Fact-checked by Grok 2 weeks ago
References
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[1]
Houston, Sam - Texas State Historical AssociationNov 9, 2020 · Riding the wave of popularity as "Old Sam Jacinto," Houston became the first regularly elected president of the Republic of Texas, defeating Stephen F. Austin.
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President Sam Houston - Growing Up | Texas State LibraryMar 13, 2015 · Sam Houston spent his early years in Rockbridge County, a Virginia frontier community settled by Scotch-Irish Presbyterians looking for a free and independent ...Missing: parents | Show results with:parents
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Sam Houston - Tennessee EncyclopediaHis father, a militia colonel, died in 1806. The following year, his mother led her family west, settling near Maryville, the seat of Blount County.Missing: migration | Show results with:migration
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Sam Houston (1793–1863) - Encyclopedia of ArkansasApr 21, 2025 · Sam Houston was born to Samuel Houston and Elizabeth Paxton Houston on March 2, 1793, at Timber Ridge Plantation in Rockbridge County, Virginia.
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Sam Houston's Life and Legacy in East Tennessee - Blount TourismNov 15, 2024 · Following the death of his father in 1806, his family moved to a 419-acre farm in Maryville, Tennessee. Young Houston didn't get along with his ...Missing: migration | Show results with:migration
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The Raven - Sam Houston State UniversityAug 27, 2018 · In 1809, at the age of 16, Sam Houston ran away from his home in Tennessee and lived among the Cherokees. He was adopted by Chief Oolooteka and ...
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Sam Houston was a friend to Cherokee people | NewsJul 10, 2020 · As a young man, Samuel Houston developed a relationship with Cherokee people that would last most of his life. He was given the Cherokee name, Kolana or Raven.
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[PDF] Sam Houston: A Study in Leadership - Teach DemocracySam hated school and refused to attend, but he learned to read and ed- ucated himself by reading his father's books. Bored with farming and clerk- ing at the ...<|control11|><|separator|>
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Sam Houston - Texas State Library and Archives CommissionMar 13, 2015 · Houston joined the U.S. Army as a private, quickly rising to the rank of third lieutenant. He was severely wounded at the Battle of Horseshoe ...Missing: enlistment | Show results with:enlistment
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Sam Houston I (Schooner) - Naval History and Heritage CommandSep 2, 2015 · Houston enlisted in the 7th Infantry on 24 March 1813 for service in the war with England. He fought under General Andrew Jackson and ...Missing: militia | Show results with:militia
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Creek War of 1813 and 1814 - Tennessee EncyclopediaThey destroyed several Upper Creek towns and defeated the Red Sticks at the battles of Tallushatchee and Talladega in the fall of 1813 before delivering the ...Missing: early campaigns skirmishes
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Horseshoe Bend Battle Facts and SummaryThe Battle of Horseshoe Bend, fought on March 27, 1814 effectively ended Creek resistance to American advances into the southeast.Missing: early skirmishes
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Sam Houston | Andrew Jackson's HermitageThe son of Major Samuel Houston and Elizabeth Houston, Sam Houston was born in a log cabin on the family's plantation March 2, 1793 in Timber Ridge, Virginia. ...Missing: reliable | Show results with:reliable
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The Battle of Horseshoe Bend - The War of 1812Houston was wounded three times at the Battle of Horseshoe Bend. He became a protégé of Andrew Jackson and was Governor of Tennessee from 1827-1829. After ...
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How Sam Houston and Andrew Jackson became friendsAlthough no longer President when the Texas Revolution occurred, Jackson encouraged Houston's leadership in the conflict. He admired Houston's decisive victory ...<|separator|>
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How the War of 1812 shaped Sam Houston's futureAt 19 years old and already standing well over six feet tall, Houston enlisted in the 39th Infantry Regiment of the US Army.Missing: 1813 | Show results with:1813
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Samuel Houston - Bioguide SearchHOUSTON, Samuel, (Father of Andrew Jackson Houston and cousin of David Hubbard), a Representative from Tennessee and a Senator from Texas; born at Timber ...Missing: legislative | Show results with:legislative
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Sam Houston | People - Nashville PBSHe served as Vice President under John Quincy Adams and began a term under Andrew Jackson, but resigned in 1832 over policy disputes, including tariff and ...
