discounted event rate may make reservations online or by phone.
For phone reservations call (972) 556-0800 and mention you are with TSHA. To make
reservations online go to http://www.omnihotels.com/meetings/group-landing-page and
use the group code 13700110653.
The group rate is $165.00 per night and will be available until February 10.
Driving Directions from DFW Airport
Take the North exit to the TX-114 East (to Dallas). Follow TX-114 East to the O´Connor
exit. Turn left on O´Connor, and go 2 blocks. Make a right turn onto Las Colinas
Boulevard. Omni Mandalay Hotel at Las Colinas will be on the left.
Driving Directions from Love Field Airport
Exit the airport and turn right on Mockingbird Lane. Take Mockingbird Lane to TX-183
West. Take the right fork in the road (toward Irving/Grapevine). Exit O’Connor (TX-114
:HVW$WWKH¿UVWOLJKWWDNHDULJKWRQ/DV&ROLQDV%RXOHYDUG2PQL0DQGDOD\+RWHODW
Las Colinas will be on the left.
Driving Directions from the South via I-35 North
Take I-35E north. Merge onto TX-183 West. Then take TX-114 West. Turn right off the
exit to O’Connor Road. Make a right on Las Colinas, and Omni Mandalay Hotel at Las
Colinas will be on the left.
Parking Options
Covered self-parking is complimentary, based on availability.
Valet Parking fee $18 daily.
Alternate parking is available across the street at Mandalay Tower for $5.
Transportation
The hotel is conveniently located just 10-15 minutes from Dallas-Fort Worth Airport or
Love Field. Estimated taxi fare is $25 per person one way.
Guests can also ride the new DART Orange Line from DFW Airport Station to the Las
Colinas area. DART fare is approximately $2.50 one way.
4
Meeting Room Floor Plans
Mandalay Lake Level
Enjolie
Nepal
Rhapsody
Mandalay Lobby Level
Andaman
Las Colinas Ballrooom
Las Colinas Boardroom
Mandalay Ballroom
Martaban
Rangoon
5
Hotel Directory
Annual Meeting
Registration
Mandalay Lobby
Level
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
8:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.
7:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m.
8:00 a.m. – 10:00 a.m.
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
10:00 a.m. – 5:30 p.m.
8:00 a.m. – 5:30 p.m.
8:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Andaman
Enjolie
Martaban
Nepal
Rangoon
Rhapsody
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
9:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.
9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.
Las Colinas Ballroom
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
10:00 a.m. – 5:30 p.m.
8:00 a.m. – 4:45 p.m.
8:30 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Friday
1:45 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Book Exhibitors, Las Colinas Ballroom
Heritage Auctions
Appraisal Fair
Sessions
Silent Auction:
- Bidding
- Bidding
- Check-out
Business Meeting Mandalay Ballroom
Banquets and Events
Women in Texas History Luncheon, Mandalay Ballroom, Lobby Level, Thursday,
12:00 p.m., Tickets are $35.
Open Reception for the Handbook of Tejano History Project, Mandalay Ballroom East,
Lobby Level, Thursday 3:45-4:45 p.m.
Graduate Student Mixer, Mandalay Ballroom West, Lobby Level, Thursday, 5:00 p.m.,
Tickets are complimentary for graduate students and TSHA Fellows.
Presidential Reception, Old Red Museum, Great Hall, Thursday, 6:30 p.m., Tickets are
$30. (Includes transportation and exhibit access.)
Book Lovers’ and Texana Collectors’ Breakfast, Mandalay Ballroom, Lobby Level,
Friday, 7:30 a.m., Tickets are $25.
Fellows Luncheon and Presentation of Awards, Mandalay Ballroom, Lobby Level,
Friday, 12:00 p.m., Tickets are $35.
Texas Independence Relay Reception, Mandalay Ballroom, Lobby Level,
Friday, 3:45 p.m.
Presidential Banquet, Mandalay Ballroom, Friday, 7:00 p.m., Tickets are $65.
6
NEW FEATURES
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Lon Star cuisine
by food editor and
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cookbook
author
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Booming business in
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by Melinda Esco
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70th anniversary of
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champion
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+ An
Analysis of college
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sports
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host
Published by Texas
State Historical Association
Cover Artwork by Lamberto Alvarez
MORE FROM THE TEXAS ALMANAC
www.TexasAlmanac.com
Searchable Town Database
Great Texas Land Rush
Web and Print Advertising
Online Teacher's Guide
Historical Almanac Archive
The Source For All Things Texan Since 1857
7
Education offerings for kids, teachers, and
you!
K-12 Programs:
Junior Historians (4-12 grade), Texas History Day (6-12 grade),
Old Stories, New Voices Intercultural Youth Camp (4-6 grade),
and Texas Quiz Show (4-8 grade)
Teachers:
History Awareness Workshops, Educator Resources
General Audience:
Annual Meeting, Speakers Bureau, and Distance Learning
For more, visit tshaonline.org/education
8
Thursday, March 3
REGISTRATION OPENS
8:00 a.m.
LOBBY LEVEL
Registration will remain open until 4:00 p.m.
SESSION 1
9:00 a.m.
RANGOON
Biography of the Long Civil Rights Movement in Texas, W. Marvin Dulaney presiding,
The University of Texas at Arlington
Panelists
J.R. Wilson, Lone Star College-North Harris; Will Guzmán, Florida A&M University;
W. Marvin Dulaney, The University of Texas at Arlington; Yvonne Davis Frear, San
Jacinto College-Central; Amilcar Shabazz, University of Amherst, Massachusetts
SESSION 2
9:00 a.m.
ANDAMAN
Creed of Convenience: A Century of Texans’ Love/Hate Relationship with the Federal
Government, Gregg Cantrell presiding, Texas Christian University
Fugitives, Frontiers, and Farmers, 1845-1900, Cameron Sinclair, Brookhaven College
Protective Tariff/Income Tax and Agricultural Subsidies, 1901-1945, David Park,
University of North Texas
Commentator: Gregg Cantrell, Texas Christian University
SESSION 3
9:00 a.m.
RHAPSODY
Opportunity and Hardship: Soldiers and Settlers in West Texas, Jason Pierce presiding,
Angelo State University
Unlikely Visionary: Joseph Tweedy and the Establishment of the Wool Industry in West
Texas, David Dewar, Angelo State University
Black Soldiers on the West Texas Frontier, Norris White, Stephen F. Austin University
Philip Plater and the Trials of a Buffalo Soldier, Suzanne Campbell, Angelo State
University
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9
Thursday, March 3
SESSION 4
9:00 a.m.
ENJOLIE
JOINT SESSION WITH THE TEXAS FOLKLORE SOCIETY
Texas Food and Legends, Lucy Fischer-West presiding, Texas Folklore Society Past
President
A Century of Afro-Tejano Foodways, Meredith E. Abarca, Texas Folklore Society Vice
President
The Hermit: A Study of the Legend Central to Cascade Caverns in Boerne, Texas, Matt
Gibson and Erin Marissa Russell, Texas Folklore Society Members
Session sponsored by Texas Folklore Society.
SESSION 5
9:00 a.m.
NEPAL
Cotton and Wheat: Nineteenth-Century Industry Meets Twentieth-Century Agriculture,
Kyle Wilkison presiding, Collin College
The Learning Curve: Planning, Building, and Operating Sherman’s Cotton Mill, 18901910, Deborah Kilgore, University of North Texas
Big Mills on the Prairie: The Industrialization of Grain Milling in North Texas, Rebecca
Sharpless, Texas Christian University
Marketing the New and Different: Dealing with Stripped Cotton on the Southern High
Plains, Cameron L. Saffell, Museum of Texas Tech University
10
Thursday, March 3
SESSION 6
9:00 a.m.
MARTABAN
Chicano Agency in Secondary and Higher Education in Twentieth-Century Texas,
Guadalupe San Miguel, Jr. presiding, University of Houston
Desegregation or Pseudo-integration?: The Hybrid School System in Hudspeth County,
Texas 1940s-1950s, Aurelio Saldana, The University of Texas at El Paso
Lubbock on Trial: The US Department of Justice v Texas Education Agency, et al.
Lubbock, TX, 1970-1991, Rainlilly Elizondo, Texas A&M University
“Chican@ Javelinas”: Higher Education from South Texas State Teachers’ College
to Texas A&M University-Kingsville, 1925-2015, Alberto Rodriguez, Texas A&M
University-Kingsville
BOOK EXHIBITORS
10:00 a.m.
LAS COLINAS BALLROOM
Exhibit hall will remain open until 5:30 p.m.
SILENT AUCTION
10:00 a.m.
LAS COLINAS BALLROOM
Silent Auction viewing and bidding will remain open until 5:30 p.m. Please check in at
the Silent Auction table to receive a bidder number.
SESSION 7
10:30 a.m.
ANDAMAN
7KH+LGGHQ6WRU\0H[LFDQ$PHULFDQ,QÀXHQFHVRQ+HPLV)DLUMelita Garza
presiding, Texas Christian University
“Mi Feria es Su Feria (My Fair is your Fair)”: How Mexican Americans Created the
1968 San Antonio HemisFair, Gene Morales, The University of Texas at El Paso
HemisFair, Henry B. and the Hearings: Civil Rights, and Civic Boosterism in San
Antonio, 168, Laura Hernandez-Ehrisman, St. Edward’s University
HemisFair ’68 & the Cultural Matrix of San Antonio, Carol A. Keller, San Antonio
College
Commentator: Melita Garza, Texas Christian University
11
Thursday, March 3
SESSION 8
10:30 a.m.
NEPAL
Rio Grande Valley Civil War Trail, Jerry Thompson presiding, Texas A&M University
Panelists
Russell Skowronek, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley; Christopher L. Miller,
University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, Roseann Bacha-Garza, University of Texas Rio
Grande Valley
SESSION 9
10:30 a.m.
ENJOLIE
What Does It Mean to Be Texan? Mary L. Scheer presiding, Lamar University
The Texas Rangers in Myth and Memory, Jody E. Ginn, Independent Scholar, Austin
On Becoming Texans: Nineteenth-Century Jewish Immigrants, Kay Goldman,
Independent Scholar, Houston
The Path from the Mina School: Civil Rights and Personal History, Gene B. Preuss,
University of Houston-Downtown
Session Sponsored by Ollie W. Crinkelmeyer
SESSION 10
10:30 a.m.
