Oran Milo Roberts was at the center of every important event in Texas between 1857 and 1883. He served on the state supreme court on three separate occasions, twice as chief justice. As president of the 1861 Secession Convention he was instrumental in leading Texas out of the Union. He then raised and commanded an infantry regiment in the Confederate Army. After the Civil War, Roberts was a delegate to the 1866 Constitutional Convention and was elected by the state legislature to the United States Senate, though Republicans in Congress refused to seat him. He served two terms as governor from 1879 to 1883. Despite being a major figure in Texas history, there are no published biographies of Roberts. This dissertation seeks to examine Roberts...
Antonio Maceo Smith was the most influential African-American civil rights activist in Texas in the ...
Document from the "Manifesto of the Committee of Vigilance and Safety of Houston" suppor...
Abstract \ud \ud This dissertation uses archival and interpretive methods to examine the life and co...
Abstract: Contains a bound, typewritten recollection of this Texas governor's life as a student of t...
As a spokesman for the Texas states\u27 rights-secession movement, Oran Milo Roberts followed the ov...
Of the men who have made history in Texas, it is doubtful whether any other man has combined so many...
Edward Clark, Governor of Texas from March 16 to November 7, 1861, was a principal figure in the his...
This dissertation is a constitutional history of nineteenth century Texas. The central questions add...
From the birth of the republic through annexation and secession two men in Texas politics loom in bi...
Revitalizing a Governor’s Reputation Edmund J. Davis was one of the most maligned governors that...
Document from the "Proceedings of Public Meeting at Galveston" in which the assembled ci...
Undergraduate Honors ThesisFollowing the end of the Civil War, Confederate veterans returned to a ho...
Concurrent resolution introduced by the Texas House of Representatives and Senate in memory of forme...
The annexation of Texas by the United States brought to a close the nine year period of independent ...
A little more than a century ago, Texas voluntarily surrendered her status as an independent republi...
Antonio Maceo Smith was the most influential African-American civil rights activist in Texas in the ...
Document from the "Manifesto of the Committee of Vigilance and Safety of Houston" suppor...
Abstract \ud \ud This dissertation uses archival and interpretive methods to examine the life and co...
Abstract: Contains a bound, typewritten recollection of this Texas governor's life as a student of t...
As a spokesman for the Texas states\u27 rights-secession movement, Oran Milo Roberts followed the ov...
Of the men who have made history in Texas, it is doubtful whether any other man has combined so many...
Edward Clark, Governor of Texas from March 16 to November 7, 1861, was a principal figure in the his...
This dissertation is a constitutional history of nineteenth century Texas. The central questions add...
From the birth of the republic through annexation and secession two men in Texas politics loom in bi...
Revitalizing a Governor’s Reputation Edmund J. Davis was one of the most maligned governors that...
Document from the "Proceedings of Public Meeting at Galveston" in which the assembled ci...
Undergraduate Honors ThesisFollowing the end of the Civil War, Confederate veterans returned to a ho...
Concurrent resolution introduced by the Texas House of Representatives and Senate in memory of forme...
The annexation of Texas by the United States brought to a close the nine year period of independent ...
A little more than a century ago, Texas voluntarily surrendered her status as an independent republi...
Antonio Maceo Smith was the most influential African-American civil rights activist in Texas in the ...
Document from the "Manifesto of the Committee of Vigilance and Safety of Houston" suppor...
Abstract \ud \ud This dissertation uses archival and interpretive methods to examine the life and co...