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Gov. Samuel Houston - National Governors AssociationHe was elected governor of Tennessee in 1827 but resigned two years later after separating from his first wife. He migrated to the Indian Territory, where he ...
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Sam Houston and Eliza Allen: “Ten Thousand Imputed Slanders”On April 11, 1829, Sam Houston and his bride of eleven weeks, Eliza Allen, abruptly ended their marriage. Neither would speak publicly of the cause for the ...
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A Quaint Document (July 2015) | Archive - 2015 | The Oglesbees - SFAThis petition fixes the date of his marriage at January 18, 1829, and says that they lived together till the 15th of April following, about three months.
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Houston's Scandalous First Marriage to Eliza AllenSam Houston married Eliza Allen in 1829, when he was a rising star in Tennessee politics. At the time, he had served in the US House of Representatives.
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Houston in Tennessee - Nashville PBSThe leader of the tribe, Chief Oolooteka, became Houston's adoptive father and bestowed on Houston the Cherokee name "Colonneh"—The Raven.
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Martin: Teen bride leaves Gov. Sam Houston; it's 'history's mystery ...May 23, 2020 · Houston is the only governor in Tennessee's 224-year history to resign for personal reasons. The other three governors did so to ascend to ...
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Sam Houston's Last Fight - AMERICAN HERITAGEHouston denounced the convention for usurpation and declared that he remained the rightful governor. But he knew he was beaten. “It is, perhaps, meet that my ...
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Flawed And Charismatic, Sam Houston Was Fiercely Devoted To ...Mar 2, 2018 · Lowe says Houston clearly suffered from depression, and some have speculated that he had bipolar disorder. He also commanded attention when he ...
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Samuel Houston - Facts, Family & Texas - BiographySep 23, 2020 · Houston was a known drinker, and following the marriage to his first wife, Eliza Allen, rumors circulated about his alcoholism and apparent ...Missing: exile | Show results with:exile
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Houston fought his toughest battle with the bottleFeb 14, 2014 · Shattered by a private scandal, Houston sent his debutante bride home to mother, resigned as governor of Tennessee and went into exile among his ...
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Sam Houston's second sojourn among the Cherokee tribe - FacebookSep 11, 2015 · Houston made a couple of trips to Washington on the tribe's behalf, travelling as "the Ambassador of the Cherokee Nation." While he got ...
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Sam Houston and Native American relations - Kids encyclopedia factsIn 1817, after a treaty with the Cherokee, Jackson appointed Houston to help carry out the treaty. Houston could speak Cherokee and knew many of the people who ...Growing Up With The Cherokee · Returning To The Cherokee · Protecting Native American...Missing: affairs | Show results with:affairs
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Following an American Patriot - True West MagazineJun 10, 2013 · Sam eventually left his Cherokee wife and returned east, whipping Representative William Stanbery of Ohio with a cane on the streets of ...
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[PDF] A SHORT HISTORY OF SAM HOUSTONWhen he returned, the self-made scholar had memorized Homer's Iliad. Houston taught school briefly, then joined Andrew Jackson's Tennessee. Regulars and was ...Missing: academy attended
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[PDF] Sam Houston and the Jacksonian Frontier Personality Thomas H ...Born in 1793, he left his family in Tennessee as an adolescent to live for several years among the. Cherokees. He joined the regular army during the War of 1812 ...
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Land Grants - Texas State Historical AssociationJan 23, 2016 · A total of 36,876,492 acres was granted by the republic in headright certificates. In order to attract settlers, the Republic of Texas also made ...Missing: 1832 size
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Consultation - Texas State Historical Association12 may 2022 · ... Sam Houston won unanimous election as commander, with the rank of major general. However, the Consultation made no attempt to assert its ...
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Convention of 1836 - Texas State Historical AssociationAug 3, 2020 · Only ten of the delegates were in Texas as early as January 1830; two of them arrived in 1836. Sam Houston, Robert Potter, Richard Ellis, Samuel ...