RHAPSODY
Prostitution and Reform in Texas, from the Gilded Age to the Progressive Era,
Catherine Clinton presiding, The University of Texas at San Antonio
They Sold Their Bodies: The Economics of Prostitution in Fort Worth’s Hell’s Half-Acre,
1876-1917, Jessica Webb, Texas Christian University
To Keep Those Red Lights Burning: Dallas’ Response to Prostitution, 1874-1913,
Gwinnetta Crowell, Tarrant County Community College
Habeas Corpus Denied: How the Amalgamation of Prostitution and Promiscuity During
WKH3URJUHVVLYH(UD/HGWR1XOOL¿FDWLRQRI:RPHQ¶V5LJKWVLQ7H[DVJennifer Bridges,
Grayson College
12
Thursday, March 3
SESSION 11
10:30 a.m.
RANGOON
JOINT SESSION WITH THE TEXAS BAPTIST HISTORICAL SOCIETY
Finding Heaven in the Midst of Hell: Texas Baptists in the Civil War, Michael Williams
presiding, Dallas Baptist University
Slavery, Civil War and Freedom at Baylor University and Independence, Texas, Michael
Parrish, Baylor University
Texas Baptist Civil War Women and the Civil War, Rosalie Beck, Baylor University
The Impact of the Civil War on Texas Baptist Churches, Estelle Owens, Wayland Baptist
University
WOMEN IN TEXAS HISTORY LUNCHEON
12:00 p.m.
MANDALAY BALLROOM
Women in Texas History Luncheon, Lynn Denton presiding, Texas State Historical
Association President
Of Love and Labor: Mexican American Women, Work, and Food in Early 20th Century
Texas, Monica Perales, University of Houston
Presentation of the Liz Carpenter Award for Research in the History of Women
Tickets are $35 each and must be purchased prior to February 19.
Luncheon Sponsored by Frances B. Vick & Ellen C. Temple.
SESSION 12
2:00 p.m.
ENJOLIE
Slavery in Texas: A Local, Regional, and International Perspective, Andrew Torget
presiding, University of North Texas
Free These British Subjects or Else: The Relationship between Great Britain and the
Republic of Texas in the Face of Abolition, 1838-1840, Marjorie Denise Brown, Texas
Southern University
History’s Strange Bedfellows: How Artists, Lawyers and Archivists Built the Texas
Runaway Slave Project, Kyle Ainsworth, Stephen F. Austin University
From Slavery to Civic Service: Former Slaves of Fort Bend County, Texas in
Reconstruction Era County Government, Nicholas Patrick Cox, Houston Community
College, Southwest
13
Thursday, March 3
SESSION 13
2:00 p.m.
ANDAMAN
JOINT SESSION WITH THE TEXAS SUPREME COURT HISTORICAL SOCIETY
The Restatement (Second) of Torts and the Revolution in Texas Asbestos Liability Law,
Ben L. Mesches presiding, 2015-2016 Texas Supreme Court Historical Society President
The American Law Institute: Stating, Restating, and Shaping American Law since 1923,
The Hon. Evelyn Keyes, Justice, First Court of Appeals
Clarence Borel v. Fiberboard Paper Products Corporation et al. (1973), a second look at
the landmark case in asbestos litigation, Professor Robert J. Robertson, Lamar University
Commentator: The Hon. Judge Mark Davidson (Ret.), Multi-District Litigation Panel
Judge (Court)
Session Sponsored by Texas Supreme Court Historical Society.
SESSION 14
2:00 p.m.
RANGOON
Change and Triumph: Mexican American Communities in the Nineteenth-Century,
Carolina Castillo Crimm presiding, Sam Houston State University, retired
The Llano Grande Land Grant, Maria G. Vallejo, The University of Texas at El Paso
“Pathos and melody which only the most cultured artist can conceive”: The Mexican
Military Bands in Texas, 1886-1889, Charles V. Heath, Sam Houston State University
Chaos, Change, Yet Triumph: Mexican-American Community Formation in 19th Century
Texas, Charles Porter, St. Edward’s University
14
Thursday, March 3
SESSION 15
2:00 p.m.
RHAPSODY
Building Texas’s Identity: Imagining, Touring, and Commemorating the Lone Star
State, Elizabeth Hayes Turner presiding, University of North Texas
Sightseeing in the Lone Star State, 1836-1916, LeAnna Biles Schooley, Texas Christian
University
Ima Hogg and Historic Preservation in Twentieth-Century Texas, Elizabeth Sodek
Moczygemba, Texas Christian University
A Byway for Texas: John Connally, Elo Urbanovsky, and the Creation of Texas Heritage
Trails, Barbara Brannon, Independent Scholar, Lubbock
SESSION 16
2:00 p.m.
NEPAL
Texas LGBT Communities, Wesley G. Phelps presiding, Sam Houston State University
“Enough is Enough”: Dallas Gay Community Responds to the Village State Arrests,
Karen S. Wisely, University of North Texas
Take it to the Streets: The Dallas Pride Parades of the 1980s, Kyle Edelbrock, University
of Massachusetts Amherst
Mobilizing Resistance: Texas in the 1970s National Movement for Gay Rights, Hillary
Anderson, Texas A&M University
OPEN RECEPTION FOR THE HANDBOOK OF TEJANO HISTORY PROJECT
3:45-4:45 p.m.
Mandalay Ballroom East
NEW MEMBER RECEPTION
4:00 p.m.
Martaban
SPANISH BORDERLANDS MEETING
5:00 p.m.
ENJOLIE
Spanish Borderlands Scholars Meeting, Jean Stuntz presiding, West Texas A&M
University
15
Thursday, March 3
GRADUATE STUDENT MIXER
5:00 p.m.
MANDALAY BALLROOM WEST
Invitations are extended to all graduate students and TSHA Fellows. Drinks and light
appetizers will be served. There is no charge for the event, but those wishing to attend
must pre-register prior to February 19. This is a great opportunity for networking.
PRESIDENTIAL RECEPTION
6:30 p.m.
OLD RED GREAT HALL
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Enjoy a beautiful evening At the Old Red Museum and help welcome incoming president
Stephen C. Cook.
Tickets are $30. Transportation will be provided. Buses begin loading at 6:00 p.m. with
the last bus departing at 6:20 p.m. Tickets must be purchased prior to February 20.
Presidential Reception is sponsored by Bud Light/Silver Eagle Distributers.
Friday, March 4
REGISTRATION OPENS
7:00 a.m.
LOBBY LEVEL
Registration will remain open until 3:00 p.m.
BOOK LOVERS’ AND TEXANA COLLECTORS’ BREAKFAST
7:30 a.m.
MANDALAY BALLROOM
%RRN/RYHUV¶DQG7H[DQD&ROOHFWRUV¶%UHDNIDVWLynn Denton presiding, Texas State
Historical Association President
The Evolution of a Book Collector, William Allison, William Allison Books.
Tickets are $25 each and must be purchased prior to February 19.
BOOK EXHIBITORS
8:00 a.m.
LAS COLINAS BALLROOM
Exhibit hall will remain open until 5:30 p.m.
16
Friday, March 4
SILENT AUCTION
8:00 a.m.
Las Colinas Ballroom
Silent Auction Viewing and Bidding will be open until 4:45 p.m. Please check in at the
Silent Auction table to receive a bidder number and catalog.
SESSION 17
9:00 a.m.
ENJOLIE
JOINT SESSION WITH THE TEXAS CATHOLIC HISTORICAL SOCIETY
Ethnogenesis in the Franciscan Missions of Texas and New Mexico, Bro. Richard Daly
presiding, St. Edward’s University
Ethnogenesis in the Texas Context: Smaller Indigenous Bands and the
Eighteenth-Century Missions, Jay T. Harrison, Fort Lewis College
Eighteenth-Century New Mexico Missions: Ethnogenesis or “Pragmatic
Accommodation”? Tracy Brown, Central Michigan University
Commentator: Gilberto Hinojosa, University of the Incarnate Word
SESSION 18
9:00 a.m.
RANGOON
JOINT SESSION WITH THE TEXAS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
2QWKH5RDGWR3URJUHVV7UDYHOLQJWKH%DQNKHDG+LJKZD\Dan L. Smith presiding,
Independent Scholar, Fort Worth
The Bankhead Highway in Texas: An Example of the Good Roads Movement, David W.
Moore, Jr., Hardy-Heck-Moore, Inc.
Finest for Colored: Accommodations for Black Travelers in Jim Crow Texas, Gregory
Smith, Texas Historical Commission
Evolution of Auto-related Accommodations, Leslie Wolfenden, Texas Historical
Commission
17
Friday, March 4
SESSION 19
9:00 a.m.
RHAPSODY
Braiding Common Threads of Texas’ History: Love and Hospitality, Jean Stuntz
presiding, West Texas A&M University
Forbidden Love in San Antonio de Bexar: The Illicit Relationship of Governor Manuel de
Sandoval with Rita Maldonado, Liz Elizondo, The University of Texas at Austin
Welcome Strangers, Texas’ Earliest Tradition Projected by her Women, Carmen
Goldthwaite, Independent Scholar, Fort Worth
Commentator: Jean Stuntz, West Texas A&M University
Session sponsored by Dr. Margaret L. Furse
SESSION 20
9:00 a.m.
NEPAL
%ODFN7H[DV$FWLYLVWVLQWKH0RGHUQ&LYLO5LJKWV0RYHPHQW$3DQHOBrenda H. Bryant
presiding, Lone Star College
Eva McMillan, Dallas Parent and Leader, Yvonne Davis Frear, San Jacinto College
Eldrewery Steans and the Houston Sit-In Movement, Cary D. Wintz, Texas Southern
University
Huntsville’s Wendell Baker, Milton S. Jordan, Independent Scholar, Georgetown
Houston African American Reformer William Lawson, Ronald E. Goodwin, Prairie View
A&M University
EDUCATION WORKSHOP
10:30 a.m.
MARTABAN
(GXFDWLRQ:RUNVKRSStephen S. Cure presiding, Texas State Historical Association
Meet with Education staff and fellow classroom educators to discuss the latest TSHA
UHVRXUFHVIRUHGXFDWRUVDQGJHWVWUDWHJLHVIURPSUDFWLWLRQHUVLQWKH¿HOG
18
Friday, March 4
HANDBOOK OF TEXAS WORKSHOP
10:30 a.m.
ANDAMAN
+DQGERRNRI7H[DV:RUNVKRSTexas State Historical Association staff presiding.
Meet with Handbook editors to view the latest additions to the Handbook of Texas
Online, discuss ideas for articles, and learn about new projects.
SESSION 21
10:30 a.m.
RHAPSODY
JOINT SESSION WITH THE HISPANIC HERITAGE CENTER OF TEXAS
7HMDQR6SDQLVK,QGLDQ5HODWLRQVEHIRUHJesús F. de la Teja presiding, Texas State
University
Ndé (Lipan Apache) Response to Spanish Eighteenth-Century Indian Policy, Daniel
Castro Romero Jr., Chairman, Lipan Apache Band of Texas, History Department 4th Year
Doctoral Student University of Texas at El Paso
The Leadership Initiatives of Spanish Governor Juan Antonio Bustillo y Cevallos, Erika
Arredondo-Haskins, The Hispanic Heritage Center of Texas
Commentator: Andres Tijerina, Austin Community College
SESSION 22
10:30 a.m.
RANGOON
&RQVHUYDWLVP'HVHJUHJDWLRQDQGWKH&KDQJLQJ3ROLWLFDO2UGHULQ(DVW7H[DV
Joseph A. Pratt presiding, University of Houston
“We in East Texas believe in liberty”: Congressman John Dowdy and Lone Star
Conservatism in the Mid-Twentieth-Century, Jeffrey L. Littlejohn, Sam Houston State
University
“Whether right or wrong, whether we like it or not, we do have the Civil Rights Law”:
The Desegregation of Sam Houston State Teachers College, Carolyn A. Carroll, Sam
Houston State University
Expansion and Equality: Dr. James G. Gee’s Internal Struggles as President of East
Texas State University, Katherine Gaskamp, Sam Houston State University
19
Friday, March 4
SESSION 23
10:30 a.m.
NEPAL
7KH&XOWXUDODQG3ROLWLFDO,PSOLFDWLRQVRI$IULFDQ$PHULFDQ$PDWHXU6SRUW
Kevin B. Blackistone presiding, University of Maryland
The Prairie View Interscholastic League: Creating Education and Athletic Opportunities
for Young Black Texans, 1920-1940, Michael Hurd, Editor Texas Black History
Preservation Project
Cultural Prominence and Civil Rights: Black College Football in Texas during the 1950s,
Rob Fink, Independent Scholar, Abilene
Commentator: Kevin B. Blackistone, University of Maryland
SESSION 24
10:30 a.m.
ENJOLIE
$&HQWXU\RI&RQÀLFW7H[DV:DUWLPH2UDO+LVWRU\1DUUDWLYHVWKDW6SDQWKHWK
Century, Eric Gruver presiding, University of North Texas
Culture War: Home Front Challenges of Central Texas German-Americans during the
Great War, Steven Sielaff, Baylor University Institute for Oral History
A Hell of a Load for a Young Man: Memories of World War II Concentration Camp
Liberators, Stephen Sloan, Baylor University Institute for Oral History
From the Red Dirt of Vietnam through the Blowing Dust of West Texas: Recording
Veterans’ Oral History at the Vietnam Archive, Kelly Crager, Vietnam Center and Archive
Texas Tech University
20
Friday, March 4
FELLOWS LUNCHEON AND PRESENTATION OF AWARDS
12:00 p.m.
MANDALAY BALLROOM
Fellows Luncheon and Presentation of Awards, Paula Mitchell Marks presiding, St.
Edward’s University
Induction of new Fellows of the Texas State Historical Association.
Presentation of the following awards:
Mary Jon and J.P. Bryan Leadership in Education Award
Kate Broocks Bates Award for Historical Research
Coral H. Tullis Memorial Prize
Ron Tyler Award for Best Illustrated Book on Texas History and Culture
H. Bailey Carroll Award
Al Lowman Memorial Prize
Catarino and Evangelina Hernández Research Fellowship in Latino History
Mary M. Hughes Research Fellowship
John H. Jenkins Research Fellowship in Texas History
Cecilia Steinfeldt Fellowship for Research in the Arts and Material Culture
Lawrence T. Jones III Research Fellowship in Civil War Texas History
$GYHQWXUHV,Q7H[DV+LJKHU(GXFDWLRQ0\7KLUW\¿YH<HDU-RXUQH\George Wright,
Prairie View A&M University
Tickets are $35 each and must be purchased prior to February 19.
BUSINESS MEETING
1:45 p.m.
MANDALAY BALLROOM
Business Meeting of the Texas State Historical Association, Lynn Denton presiding,
Texas State Historical Association President
5HSRUWVRI&KLHI([HFXWLYH2I¿FHU&KLHI+LVWRULDQDQGFRPPLWWHHFKDLUV
All members should attend.
Door prizes will be given at the end of the meeting. You must be present to win.
If you are a member, please check with the registration desk to pick up your red voting
card. Non-members are welcome to attend.
21
Friday, March 4
SESSION 25
2:30 p.m.
NEPAL
Texas in the Civil War, Steven E. Woodworth presiding, Texas Christian University
The Union Blockade of the Texas Coast, Blake Hill, Texas Christian University
To Train Up a Solider: Camps of Instruction in Civil War Texas, Brian Cervantez, Tarrant
County Community College
The Civil War of K.M. and Minerva Van Zandt, John R. Lundberg, Tarrant County
Community College
SESSION 26
2:30 p.m.
ENJOLIE
Walter Prescott Webb Historical Society Annual Meeting and Chapter Reports, Ken
Howell presiding, Blinn College
SESSION 27
2:30 p.m.
RHAPSODY
,GHQWLW\6SDFH3RZHU7KH&KDQJLQJ)DFHRIWKH7H[DV%RUGHUODQGV
F. Todd Smith presiding, University of North Texas
Raiders and Dealers: Indigenous and Atlantic Slaveries in Texarkana, 1758-1790, Max
Flomen, University of California, Los Angeles
Before the Purchase: Local Rhythms on East Texas’s Spanish-Indian Borderlands, Carla
Gerona, Georgia Institute of Technology
Continuity and Change: The Nacogdoches Census of 1829, Hayden Gregg, Georgia
Institute of Technology
Sponsored by Center for Greater Southwestern Studies.
22
Friday, March 4
SESSION 28
2:30 p.m.
RANGOON
Violence, Politics, and Memory: German Immigrants on the Texas Frontier, Walter
Kamphoefner presiding, Texas A&M University
Civilian-Military Relations in German Texas, Julia Brookins, American Historical
Association
“Satisfaction with things as they exist”: German Immigrant Conservatism in MidNineteenth Century Texas, Nick Roland, The University of Texas at Austin
“The Bleaching Bones of a Lot of Such Traitors”: The Uses and Abuses of the Battle of
the Nueces, Marian J. Barber, Catholic Archives of Texas
6HVVLRQ6SRQVRUHGE\7H[DV*HQHUDO/DQG2I¿FH
SESSION 29
2:30 p.m.
ANDAMAN
7KH%XWWHU¿HOG2YHUODQG0DLOLQ7H[DV(FRQRPLF6RFLDODQG&XOWXUDO$VSHFWV
Walter L. Buenger presiding, Texas A&M University
3DQGRUD¶V%R["&DVKLQJLQRQWKH%XWWHU¿HOG&DFKHWGlen Sample Ely, Independent
Scholar, Fort Worth
7KH5HVXUUHFWLRQRI6PLWK¶V6WDWLRQD%XWWHU¿HOG2YHUODQG0DLO6WDWLRQJoe
R. Allen, Independent Scholar, Comanche
Commentator: Walter L. Buenger, Texas A&M University
Las Colinas Manadlay Canal, Courtesy of Irving
CVB
23
Friday, March 4
SESSION 30
2:30 p.m.
MARTABAN
7KH6WDUU&RXQW\)DUPZRUNHUV¶6WULNH<HDUV/DWHUMary Margaret McAllen
presiding, Author, Historian
Agricultural Labor Politics in Bracero-era South Texas, Cristina Salinas, The University
of Texas at Arlington
La Causa, The Chicano/a Movement, and Texas Politics in the 1960s, Max Krochmal,
Texas Christian University
The Starr County Strike and the Birth of Cynical Labor Leader: The Case of Antonio
Orendain, Timothy P. Bowman, West Texas A&M University
TEXAS INDEPENDENCE RELAY RECEPTION
3:45 p.m.
MANDALAY BALLROOM
Join us for a free reception to celebrate Team TSHA’s ongoing efforts to support the
Handbook of Texas as they prepare to run the fabled Texas Independence Relay. Meet the
team, see a slideshow of their 2015 journey across 200 miles of Texas history, and learn
more about their preparations for the upcoming 2016 race.
SILENT AUCTION CLOSES
4:45 p.m.
LAS COLINAS BALLROOM
7KH6LOHQW$XFWLRQZLOOFORVHLQVHFWLRQVZLWKWKH¿UVWVHFWLRQFORVLQJDWSP
The following sections will close in 10 minute increments. To participate in the Silent
Auction, you must register and be issued a bidder number. Registration for the Silent
Auction will be located in the Las Colinas Ballroom. Silent Auction check out and item
pick-up will take place Saturday morning between 8:30 a.m. - 11:30 a.m.
PRESIDENTIAL BANQUET
7:00 p.m.
MANDALAY BALLROOM
3UHVLGHQWLDO%DQTXHWWR+RQRU3UHVLGHQW/\QQ'HQWRQSteve Cook presiding,
Texas State Historical Association 2016 President
“They Are Hauling Off Bits of Texas:” James E. Pearce and the Effort to Establish a
State Museum, Lynn Denton, 2015 President
Tickets are $65. Tickets must be purchased prior to February 19.
24
Saturday, March 5
REGISTRATION OPENS
8:00 a.m.
LOBBY LEVEL
Registration will remain open until 10:00 a.m.
BOOK EXHIBITORS
8:00 a.m.
LAS COLINAS BALLROOM
Exhibit hall will remain open until 4:00 p.m.