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Sam Houston - Texas State Library and Archives Commission13 mar 2015 · Sam Jacinto. In November 1835, as war with Mexico appeared inevitable, the Texas Consultation appointed Houston major general of the Texas army.<|separator|>
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Texas Revolution - Texas State Historical AssociationMay 21, 2025 · The Texan army was disintegrating and Sam Houston, appointed commander-in-chief, led a nonexistent “regular army.” The provisional government ...
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Revolutionary Army - Texas State Historical Association... Sam Houston as commander, though in practice the innovation had no impact. ... " The fate of Fannin's command, whose far-flung units totaled about 675 men ...
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Texas History Main Page 1836On March 11, 1836 General Sam Houston arrived at Gonzales, Texas to take command of the Texas Army. ... With 374 men, he began a 41 day retreat, recruitment and ...
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Houston retreats from Santa Anna's army | March 13, 1836 | HISTORYOn March 6, 1836, the separatists chose Sam Houston to be the commander-in-chief of the revolutionary army. Houston immediately departed for Gonzales, Texas ...Missing: appointment | Show results with:appointment
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Goliad Campaign of 1836 - Texas State Historical AssociationApr 7, 2016 · The Goliad Campaign of 1836, a campaign of the Texas Revolution, was a victorious operation for the Mexican army under Gen. José de Urrea.
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Sam Houston's Notes Before San Jacinto, April 19, 1836Jun 19, 2019 · Historians still debate Sam Houston's strategy in taking the Texan army on a retreat eastward towards Louisiana rather than engaging ...
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Old Sam Jacinto - Today@Sam - Sam Houston State UniversityThe military victory on April 21, 1836, on a river, bayou and swamp-ringed field just east of Houston, Texas, is considered one of the 10 most decisive battles ...
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The History | The Battle of San JacintoGeneral Sam Houston's men, their families uprooted and futures uncertain, were spoiling for a fight. On April 17th, their eastward retreat led them to a fateful ...Missing: morale | Show results with:morale
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The Battle of San Jacinto - Texas History for TeachersThe video outlines the events leading up to the battle, highlighting the strategic decisions made by Sam Houston and the mistakes by Santa Anna that led to the ...
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Battle and Revolution | The AlamoOn April 21, 1836, the Texan Army under Sam Houston attacked Santa Anna's army on the banks of the San Jacinto River with cries of “Remember the Alamo! Remember ...
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San Jacinto – Texans Defending TexasFrom the official report of the April 21, 1836 Battle of San Jacinto, by General Sam Houston to D. G. Burnet, Provisional President of the Republic of Texas ...
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Treaties of Velasco - Texas State Historical AssociationJul 30, 2020 · Two treaties were signed by ad interim president David G. Burnet and Gen. Antonio López de Santa Anna at Velasco on May 14, 1836.
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Republic of Texas - Texas State Historical AssociationFinally, just eleven days before the election, Sam Houston became an active candidate. On election day, September 5, Houston received 5,119 votes, Smith 743, ...
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[PDF] Chapter 7: The Republic of Texas and Early StatehoodIn managing Texas's vast amounts of land, Houston favored giving land to settlers as a source of future property taxes; Lamar favored reinstating the empresario ...
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Texas* - Countries - Office of the HistorianOn March 1, 1845, U.S. President John Tyler signed a congressional joint resolution favoring the annexation of Texas. On March 4, 1845, U.S. President James ...Missing: Van Buren deferral
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The Annexation of Texas, the Mexican-American WarFollowing Texas' successful war of independence against Mexico in 1836, President Martin van Buren refrained from annexing Texas after the Mexicans threatened ...Missing: Houston deferral
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Treaty Between Texas Commissioners and the Cherokee Indians ...Apr 11, 2016 · Sam Houston and John Forbes were commissioned in December 1835 to negotiate with the Indians. They concluded a treaty on February 23, 1836.