SILENT AUCTION CHECKOUT
8:30 a.m.
LAS COLINAS BALLROOM
Items may be picked up Saturday morning between 8:30 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. Items not
claimed by 11:45 a.m. will be sold to the next highest bidder.
SESSION 31
9:00 a.m.
RHAPSODY
)UHH%ODFNVLQ$QWHEHOOXP7H[DVM. Scott Sosebee presiding, Stephen F. Austin State
University
Free Black Women in Antebellum Texas, Nikki Taylor, Texas Southern University
Free Blacks in Antebellum Houston, John Garrison Marks, Rice University
Texas Historians and Antebellum Free Blacks, Bruce A. Glasrud, San Antonio, Texas
SESSION 32
9:00 a.m.
RANGOON
Faith Healing, Smuggling, and the Formation of Identity in the Texas-Mexico
Borderlands, George T. Díaz presiding, Sam Houston State University
Smuggling for the Confederacy along the Mexican Border, 1863-1865, James T.
Matthews, Independent Scholar, San Antonio
Water, Faith, and Curanderismo: What Don Pedrito Jaramillo’s Rectas Reveal about
the Turn of the Twentieth-Century South Texas Borderlands, Jennifer Koshatka Seman,
Southern Methodist University
Creating Castolon: Community Formation in the Remote Big Bend Region of Texas,
1903-1944, Cody Edwards, Oklahoma State University
25
Saturday, March 5
SESSION 33
9:00 a.m.
ENJOLIE
:LQGRZLQWRV)URQWLHU7H[DVRQWKH%UD]RV$%LOLQJXDO(GXFDWRULQD8QLTXH
Setting, The Paradox of the Indian Reservations, and a Historic Pioneer Family,
Deborah M. Liles presiding, University of North Texas
A Journal: Zachariah Ellis Coombes: Bilingual Educator, An Experiment, the Brazos
Reservation in Young County, 1858-1859, Sylvia Gann Mahoney, Independent Scholar,
Fort Worth
The “Blurred Lines” of Identity and Geopolitics-Around the Texas Indian Reservations,
1854-1859, Lisa D. Barnett, Texas Christian University
Matthews/Reynolds Family Challenges during the Civil War Years, John B. Caraway,
Cisco College
SESSION 34
9:00 a.m.
MARTABAN
:ULWLQJ(QWULHVRQ'DOODV/HDGHUVIRUWKH+DQGERRNRI$IULFDQ$PHULFDQ7H[DV
Merline Pitre presiding, Texas Southern University
R.C. Hickman, Camille Davis, University of North Texas
Dock Rowen, R. Jack Duncan, Independent Scholar, McKinney
Anderson Bonner, Dan Nabors, University of North Texas
SESSION 35
9:00 a.m.
NEPAL
Hard Times in a Changing Century, Carlos Blanton presiding, Texas A&M University
A Unique Monarchy: Texas under Joaquín de Arredondo, Bradley Folsom, The
University of Texas at Arlington
Hard Drink and Hard Times: Mexican Americans and Prohibition, Brandan J. Payne,
Baylor University
March Like Stoics Over Wind-Swept Hills, Tiffany M. Fink, Hardin-Simmons University
PUBLICATIONS WORKSHOP
10:30 a.m.
LAS COLINAS BOARDROOM
26
Saturday, March 5
SESSION 36
10:30 a.m.
ENJOLIE
+LVWRU\LQ$FWLRQ7KH&ROOHJH&ODVVURRPLQDQG3UHVHQWDWLRQRIWKH$QQXDO
&0&DOGZHOO0HPRULDO$ZDUGVStephen S. Cure presiding, Texas State Historical
Association
Fifty Shades of Cadet Gray: Uniforms and Textiles in the Confederate Trans-Mississippi,
Sam Galyon, McMurry University
The Chamizal Settlement and the Dispersion of a People Group, Dirk Johnston, San
Jacinto College-South
Fire This Time: The Texas Southern University Riot, Katy Rudisill, San Jacinto CollegeSouth
SESSION 37
10:30 a.m.
RHAPSODY
West of the River: The Civil War in the Trans-Mississippi, Donald S. Frazier presiding,
McMurry University
“Their families being in immediate danger”: Defense of North Texas in the Closing
Months of the Civil War, Charles Grear, Central Texas College
Unlikely Savior of the Union: Nathaniel P. Banks and the Systemic Effects of the Red
River Campaign, Bowman Henderson, Texas State University
Texan Ben McCulloch at Wilson’s Creek, Thomas W. Cutrer, Professor Emeritus of
American History and American Studies, Arizona State University
SESSION 38
10:30 a.m.
RANGOON
Elite Racism in Texas in the Twentieth-Century, Keith Volanto presiding, Collin College
The Purifying Knife: The Stranger Career of Eugenics in Texas, 1850-1940, Michael
Phillips, Collin College
Constructing a Reactionary Southern Nationalism: M.E. Bradford and the Modern NeoConfederate Movement, Edward Sebesta, Independent Scholar, Dallas
Commentator: Chad Pearson, Collin College
27
Saturday, March 5
SESSION 39
10:30 a.m.
NEPAL
Game On: Sports Archives and Collections in Texas, James Williamson presiding,
Southern Methodist University
Building the Dallas Cowboys Archives, Jonathan Thorn, Dallas Cowboys
Texas Sports Legends, Samantha Dodd, Dallas Historical Society
Commentator: James Williamson, Southern Methodist University
SESSION 40
10:30 a.m.
MARTABAN
Reactionary Conservatism and the Changing Texas Right, Sean P. Cunningham
presiding, Texas Tech University
Texans in Transition: Major General Edwin Walker’s Run for Governor, 1962, Adrienne
&DXJK¿HOG&ROOLQ&ROOHJH
Brawl in the Bayou City, The New Right’s Backlash against a Human Rights Ordinance
in Houston, John D. Goins, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley
Commentator: Nancy Beck Young, University of Houston
Mustangs of Las Colinas, Courtesy of Irving CVB
28
Texas State Historical Association
Get Unlimited Access
to the TSHA Digital Library
When you become an official member of the TSHA
The Texas State Historical Association was one of the first historical associations
to begin digitizing its entire archive of content - which spans more than 115
years - and making it available to the world free of charge in conjunction with its
Handbook of Texas and Texas Almanac websites.
Today more than 500,000 people access these websites every single month.
The TSHA Digital Library includes:
61 EDITIONS of the Texas Almanac
106 VOLUMES of the Southwestern Historical Quarterly
341 EDITIONS of the Texas Historian
25 TSHA Press publications
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Get Special Member-only Benefits:
The Southwestern Historical Quarterly
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A FREE Copy of the Texas Almanac
http://tshaonline.org/digital-library
29
ROOM
LOBBY LEVEL
RANGOON
ANDAMAN
RHAPSODY
ENJOLIE
NEPAL
MARTABAN
LAS COLINAS BALLROOM
LAS COLINAS BALLROOM
ANDAMAN
NEPAL
ENJOLIE
RHAPSODY
RANGOON
MANDALAY BALLROOM
ENJOLIE
ANDAMAN
RANGOON
RHAPSODY
NEPAL
MANDALAY BALLROOM EAST
MARTABAN
ENJOLIE
MANDALAY BALLROOM WEST
OLD RED GREAT HALL
7:00 a.m.
7:30 a.m.
8:00 a.m.
8:00 a.m.
LOBBY LEVEL
MANDALAY BALLROOM
LAS COLINAS BALLROOM
LAS COLINAS BALLROOM
FRIDAY, MARCH 4
TIME
8:00 a.m.
9:00 a.m.
9:00 a.m.
9:00 a.m.
9:00 a.m.
9:00 a.m.
9:00 a.m.
10:00 a.m.
10:00 a.m.
10:30 a.m.
10:30 a.m.
10:30 a.m.
10:30 a.m.
10:30 a.m.
NOON
2:00 p.m.
2:00 p.m.
2:00 p.m.
2:00 p.m.
2:00 p.m.
3:45 p.m.
4:00 p.m.
5:00 p.m.
5:00 p.m.
6:30 p.m.