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Annexation - Texas State Historical AssociationNov 1, 1994 · The United States Congress passed the annexation resolution on February 28, 1845, and Andrew Jackson Donelson proceeded to Texas to urge ...
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[PDF] SENATORS OF THE UNITED STATES - GovInfotook oath Feb. 1, 1871. 10 Tendered resignation May 14, 1880, effective May ... Sam Houston .................... Feb. 21, 1846 Mar. 3, 1859. 36th–38th ...
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Sam Houston | Texas State LibraryMar 19, 2015 · February 19, 1846 - Formal transfer of power from Republic of Texas to United States of America. March 1846 - Takes office as U.S. Senator.
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History - Sam Houston Memorial MuseumHe held the Attorney General of the Nashville District in Tennessee from 1819-1821. In 1823 and 1825, he was elected to the Democratic Party for the House of ...
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The Senate Votes for War against MexicoOn May 12, 1846, the United States Senate voted 40 to 2 to go to war with Mexico. President James K. Polk had accused Mexican troops of having attacked ...
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[PDF] "Magnificent Barbarian": Sam Houston RevisitedWhile serving as a representative, Houston met the first love of his life. Although De Bruhl's book is uneven, and sporadically researched, he seems to be the ...
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Presidential Ambitions - Today@Sam - Sam Houston State UniversityJul 20, 2018 · Houston supported the Compromise of 1850 with the words "a nation divided against itself cannot stand." Eight years later Abraham Lincoln used ...
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Houston and the Kansas-Nebraska ActSam Houston was one of the few southern senators to oppose the Kansas-Nebraska Act. He foresaw that the act would stoke the flames of sectional conflict.
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Sam Houston Senate Speech, February 15, 1854 | Texas State LibraryFeb 17, 2016 · Sam Houston speech opposing the Kansas-Nebraska Act, 1854. I might here close my remarks in relation to this bill.
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Sam Houston, Texas Secession — and Robert E. LeeFeb 1, 2011 · ... Houston, then a U.S. senator, told Congress in 1854 as he defied Southern predilections to vote against the Kansas-Nebraska Act. Of himself ...
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Chapter 222: Kansas Voters Reject The Pro-Slavery Lecompton ...The leading Southern politicians quickly line up behind this narrative, including Alexander Stephens, James Mason, Robert Toombs, John Slidell and Sam Houston.
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Sam Houston | Texas State Library### Summary of Sam Houston's Election, Inauguration, and Early Governorship (1859–1860)
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Gov. Samuel Houston - National Governors Association... President of the Republic of Texas, serving two nonconsecutive terms. When Texas was annexed to the Union, Houston won election to the U.S. Senate, serving ...
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Sam Houston's Return: Inaugural Address as Governor, 1859In this inaugural address, he warned against sectionalism, called for investment in infrastructure and education, and advocated stronger frontier defenses.
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Narrative History of Texas Secession and Readmission to the Union(Sam Houston, although accepting the decision of the electorate to secede, protested the Convention's decision to join the Confederacy since the matter was not ...
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Secession Convention - Texas State Historical AssociationJul 1, 1995 · In doing this it declared that all current officeholders must swear a loyalty oath to the Confederacy. Sam Houston refused, saying that the ...
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Texas secedes | March 2, 1861 - History.comHouston grumbled that Texans were “stilling the voice of reason,” and he predicted an “ignoble defeat” for the South. Houston refused to take an oath of ...
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February 1861 - Appomattox Court House National Historical Park ...Mar 31, 2012 · Texas seceded on February 1, 1861. Governor Sam Houston, the man who had done so much to bring the state into existence, opposed secession.
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Sam Houston and Secession - Emerging Civil WarAug 17, 2015 · Houston was evicted from his office on March 16, 1861, for refusing to take an oath of loyalty to the Confederacy. “Fellow-Citizens,” he wrote, ...Missing: Huntsville speeches
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Woodland Home - East Texas HistoryIn 1847, Sam Houston bought a 200-acre property on the outskirts of Huntsville, Texas, to be the site of his family's home. Houston designed a house that ...