THURSDAY, MARCH 3
Meeting at a Glance
12
13
14
15
16
7
8
9
10
11
1
2
3
4
5
6
#
Registration Opens
Book Lovers’ and Texana Collectors’ Breakfast
Exhibit Hall Opens
Silent Auction Opens
Session Title
Registration Opens
Biography of the Long Civil Rights Movement in Texas
Creed of Convenience: A Century of Texans’ Love/Hate Relationship with the Federal Government
Opportunity and Hardship: Soldiers and Settlers in West Texas
Texas Food and Legends
Cotton and Wheat: Nineteenth-Century Industry Meets Twentieth-Century Agriculture
Chicano Agency in Secondary and Higher Education in Twentieth-Century Texas
Exhibit Hall Opens
Silent Auction Opens
7KH+LGGHQ6WRU\0H[LFDQ$PHULFDQ,QÀXHQFHVRQ+HPLV)DLU
Rio Grande Valley Civil War Trail
What Does It Mean to Be Texan
Prostitution and Reform in Texas, from the Gilded Age to the Progressive Era
Finding Heaven in the Midst of Hell: Texas Baptists in the Civil War
Women in Texas History Luncheon
Slavery in Texas: A Local, Regional, and International Perspective
The Restatement (Second) of Torts and the Revolution in Texas Asbestos Liability Law
Change and Triumph: Mexican American Communities in the Nineteenth-Century
Building Texas’s Identity: Imagining, Touring, and Commemorating the Lone Star State
Texas LGBT Communities
Open Reception for the Handbook of Tejano History Project
New Member Reception
Spanish Borderlands Meeting
Graduate Student Mixer
Presidential Reception
Click
Register online at:
www.TSHAonline.org/annual-meeting
Call
Register by phone: (512) 471-2600
Mail
Return this form to:
Texas State Historical Association
Attn: Annual Meeting Registration
3001 Lake Austin Blvd, Ste 3.116
Austin, TX 78703
Register today! Call, Click or Mail
_______________
_______________
_______________
_______________
_______________
_______________
_______________
Subtotal
76+$PD\SKRWRJUDSKRU¿OPWKHHYHQW%\UHJLVWHULQJ\RXDJUHHWKDW76+$PD\XVHUHSURGXFHDQGRUSXEOLVKSKRWRJUDSKVDQGRUYLGHRWKDWPD\SHUWDLQWRPHLQFOXGLQJP\LPDJH
OLNHQHVVDQGRUYRLFH,XQGHUVWDQGWKDWWKLVPDWHULDOPD\EHXVHGIRUYDULRXVSXUSRVHVVXFKDVSXEOLFLW\DGYHUWLVLQJZHEFRQWHQWRURWKHUUHODWHGHQGHDYRUV3OHDVHQRWH76+$
UHVHUYHVWKHULJKWWRSKRWRJUDSKVHVVLRQV76+$ZLOOQRWYLGHRUHFRUGDQ\VHVVLRQFRQWHQW
5HIXQG&DQFHOODWLRQ3ROLF\&DQFHOODWLRQRIUHJLVWUDWLRQPXVWEHVXEPLWWHGLQZULWLQJYLDHPDLOWRQLFROLUHODQG#76+$RQOLQHRUJDQGPXVWEHGDWHGRQRUEHIRUHSP&7RQ
)HEUXDU\WRUHFHLYHDIXOOUHIXQGOHVVD86'UHJLVWUDWLRQFDQFHOODWLRQSURFHVVLQJIHH3OHDVHDOORZEXVLQHVVGD\VIRUFKHFNUHIXQGWREHSURFHVVHGDQGPDLOHG1R
UHIXQGVZLOOEHJUDQWHGDIWHU)HEUXDU\1RUHIXQGVZLOOEHJUDQWHGIRUQRVKRZV
Friday
Book Lovers’ & Texana Collectors’ Breakfast, Friday 7:30 a.m. ..........................................25.00
_______________
Fellows Luncheon and Presentation of Awards, Friday 12:00 noon......................................35.00
_______________
Texas Independence Relay Reception, Friday, 3:45 p.m .......................................................Complimentary _______________
Presidential Banquet, Friday 7:00 p.m. .................................................................................65.00
_______________
EVENTS (all events are optional and will be held at the Omni Mandalay Hotel at Las Colinas unless otherwise noted)
Thursday
Women in Texas History Luncheon, Thursday 12:00 noon ...................................................35.00
_______________
Open Reception for the Handbook of Tejano History Project ..............................................Complimentary _______________
Graduate Student Mixer, Thursday 5:00 p.m. (Students and Fellows only) ..........................Complimentary _______________
Presidential Reception, Old Red, Thursday 6:30 p.m.
.................................30.00
_______________
Registration fee
REGISTRATION (*provides registration for all 3 days of meeting)
for each person
Presenter Registration* (Required for all presenters) ............................................................45.00
Early Registration* (by February 1, 2016) ............................................................................70.00
Late Registration* (after February 1, 2016) ..........................................................................90.00
Guest Registration* *XHVWUHIHUVWRVLJQL¿FDQWRWKHURUSHUVRQDOIULHQGQRWDEXVLQHVVDVVRFLDWHRUVWDIIFROOHDJXH 35.00
K-12 Educator Registration* .................................................................................................25.00
Student Registration* (Copy of valid student ID must be enclosed) ....................................20.00
One-day Registration (circle one) 3/03 3/04 3/05 ............................................................45.00
(Hotel Reservations made separately)
2016 TSHA Annual Meeting Registration Form
GRAND TOTAL
$_______________
BBBBBBBBBBBBBBB
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Special Needs_________________________________Special dietary requirements ________________________________________
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City________________________________________________ State_________________ Zip _______________________________
Mailing Address______________________________________________________________________________________________
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Special Needs_________________________________Special dietary requirements ________________________________________
Home Phone__________________________________________Email __________________________________________________
City________________________________________________ State_________________ Zip _______________________________
Mailing Address______________________________________________________________________________________________
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NameBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB76+$0HPEHU" <HV 1R
PLEASE COMPLETE ALL PORTIONS OF REGISTRATION FORM.
3OHDVH¿OORXWFRPSOHWHO\DQGSULQW\RXUQDPHVDV\RXZLVK\RXUQDPHWDJWRUHDG
Card Number________________________________________ Expiration Date_________ Signature___________________________
0HWKRGRI3D\PHQW͔&KHFN ͔$PHULFDQ([SUHVV͔'LVFRYHU͔0DVWHU&DUG͔9LVD͔3XUFKDVHRUGHUBBBBBBBBBBB
*Your contributions to the Texas State Historical Association are fully deductible to the extent provided by law.
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TSHA MEMBERSHIP
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$1,000.00 - President’s Council
In addition to basic membership benefits, members of the President’s Council receive a complimentary copy of the hardcover edition of the Texas Almanac, two (2) FREE
Registrations to the Annual Meeting, and an invitation to attend a special VIP Reception
$500.00 - Defenders of Texas History
In addition to basic membership benefits, Defenders of Texas History receive a complimentary copy of the hardcover edition of the Texas Almanac, and one (1)
FREE Registration to the Annual Meeting of TSHA.
$250.00 - Texas Pioneers
In addition to basic membership benefits, Texas Pioneers receive a complimentary copy of the hardcover edition of the Texas Almanac.
$100.00 - Texas Ambassadors
In addition to basic membership benefits, Texas Ambassadors receive a complimentary copy of the flex-bound edition of the Texas Almanac.
$50.00 - Friend of Texas
This is our most popular level. Same benefits as the Basic membership.
$25.00 - Basic Membership
Great for students or K-12 Educators! Basic membership benefits receive the Southwestern Historical Quarterly journal and the Riding Line newsletter. K-12 educators will
receive a copy of the flex-bound edition of the Texas Almanac in lieu of the Southwestern Historical Quarterly.
Become a member of the Texas State Historical Association today, and join an elite group dedicated to the rich heritage and proud history of this great state! Simply complete
the form below with your information and your most generous donation, and we will instantly activate your membership.
Special Invitations to Attend Exclusive Events—Members of TSHA receive invites to unique meetings and events like our Annual Meeting. Hosted in a different Texas city
each year, the Annual Meeting is the largest gathering of its kind for Texas history enthusiasts.
Insider Updates from the Executive Director—As a member of the Texas State Historical Association, you will have insider access to updates about the exciting projects and
initiatives that are underway at TSHA. This is another way that we can express our deep appreciation for your investment in protecting our rich Texas heritage.
The Riding Line Newsletter—This content-packed newsletter is sent four times a year and will keep you in the loop about local historical happenings, recent publications, and
other resources that TSHA is working to make available every day.
The Southwestern Historical Quarterly—This publication has been continuously published since 1897 and is the most sought-after source of original research on Texas
history. Members will receive all four issues every year.
Every member will receive:
2015-2016 Membership Levels and Benefits
ENJOLIE
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LOBBY LEVEL
LAS COLINAS BALLROOM
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SATURDAY, MARCH 5
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Registration Opens
Exhibit Hall Opens
Silent Auction Checkout
Free Blacks in Antebellum Texas
Faith Healing, Smuggling, and the Formation of Identity in the Texas-Mexico Borderlands
Window into 1850s Frontier Texas on the Brazos: A Bilingual Educator in a Unique Setting, The Paradox of the
Indian Reservations, and a Historic Pioneer Family
Writing Entries on Dallas Leaders for the Handbook of African-American Texas
Hard Times in a Changing Century
Publications Workshop
History in Action: The College Classroom in 2015 and Presentation of the Annual C.M. Caldwell Memorial Awards
West of the River: The Civil War in the Trans-Mississippi
Elite Racism in Texas in the Twentieth-Century
Game On: Sports Archives and Collections in Texas
Reactionary Conservatism and the Changing Texas Right
Ethnogenesis in the Franciscan Missions of Texas and New Mexico
On the Road to Progress: Traveling the Bankhead Highway
Braiding Common Threads of Texas’ History: Love and Hospitality
Black Texas Activists in the Modern Civil Rights Movement: A Panel
Education Workshop
Handbook of Texas Workshop
Tejano Spanish-Indian Relations before 1821,
Conservatism, Desegregation, and the Changing Political Order in East Texas, 1952-1973
The Cultural and Political Implications of African American Amateur Sport, 1900-1960
$&HQWXU\RI&RQÀLFW7H[DV:DUWLPH2UDO+LVWRU\1DUUDWLYHVWKDW6SDQWKHWK&HQWXU\
Fellows Luncheon and Presentation of Awards
Business Meeting
Texas in the Civil War
Walter Prescott Webb Historical Society Annual Meeting and Chapter Reports
Identity, Space, Power: The Changing Face of the Texas Borderlands, 1760-1830
Violence, Politics, and Memory: German Immigrants on the Texas Frontier
7KH%XWWHU¿HOG2YHUODQG0DLOLQ7H[DV(FRQRPLF6RFLDODQG&XOWXUDO$VSHFWV
The Starr County Farmworkers’ Strike 50 Years Later
Texas Independence Relay Reception
Silent Auction Closes
Presidential Banquet
36
Beyond Myths
& Legends
Kenneth W. Howell
Keith J. Volanto
James M. Smallwood
Charles D. Grear
Jennifer S. Lawrence
Beyond Myths and Legends: A Narrative
History of Texas moves beyond the myths and
legends that cloud our understanding of the past
and presents a straightforward narrative history
of Texas from the prehistoric era to the present.
The focus is primarily on the cultural, social, and
political history of the state but also includes
economic and military history as well.
Texas Voices
Keith J. Volanto
Texas Voices: Documents & Biographical
Sketches contains five primary source
documents, three compact biographies,
and photographs for each chapter. Selections
cover earlier periods of Texas History such
as Exploration, the Spanish Era, Mexican Texas,
the Texas Revolution, the Texas Republic, the
Civil War, and Reconstruction, but also provide
a wealth of information on twentieth-century
Texas topics including the Progressive Era,
the 1920s, the Great Depression, World War II,
the Civil Rights Movement, and Modern Texas
Politics, Economics, and Culture.
For a review copy e-mail
phyllis@abigailpress.com.
For more information contact:
www.abigailpress.com
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Visit our booth to receive 30% off all of our titles!