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Sam Houston House - Texas State Historical AssociationSam Houston's home, the Woodlands, is located in Huntsville, on the campus of Sam Houston State University. ... Houses, Mansions, and Plantations. The ...
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Biography of Sam Houston, Founding Father of Texas - ThoughtCoMay 15, 2019 · Houston enlisted in the American army for the War of 1812, serving in the west under Andrew Jackson. He distinguished himself for heroism at ...
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Was Sam Houston against joining the Confederacy? - QuoraJul 23, 2020 · After refusing to support the Confederacy and refusing Union troops to keep his office as governor, he retired to his home in Huntsville and ...
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Sam Houston and Texas Secession - Abbeville InstituteJul 12, 2018 · On February 8, 1850, he delivered his “Nation Divided” speech in the Senate to support the 1850 Compromise. It would be a speech printed and ...<|separator|>
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Museum Grounds - Sam Houston Memorial MuseumThe complex is situated on 15 acres of the original farm of over 200 acres owned by General Sam Houston and his family from 1847-1858. The Steamboat House is ...
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Texas's secession and the twilight years of Houston's lifeHouston remained a steadfast supporter of the Union during the Civil War, even as he witnessed the turmoil and destruction it wrought. He believed that ...Missing: blockade | Show results with:blockade
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Steamboat House - Texas State Historical AssociationIn midsummer Houston was stricken with pneumonia and died in the front room downstairs on July 26, 1863. He was buried in nearby Oakwood Cemetery, where his ...
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Sam Houston's lonely death to be commemorated in HuntsvilleJul 24, 2013 · On July 26, 1863, the disdained 70-year-old, lucid after days of wavering consciousness, whispered to his family, "Texas, Texas, Margaret," and ...
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[PDF] The Death of Sam Houston - Newton Gresham LibraryAug 3, 2007 · It is reported in several sources that his last words were, “Texas, Margaret, Texas.” The funeral service was held in the upstairs parlor on ...
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Houston, Margaret Moffette Lea - Texas State Historical AssociationOct 26, 2019 · Explore the life of Margaret Houston, wife of Sam Houston, her struggles, devotion, and the impact she had on his life and legacy.
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[PDF] Days Of Old Sumner CountyCounty Historical Society dinner, April 25 at 6:30 in the. Gallatin Church of ... Sam Houston married 18-year-old Eliza. Allen of Gallatin on Jan. 22 ...
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Sam Houston's Eight Children and their DescendantsHouston's Children. On May 9, 1840, at the age of 47, Sam Houston wed the 21-year-old Margaret Moffette Lea, the daughter of Alabama planters.
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Houston Children - Sam Houston Memorial MuseumOn May 25, 1843 at Washington-on-the-Brazos, the first of eight Houston children was born. Proud parents Margaret Lea and Sam Houston greeted their first son ...
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Houston's Spiritual Journey - Today@SamJul 20, 2018 · His family was prosperous, with roots in the Presbyterian religion and the American revolution. They owned a frontier farm and part interest in ...Missing: early | Show results with:early<|control11|><|separator|>
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Recollections of General Sam Houston - jstor'" The Tennessee Historical Society has two portraits of Governor Hous- ton ... Also, of his marriage to Miss Eliza Allen. (who was a first cousin of ...
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The Raven Biography of Sam Houston | PDF - Scribdadventure, however, and Sam spent most of his time reading. some books he had brought along, including Shakespeare, Akenside's poems, Robinson Crusoe, The ...
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Sam Houston Survived Many Disappointments - The Pineville SunJul 19, 2024 · The solitude of the wilderness soothed the hurt and embarrassment of Houston's lost love but not sufficiently and he began drinking heavily and ...Missing: exile 1830-1832
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Houston fought his toughest battle with the bottle - Hays Free PressFeb 12, 2014 · In May 1840, Houston married Margaret Lea, a strong-willed woman who declared open season on his drinking. She resolved to stop her famous ...
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Sam Houston's Wooden Crutch | Bullock Texas State History MuseumAt San Jacinto, a musket ball shattered the front part of Houston's tibia bone just above his ankle. Within days, the wound became inflamed and too painful to ...Missing: chronic pain
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Sam Houston's health decline in 1863 near Beaumont TexasJun 3, 2025 · He lingered through months of pain and infection, his health unsteady, the wound unhealed. He was finally able to return to the army in the ...When General Sam Houston died in the summer of 1863, hisOn July 26, 1863, Sam Houston died at Steamboat House in ...More results from www.facebook.comMissing: cough | Show results with:cough
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Houston, the Emancipator - Today@SamJul 20, 2018 · Sam Houston was also an emancipator. Houston owned 12 slaves. Texas legend says that he freed them before he was legally required to do so.Missing: called | Show results with:called<|control11|><|separator|>
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Sam Houston despised slavery | AP NewsJul 22, 2020 · ... slave owners who didn't have Houston's same anti-slavery stance. In the 1860's Houston's slave Joshua Houston had accumulated the equivalent ...<|separator|>
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Houston, Joshua - Texas State Historical AssociationJoshua Houston, a servant of Sam Houston and an officeholder after the Civil War ... After Houston's death in July 1863, Margaret Lea Houston moved to ...
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Sam Houston's Proslavery Argument Against SecessionIn this speech, given prior to Lincoln's election, he presents the argument that slavery would be safer within the United States than outside of it. It was a ...
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PolitiFact: Sam Houston's views on slavery not as clear-cut as Perry ...May 26, 2013 · Gov. Perry is right that Houston was against slavery, but as a Southern senator he was chained to it and could not openly oppose it.<|separator|>
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Sam Houston, San Jacinto, and the Coming Civil WarApr 25, 2011 · A young congressman named David Wilmot proposed in 1846 that any new territory acquired as a result of the Mexican War not be open to slavery.
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Southern Politics and Attempts to Reopen the African Slave Tradereopening. An opposition ticket, led by gubernatorial candi- date Sam Houston, was elected. Houston's triumph was popu- larly regarded as a rebuke to the ...
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Agitation in Texas for Reopening the Slave Trade - jstordespite the fact that Sam Houston, who opposed the reopening of the traffic, had been defeated in the August election for the gov- ernorship by Hardin R ...
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Texas Secedes from the Union - Digital HistoryTexas Governor Sam Houston (1793-1863), who owned a dozen slaves, repudiated secession and refused to take an oath of allegiance to the Confederacy. As a ...
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Houston & Native Americans - Today@SamJul 20, 2018 · After Houston's heroic conduct at the Battle of Horseshoe Bend, he was named an Indian sub-agent in Tennessee. He accompanied a delegation ...Missing: early | Show results with:early<|control11|><|separator|>
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Sam Houston had strong ties to the Cherokee Nation | khou.comNov 30, 2020 · Houston became Chief Oolooteka's adopted Cherokee father. The Chief dubbed Houston "Colonneh," meaning "Raven." Houston lived with the tribe ...
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American Indian Relations - Texas State Historical AssociationPresident Sam Houston's policy of peace, friendship, and commerce, plus adequate frontier protection, was well set forth in a law of December 5, 1836, in which ...
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Texans' Struggle for Freedom and Equality Exhibit - Indians and ...Feb 25, 2025 · In February 1836, Houston negotiated a treaty with the Cherokees and other East Texas bands. However, the Convention of 1836 failed to ratify ...
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[PDF] 2) Texas' First President: Sam Houston 1836 - 1838The Republic of Texas faced a number of signi icant challenges during its almost ten years as a nation. It had already accrued $1.25 million dollars in debt ...
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Sam Houston elected as president of Texas | September 5, 1836On September 5, 1836, Sam Houston is elected as president of the Republic of Texas, which earned its independence from Mexico in a successful military ...Missing: stabilization diplomacy
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Sam Houston's respect and advocacy for Native AmericansIn essence, Sam Houston's relationships with Native Americans were characterized by respect, empathy, and a genuine pursuit of peaceful coexistence. He ...Missing: affinity dress language
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BIRD'S FORT TREATY - THE COPPELL HISTORICAL SOCIETYBird's Fort Treaty was a peace treaty between the Republic of Texas and some of the Indian tribes of Texas and Oklahoma, signed on September 29, 1843.Missing: 1841-1844 | Show results with:1841-1844
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[PDF] THE POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY OF SAM HOUSTON THESIS ...5 Books and articles on Houston's Indian policies include Mary Whatley Clarke ... "Sam Houston's First Marriage." Frontier. Times 31 (March 1954): 21-6 ...