New Books from
TEXAS A&M
Allie Victoria Tennant and the Visual Arts
in Dallas
Light Townsend Cummins
A Texas Suffragist
classic reissue
Diaries and Writings of Jane Y. McCallum
Edited by Janet G. Humphrey
Citizens at Last
classic reissue
The Woman Suffrage Movement in Texas
General Editor, Ellen C. Temple
Edited by Ruthe Winegarten and Judith N. McArthur
Foreword by Anne Firor Scott
Contested Empire
Rethinking the Texas Revolution
Edited by Sam W. Haynes and Gerald D. Saxon
Introduction by Gregg Cantrell
Echoes of Glory
Historic Military Sites across Texas
Thomas E. Alexander and Dan K. Utley
Tattooed on My Soul
Texas Veterans Remember World War II
Edited by Stephen M. Sloan, Lois E. Myers,
and Michelle Holland
Confederate Saboteurs
Building the Hunley and Other Secret Weapons of the Civil War
Mark K. Ragan
Fog at Hillingdon
David K. Langford
Introduction by Rick Bass
Foreword by Andrew Sansom
12 Texas Aggie War Heroes
From World War I to Vietnam
James R. Woodall
Foreword by Thomas G. Darling
Houston Cougars in the 1960s
Death Threats, the Veer Offense, and the Game of the Century
Robert D. Jacobus
TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY PRESS
800.826.8911 Fax: 888.617.2421 www. tamupress.com
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Visit our booth to receive 30% off all of our titles!
New Books from
TEXAS A&M
Fair Ways
New in Paper
How Six Black Golfers Won Civil Rights in Beaumont, Texas
Robert J. Robertson
Anti-Black Violence in Twentieth-Century Texas
Edited by Bruce A. Glasrud
Tejano West Texas
Edited by Arnoldo De León
Texas Woollybacks
New in Paper
The Range Sheep and Goat Industry
Paul H. Carlson
The Art of the Woman
classic reissue
The Life and Work of Elisabet Ney
Emily F. Cutrer, New Preface by the Author
Foreword by Nancy Baker Jones and Cynthia J. Beeman
Kent Finlay, Dreamer
The Musical Legacy behind Cheatham Street Warehouse
Brian T. Atkinson and Jenni Finlay
Foreword by George Strait
Faces of Béxar
Early San Antonio and Texas
Jesús F. de la Teja
Forthcoming Spring 2016
The Ground on Which I Stand
Lone Star Steeples
Tamina, a Freedmen’s Town
Marti Corn
Introduction by Thad Sitton
Contributions by
Tracy Xavia Karner
and Tacey A. Rosolowski
Historic Places of Worship in Texas
Illustrated by Carl J.
Christensen Jr.
Text by Pixie Christensen
Foreword by David Ruesink
The Material Culture of
German Texans
Blood Oranges
Kenneth Hafertepe
Colonialism and Agriculture in the South
Texas Borderlands
Timothy Paul Bowman
The Red River Bridge War
Panting For Glory
A Texas-Oklahoma Border Battle
Rusty Williams
The Mississippi Rifles in the Mexican War
Richard Bruce Winders
TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY PRESS
800.826.8911 Fax: 888.617.2421 www. tamupress.com
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New Releases
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Adele
Briscoe Looscan
Daughter of the Republic
Laura Lyons McLemore
Foreword by Gregg Cantrell
ISBN: 978-0-87565-442-3
Yours in Filial Regard
d
The Civil War Letters of a
Texas Family
y
Kassia Waggoner &
Adam Nemmers
ISBN: 978-0-87565-612-0
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New Releases
The Garden of Eden
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The Story of a Freedmen’ss
Community in Texass
Drew Sanders
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a novel by
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A part of Texas history
(Wright Opera House, Denton, TX, ca. 1900 - Home of Recycled Books, Records, and CDs)
Recycled Books has been serving Denton, Texas, and the world since
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44
Texas
FOLKLORE
Society
100th Annual Meeting
Celebrating our Legends and Leaders
April 1-3, 2016 , Austin, Texas
www.texasfolkloresociety.org
45
University of North Texas Press
Raza Rising: Chicanos in North Texas
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Gonzales offers first-hand observations, supported
by well-documented scholarly research, of Chicanos’
growth and subsequent struggles to participate fully
in North Texas’ political and economic life.
$29.95 hardcover
T Texas Way of War: A History of Warfare
The
iin Texas 1822-1865
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Drawing
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$
Tales of Texas Cooking: Stories & Recipes from the Trans
Pecos to the Piney Woods & High Plains to the Gulf Prairies
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The latest Texas Folklore Society publication contains
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$34.95 hardcover
The Notorious Luke Short: Sporting Man of the Wild West
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During
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known and wealthiest sporting men in the U.S.; however,
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have hated that.
$29.95 hardcover
To order call 1-800-826-8911 http://untpress.unt.edu
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New
from
UNC
Press
368 pages $34.95
“Torget’s wonderful new book wrenches the history of Texas independence out of the
grip of nationalists and exceptionalists. He shows that the Texas Republic was created
by—and dissolved by—the massive force of the cotton revolution and slavery expansion that drove the rise of Western economic modernity. And he shows how the same
forces tragically disrupted and destroyed the lives of tens of thousands of African
Americans forced to move to the Cotton South’s first independent slaveholding state.”
—Edward E. Baptist, author of The Half Has Never Been Told: Slavery and
the Making of American Capitalism
“A masterfully researched, elegantly written, and intellectually sophisticated study
of the forces that shaped the U.S.-Mexican borderlands during the first half of the
nineteenth century. Torget has written a fine and important book.”
—Gregg Cantrell, Texas Christian University
“Torget moves beyond national and state narratives to place cotton at the heart of the
breathtaking transformation of the Gulf of Mexico region during the first half of the
nineteenth century. His greatest accomplishment is to put in conversation processes
and events that are frequently discussed in separate literatures. Seeds of Empire is
a major work of reinterpretation.”
—Andrés Reséndez, author of Changing National Identities at the Frontier:
Texas and New Mexico, 1800–1850
The David J. Weber Series in the
New Borderlands History
Published with support provided by the
William P. Clements Center for Southwest Studies
at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas
UNC Press books are now available
through Books @ JSTOR and
Project Muse Muse – and North
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on Oxford Scholarship Online.
the university of north carolina press
at bookstores or 800-848-6224 • www.uncpress.unc.edu
47
Walking the Llano
The Texas Frontier
and the
Butterfield Overland Mail,
–
a texas memoir of place
L I S T E N I N G
T O
R o s i t a
❁ ❁ ❁
THE BUSINESS OF
TEJANA MUSIC
AND CULTURE
1930--1955
❁ ❁ ❁
Mary Ann Villarreal
s h e l l e y a r m i ta g e
LISTENING TO ROSITA
WALKING THE LLANO
The Business of Tejana
Music and Culture,
1930–1955
By Mary Ann Villarreal
A Texas Memoir of Place
By Shelley Armitage
!'
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glen sample ely
THE TEXAS
FRONTIER AND
THE BUTTERFIELD
OVERLAND MAIL,
1858–1861
By Glen Sample Ely
!'
+
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Other Sides of
Civil War Texas
Edited by J E S Ú S F . D E L A T E J A
LONE STAR
UNIONISM, DISSENT,
AND RESISTANCE
Other Sides of
Civil War Texas
Edited by Jesús F. de la Teja
FORT BASCOM
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Comancheros, Soldiers,
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Walter Prescott Webb
Historical Society
The Walter Prescott Webb Historical Society works through college and
university history departments to encourage students to discover, research, write,
and publish the history of Texas as they find it where they live.
Join us for the Webb Society Annual Business Meeting
Friday, March 4, 2016
Enjolie
2:30 PM - 4:00 PM
Ask how you can affiliate your existing student organization or start a
Webb Society Chapter at your institution.
C. M. Caldwell
Memorial Award for
Excellence in History
Submit your student research papers for this prestigious award. Winners
recieve a cash award, and select papers are published in Touchstone, the
undergraduate journal of the Walter Prescott Webb Historical Society.
Deadline to enter is mid-January of each year. The contest is open to all
lower division, upper division and graduate students.
For more information visit: http://www.tshaonline.org/education
Or contact Charles Nugent at charles.nugent@TSHAonline.org
49
TeachingTexas.org
Gives Teachers FREE and EASY access
to resources they need to
teach Texas history
Resources for the Texas History teacher
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Education offerings for kids, teachers, and
you!
K-12 Programs:
Junior Historians (4-12 grade), Texas History Day (6-12 grade),
Old Stories, New Voices Intercultural Youth Camp (4-6 grade),
and Texas Quiz Show (4-8 grade)
Teachers:
History Awareness Workshops, Educator Resources
General Audience:
Annual Meeting, Speakers Bureau, and Distance Learning
For more, visit tshaonline.org/education
51
Life Members of the Texas State Historical Association
Corporate Life Members*
Anadarko Petroleum
Corporation
Ascendant Advisors Group,
LLC
Barbara & Corbin J.
Robertson Jr.
Butler and Sons Books
C.H. Guenther & Son, Inc.
Dallas Morning News
Encap Investments, L.P.
Energy Future Holdings
Fieldstone Partners
First National Bank
Hidalgo, Banfill, Zlotnik &
Kermali, P.C.
Hirsch & Westheimer, P.C.
Houston Chronicle Library
Institute of Texan Cultures
KNA Partners
Marathon Financial
Insurance Company
Margot & Ross Perot
Mastrapasqua Asset
Management
Ned S. Holmes Investments,
Inc.
Primoris Services
Corporation
Sophienburg Museum &
Archives
Southern Steel Company
Sydtran, L.P.
Texas Historical
Foundation
Texas History.com
Life Members*
Mr. Joe C. Abel
Mr. G. Hughes Abell
Mr. Ward N. Adkins, Sr.
Mr. John Adkins
Ms. Caroline R. Alexander
Mr. Pierce M. Allman
Dr. Félix D. Almaráz, Jr.
Mr. Henry C. Armbruster
52
Mrs. George W. Armstrong
Mr. Thomas K. Armstrong
Dr. Watson Arnold
Mr. Earl M. Ayles
Mr. Richard O. Baish
Ms. A. Leslie Ballard
Mr. James H. Barksdale
Mr. Paul F. Barnhart
Dr. Alwyn Barr
Mrs. L. T. Barrow
Mr. Roger A. Bartlett
Mr. Richard C. Bartlett
Mr. Lee M. Bass
Dr. Gretchen M. Bataille
Mr. William H. Beasley, III
Mr. & Mrs. Robert
Beckham
Mr. Paul G. Bell, Jr.
Dr. Patricia K. Benoit
Ms. Eliza H. Bishop
Mr. Alfred Bishop
Dr. Carlos K. Blanton
Mr. Robert L. Bobbitt Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Jules Bohnn
Mr. James C. Bourne
Mr. Sam T. Bracken
Mr. John B. Brent
Mr. and Mr. Bob Brinkman
Mr. Gordon Leigh Briscoe
Mr. John C. Britt
Dr. Norman D. Brown
Mr. Darrel O. Brown
Mr. J. P. Bryan, Jr.
Dr. Walter L. Buenger
Butler and Sons Books
Mr. and Mrs. Jno. P. Butler
Mrs. Marguerite W. Butler
Dr. Patrick H. Butler, III
Mr. D. H. Byrd
Mr. Frank Cahoon
Mr. Curtis Calder
Ms. Shirley Caldwell
Mr. Lee Caldwell
Mr. Clifton Caldwell
Mrs. Sandra K. Calpakis
Ms. Alison Campbell
Dr. Weldon G. Cannon
Dr. Gregg Cantrell
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Carey
Ms. Margaret F. Carmichael
Mr. Jefferson E. Carroll
Mr. J. S. Carroll
Ms. Deborah Carson
Mr. John B. Carter Jr.
Mrs. J. I. Cartwright
Mrs. Karen Vick Cavazos
Dr. William R. Childs
Mr. George L. Clark
Mr. Robert M. Clark
Mr. James H. Clement, Jr.
Ms. Molly C. Cline
Mr. John Coates
Mr. Robert P. Cochran
Ms. Daye D. Collins
Ms. Carroll W. Conn
Ms. Genevieve H. Coonly
Mr. Joseph H. Coreth
Mr. Carl Cornelius
Mrs. Susan E. Cotten
Mr. John L. Cox
Ms. Margaret Cox
Mr. B. W. Crain
Mr. James C. Crain
Mr. John W. Crain
Mr. F. Gene Crawford
Ms. Jamie B. Creech
Mr. Billy Bob Crim
Ms. Caroline C. Crimm
Mr. Harlan Crow
Ms. Donna G. Crow
Mr. Richard D. Culbertson
Mr. John A. Cypher Jr.
Mr. H. W. Davidson
Mr. John M. Davis Jr.
Mr. Glen Dawson
Dr. Jesus F. de la Teja
Mrs. Marion W. DeFord
Mr. Franklin W. Denius
Mr. William A. Dennis
Dr. and Mrs. Charles
Dickinson
Mr. Jim Dillard
Mr. Richard Donnelly, Sr.
Mrs. J. Conrad Dunagan
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J.
Duncan
Mr. James V. Dunkley
Mr. Jack H. Dunn
Dr. Ken R. Durham
Dr. Eugene Edge, III
Mr. Billie J. Ellis
Dr. L. Tuffly Ellis
Dr. Glen Sample Ely
Mr. Jason Fertitta
First National Bank
Mr. Hugh J. Fitz-Gerald
Mr. H. A. Fitzsimmons
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W.
Foran
Mr. James C. Fourmy
Ms. Martha Doty Freeman
Mr. L. R. French Jr.
Mr. Joe R. Fulton
Ms. Margaret L. Furse
Dr. and Mrs. Nathan C.
Galloway
Mr. Nathan C. Galloway, III
Mr. Monroe Garrison
Ms. Lois Garver
Mr. & Mrs. W. K. Gayden
Mr. Herbert Gehring
Mr. Stuart W. Gentling
Mr. Wayne Gibson
Mr. John N. Gilbert II
Mr. Randal B. Gilbert
Mr. L. P. Gilvin
Dr. Jody E. Ginn
Mr. Alfred C. Glassell, III
Dr. David B. Gracy II
Mrs. Hugh S. Grady
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Grainger
Mr. James F. Gray
Mr. Matthew J. Grayson
Dr. George N. Green
Dr. F. Parker Gregg
Mr. Gregory B. Gregson
Mr. Ted O. Groebl
Mr. David Grossblatt
Mr. Manuel Guerra
Mr. Chris A. Hale
Mr. Bryan Hale
Mr. and Mrs. Dow Hamm
Jr.
Mr. Kent R. Hance
Mr. Lyman Hardeman
Dr. Stephen L. Hardin
Mr. James P. Hart
Mr. Weldon Hart
Dr. and Mrs. Newt Hasson
Mr. and Mrs. Albert F.
Hausser
Mr. David W. Hawes
Mr. Jeff Haynes
Mr. Michael D. Heaston
Mr. Robert J. Heinonen and
Ms. Elizabeth R. Seibert
Mr. Dick D. Heller Jr.
Mr. John Henderson
Ms. Mary A. Hewitt
Mr. Jimmie Hicks
Mr. Vernon B. Hill
Mr. William J. Hill
Dr. Harwood P. Hinton
Mrs. Sarita A. Hixon
Ms. Molly Blaine Hollimon
Ms. Susan V. R. Hollimon
Mr. Harold Hook
Mrs. Dorothy Knox
Houghton
The Honorable Lynn N.
Hughes
Mr. and Mrs. Ben W.
Huseman
The Honorable Kay Bailey
Hutchison
Mr. & Mrs. Sherwood
Inkley
Admiral Bobby R. Inman,
U.S.N (Ret.)
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Ivy
The Honorable and Mrs.
David D. Jackson
Ms. Beverly Jacomini
Mrs. John H. Jenkins
Captain Julius W. Jockusch
Ms. Lucinda Johnson
Mrs. Leland T. Jordan
Mr. Clint W. Josey Jr.
Ms. Colleen T. Kain
Dr. William Henry Kellar
Mr. Tweed Kezziah
Ms. Jo Ruth Kimbro
Mr. Joe J. King
Mr. Arthur King
Mr. Don Kingston
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy C.
Klinger
Mr. Wesley Kyle
Mr. Alfred G. Laverty
Ms. Frances Lawrence
Mr. John M. Lewis
Mr. Cliff Logan
Mr. Thomas A. Loomis
Mr. Gilbert I. Low
Mrs. Darlyne Lowman
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Lusher
Mr. John H. Lyman
Mr. John R. Lyman
Dr. Amy R. Lyman
Mr. Wales H. Madden, Jr.
Ms. Elizabeth H. Maddux
Mr. Timothy B. Maher
Ms. Sylvia Gann Mahoney
Dr. Eugene I. Majerowicz
Mr. J.C. Martin
Mr. Richard C. Mason
Dr. W. Michael Mathes
Mr. John A. Matthews
The Honorable and Mrs.
Oscar Mauzy
Mr. and Mrs. James A.
McAllen
Dr. and Mrs. David G.
McComb
Mr. and Mrs. Red
McCombs
Mr. W. C. McCord
Ms. Cindrette Ricker
McDaniel
Ms. Virginia McDermott
Mr. Richard W. McKinney
Mrs. Walter S. McMeans
Mr. Larry McMurtry
Mr. John H. McNeely
Mr. Larry McNeill
53
Life Members of the Texas State Historical Association
Mrs. Maria P. McPhail
Mr. John W. McReynolds
Mr. and Mrs. John McStay
Mr. Bill Milburn
Mr. Edward L. Mixon
Mrs. Jane C. Monday
Dr. Monte L. Monroe
Mr. Richard Moore
Mr. Joseph S. Morris
Dr. Rosemary Morrow
Mr. Bill Moyers
Mr. William J. Murray
Mrs. Patrick H. WelderMurray
Mrs. Menton J. Murray
Ms. Amanda S. Myers
Mr. John L. Nau, III
Mr. C. Schreiner Nelson
Mr. Willie Nelson
Dr. Sheridan Nichols
Dr. and Mrs. Eberhardt V.
Niemeyer Jr.
Ms. Louise S. O’Connor
Dr. Roger M. Olien
Mr. John C. Oliver, III
Mrs. Ben G. O’Neal
Mrs. Natalie Ornish
Mr. Patrick C. Oxford
Mr. Duffy Oyster
Ms. Frances V. Parker
Dr. John M. Parker
Mr. Patrick J. Parma
Dr. T. Michael Parrish
Mr. Thaddeus Edgar (Ted)
Paup
Mrs. Nancy Painter Paup
Mr. and Mrs. Henry B.
Paup
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Pearsall
Mr. H. Ross Perot
Mr. Tobin Perritt
Mr. Robert K. Peters, III
The Honorable and Mrs.
Thomas R. Phillips
Mr. T. B. Pickens Jr.
Mr. John Poindexter
54
Mr. Lawrence S. Pollock
Mr. Joseph H. Pool
Mr. James L. Powell
Mr. Alexander T. Pratt
Mr. Manuel B. Prince, III
Mr. David A. Quintin
Mr. Albert R. Rambo
Mrs. Ben Ramsey
Mrs. Laura A. Rau
Mr. William C. Reeder
Ms. Betsy Reese
Ms. Karen Rehm
Dr. Paul Rich
Mr. Robert W. Ritchey Jr.
Ms. Joyce G. Roach
Mrs. L. G. Robertson
Mr. John N. Rowe
Mr. Richard C. Sanders
Mr. William Scanlan, Jr.
Mr. Wayne Schavrda
Mr. John L. Schoellkopf
Mr. Charles W. Schwartz
Ms. Virginia C. Scott
Mr. Dana G. Seamans, CPA
Mr. Glenn E. Seureau
Mr. Sam Sharp
Mr. Joseph J. Shebl
Mr. Clyde M. Siebman
Mr. William R. Simpson
Mr. Glen C. Skaggs
Ms. Dorothy Sloan
Mr. Charles Smith
Mr. Eugene B. Smith
Mr. Trey Smith
Mr. Charles A. Spain
Dr. A. R. Stephens
Mr. E. Charles Stern
Mr. Graham Preston
Stewart
Mrs. Mamie Blount Stewart
Dr. Robert L. Stockton
Mr. George W. Strake Jr.
Dr. Jean A. Stuntz
Mrs. Joe Sullivan
Mr. Lonn W. Taylor
Ms. Ellen C. Temple
Mr. G. Warren Thomas
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph B.
Thomas
Ms. Bess Thomas
Mrs. Emory B. Thompson
Ms. Willie E. Tindall
Mrs. Peggy Tobin
Mr. Robert R. Truitt, Jr.
Mr. B. D. Tucker
Mr. Edward B. Tucker
Dr. Ron Tyler
Mrs. Francita S. Ulmer
Ms. Rebecca Ussery
Captain John J. Vandale
Ms. Martha L. Vaughan
Mr. Ross W. Vick Jr.
Mr. Ross W. Vick, III
Mr. Patrick Brannen Vick
Ms. Frances B. Vick
Mr. Leonard W. Volk II
Mrs. Margaret B. Vonder
Hoya
Mr. Wolfram M. VonMaszewski
Mr. William Waggener
Mr. Donald R. Walker
Ms. Christy Walker
Mr. William F. Wardlaw
Dr. David L. Ware
Ms. Margaret T. Waring
Dr. William R. Weaver
Mr. Benjamin K. Webb
Dr. Harold J. Weiss Jr.
Mr. William Welge
Dr. Cecil E. Weller, Jr.
Mr. John H. Wells
Ms. Margaret D. Wells
The Honorable Jeff
Wentworth
Mr. George C. Werner
Mr. John C. White
Mr. Valleau Wilkie Jr.
Mr. Jack B. Wilkinson, Jr.
Mr. John R. Willis
Mrs. Rosine M. Wilson
Mr. Lawrence A. Wilson
Mr. Richard O. Wilson
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace S.
Wilson
Ms. Mary S. Wilson
Mrs. T. L. Wilson
Mr. and Mrs. David
Wintermann
Mr. Carl Wolary Jr.
Dr. Ralph A. Wooster
Dr. Robert A. Wooster
Mr. Frank M. Wozencraft Jr.
Mr. Hugh M. Wright
Mr. Carl L. Yeckel
Mrs. Suzie Yeckel
Mr. Sam D. Young Jr.
Future Annual Meetings
2017 Award and Fellowship Nominations
The 121st Annual Meeting will be held March 1–3, 2017, in Houston, Texas, at the Hyatt
Regency Houston. Book award nominations are due October 10, 2016. Fellowship
nominations are due December 30, 2016. More information can be found on our website
www.TSHAonline.org.
2018 Call For Proposals
The program committee is now calling for proposals for sessions and papers to be
presented at the 122nd Annual Meeting. A complete session proposal includes: a)
session title; b) complete name, address, phone number, a one-page vita, and institutional
affiliation (or hometown, in the case of lay historians) of the session chairman, paper
presenters (either two or three), and commentator (for sessions with two paper
presenters); c) titles of the two or three individual papers; and d) a brief summary of each
paper. Proposals must be received by February 1, 2017. Download a program worksheet
on our website at www.TSHAonline.org or contact Mike Campbell at mike@unt.edu.
Session Participants
Name, Session
Abarca, Meredith E., 4
Ainsworth, Kyle, 12
Allen, Joe R., 29
Anderson, Hillary, 16
Arredondo-Haskins, Erika,
21
Bacha-Garza, Roseann, 8
Barber, Marian J., 28
Barnett, Lisa D., 33
Beck, Rosalie, 11
Blackistone, Kevin B., 23
Blanton, Carlos, 35
Bowman, Timothy P., 30
Brannon, Barbara, 15
Bridges, Jennifer, 10
Brookins, Julia, 28
Brown, Marjorie Denise, 12
Brown, Tracy, 17
Bryant, Brenda H., 20
Buenger, Walter L., 29
Campbell, Suzanne, 3
Cantrell, Gregg, 2
Caraway, John B., 33
Carroll, Carolyn A., 22
&DXJK¿HOG$GULHQQH
Cervantez, Brian, 25
Clinton, Catherine, 10
Cox, Nicholas Patrick, 12
Crager, Kelly, 24
Crimm, Carolina Castillo,
14
Crowell, Gwinnetta, 10
Cunningham, Sean P., 40
Cure, Stephen S., 36
Cutrer, Thomas W., 37
Daly , Richard, 17
Davidson, Mark, 13
Davis Frear, Yvonne, 1
Davis, Camille, 34
de la Teja, Jesús F., 21
Dewar, David, 3
Díaz, George T., 32
Dodd, Samantha, 39
Dulaney, W. Marvin, 1
Duncan, Jack, 34
Edelbrock, Kyle,16
Edwards, Cody , 32
Elizondo, Liz, 19
Elizondo, Rainlilly, 6
Ely, Glen Sample, 29
Fink, Rob, 23
Fink, Tiffany M., 35
Fischer-West, Lucy, 4
Flomen, Max, 27
Folsom, Bradley, 35
Frazier, Donald S., 37
Frear, Yvonne Davis, 20
Garza, Melita, 7
Gaskamp, Katherine, 22
55
Gaylon, Sam, 36
Gerona, Carla, 27
Gibson, Matt, 4
Ginn, Jody E., 9
Glasrud, Bruce A., 31
Goins, John D., 40
Goldman, Kay, 9
Goldthwaite, Carmen, 19
Goodwin, Ronald E., 20
Grear, Charles, 37
Gregg, Hayden, 27
Gruver, Eric, 24
Harrison, Jay T.,17
Heath, Charles V., 14
Henderson, Bowman, 37
Hernandez-Ehrisman,
Laura, 7
Hill, Blake, 25
Hinojosa, Gilberto, 17
Howell, Ken, 26
Hurd, Michael, 23
Johnson, Dirk, 36
Jordan, Milton S., 20
Kamphoefner, Walter, 28
Keller, Carol A., 7
Keyes, Evelyn, 13
Kilgore, Deborah, 5
Krochmal, Max, 30
Liles, Deborah M., 33
Littlejohn, Jeffrey L., 22
Lundberg, John R., 25
Mahoney, Sylvia Gann, 33
Marks, John Garrison, 31
Matthews, James T., 32
McAllen, Mary Margaret,
30
Mesches, Ben L., 13
Miller, Christopher L., 8
Moczygemba, Elizabeth
Sodek, 15
Moore Jr., David W., 18
Morales, Gene, 7
Nabors, Dan, 34
Owens, Estelle, 11
Park, David, 2
Parrish, Michael, 11
Payne, Brandan J., 35
Pearson, Chad,38
56
Phelps, Wesley G., 16
Phillips, Michael, 38
Pierce, Jason, 3
Porter, Charles, 14
Pratt, Joseph A., 22
Preuss, Gene B., 9
Roach, Joyce Gibson, 4
Robertson, Robert J., 13
Rodriguez, Alberto, 6
Roland, Nick, 28
Romero Jr., Daniel Castro,
21
Rudisill, Katy, 36
Russell, Erin Marissa, 4
Saffell, Cameron L., 5
Saldana, Aurelio, 6
Salinas, Cristina, 30
San Miguel, Jr., Guadalupe,
6
Scheer, Mary L., 9
Schooley, LeAnna Biles, 15
Sebesta, Edward, 38
Seman, Jennifer Koshatka,
32
Shabazz, Amilcar, 1
Sharpless, Rebecca, 5
Sielaff, Steven, 24
Sinclair, Cameron, 2
Skowronek, Russell, 8
Sloan, Stephen, 24
Smith, Dan L. , 18
Smith, F. Todd, 27
Smith, Gregory, 18
Sosebee, M. Scott, 31
Stuntz, Jean, 19
Taylor, Nikki, 31
Thompson, Jerry, 8
Thorn, Jonathan, 39
Tijerina, Andres,21
Torget, Andrew, 12
Turner, Elizabeth Hayes, 15
Vallejo, Maria G., 14
Volanto, Keith, 38
Webb, Jessica, 10
White, Norris, 3
Wilkison, Kyle, 5
Williams, Michael, 11
Williamson, James, 39
Wilson, J.R., 1
Wintz, Cary D., 20
Wisely, Karen S., 16
Wolfenden, Leslie, 18
Woodworth, Steven E., 25
Young, Nancy Beck, 40
Texas State Historical Association
1897 - The Oldest Learned Society in Texas - 1897
J. P. Bryan, Honorary Life Board Member
Walter L. Buenger, Honorary Life Board Member
John Crain, Honorary Life Board Member
Lynn Denton
Stephen C. Cook
Paula Mitchell Marks
John Miller Morris Jr.
President
First Vice President
Second Vice President
Secretary
OFFICERS
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
Brian A. Bolinger
CHIEF HISTORIAN
Randolph B. “Mike” Campbell
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
(In addition to the officers named above)
John L. Nau III
Gregg Cantrell
Mary Margaret McAllen
Carlos K. Blanton
Jessica Brannon-Wranosky
James H. Clement Jr.
W. Marvin Dulaney
Jeffrey Dunn
David A. Gravelle
Kay Bailey Hutchison
Richard B. McCaslin
Nancy Painter Paup
Thomas R. Phillips
Rebecca Sharpless
Jean A. Stuntz
Homero S. Vera
Emilio Zamora
Past President 2014
Past President 2013
2013–2016
2013–2016
2015–2018
2015–2018
2013–2016
2013–2016
2014–2017
2015–2018
2014–2017
2014–2017
2014–2017
2013–2016
2013 -2016
2015–2018
2015–2018
57
TEXANA AUCTION
March 12, 2016 | Dallas | Live & Online
Now accepting consignments for our March 2016 Auction
Sam Houston “Army Orders” Broadside. March 2, 1836.
A fervent appeal to the citizens of Texas to come to the aid of “their bleeding country.”
Sold for $52,500! | March 2015
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Paul R. Minshull #16591. BP 12-25%; see HA.com 38629
next in the series
Santos Benavides:
Defending the Texas-Mexico
Border in the Nineteenth Century
Jerry Don Thompson
Now available from the
Center for Texas Studies at
TCU and TCU Press!
Adele Briscoe Looscan:
Daughter of the Republic
Laura Lyons McLemore
Texas
Biography
Series
new from the
Insert Addressee
Address
City, State Zip
Texas State Historical Association
3001 Lake Austin Blvd., Ste 3.116
Austin, TX 78703