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The Cherokee War of 1839 - Texas State Historical AssociationOct 19, 2020 · The Cherokee War of 1839 was the culmination of friction between the Cherokee, Kickapoo, and Shawnee Indians and the White settlers in Northeast Texas.Missing: repudiation | Show results with:repudiation
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Sam Houston Senate Speech, February 15, 1854 | Texas State LibraryFeb 17, 2016 · institution of slavery. This sacrifice was exacted by the southern as well as by the northern States. The sacrifice was received at the ...
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How Many Died in the American Civil War? - History.comJan 6, 2022 · For more than a century, the most-accepted estimate was about 620,000 dead. A specific figure of 618,222 is often cited, with 360,222 Union ...Missing: confirmation | Show results with:confirmation
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Reconstruction Era in Texas: Political, Social, and Economic ChangesAug 25, 2023 · For nine years following the Civil War, Texas was in turmoil, as its people attempted to solve political, social, and economic problems ...Missing: hardships | Show results with:hardships
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The Battle of San Jacinto | Texas State LibraryDec 5, 2017 · The Battle of San Jacinto lasted less than twenty minutes, but it sealed the fate of three republics. Mexico would never regain the lost territory.Missing: details | Show results with:details
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Sam Houston | Texas State Library### Summary of Sam Houston's Achievements as President of the Republic of Texas
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Man and Metropolis: The Story of Houston | Worlds RevealedMar 2, 2023 · Sam Houston had a fascinating life long before he set foot on Texas soil. Born on March 2, 1793 in Rockbridge County, Virginia, he lived on the ...
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Sam Houston State University - Texas State Historical AssociationSam Houston State University, originally Sam Houston Normal Institute, was established by the Sixteenth Texas Legislature, named for Sam Houston, and located ...
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About SHSU - Growing Fast, Staying FriendlySep 4, 2025 · Named for Texas' greatest hero, Sam Houston State University honors its historical roots through academic excellence. For more than 140 years, ...Our Administration · Faculty and Staff · Our Success
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History of Fort Sam Houston: A Military Legacy in San AntonioMay 16, 2018 · Explore the rich history of Fort Sam Houston, from its establishment in 1845 to its role in modern military training and medical education.
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Sam Houston Statue Visitor Center & Gift Shop - Visit Huntsville, TXA tribute to courage, the Sam Houston Statue was designed and constructed by artist David Adickes. He dedicated the statue to the City of Huntsville on October ...Missing: namesakes | Show results with:namesakes
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SAM HOUSTON MONUMENT - Hermann Park ConservancyGeneral Sam Houston, sitting atop his horse, Saracen, has watched over the entrance to Hermann Park at Montrose and Main streets since 1925.
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Sam Houston Statue, U.S. Capitol for Texas | AOCThis statue of Sam Houston was given to the National Statuary Hall Collection by Texas in 1905. Born on March 2, 1793, near Lexington, Virginia.
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Houston and the Complex Dynamics of Slavery - Sam Houston TalesMoreover, Sam Houston's reluctance to emancipate his slaves in his lifetime, despite his complex political views on slavery, suggests a certain level of ...
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Let's Mess With Texas | Native America: A HistoryMar 9, 2022 · Neighbors received orders to remove the Caddos to “where they can be protected from lawless violence, and effective measures adopted for their ...
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Black Lives Matter Huntsville says no issues with Sam Houston ...Jul 13, 2020 · Black Lives Matter Huntsville members say the only thing they'd like to see removed is a Confederate monument from the courthouse grounds. We ...Missing: debates | Show results with:debates
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Texas distorts its past – and Sam Houston's legacy - The ConversationMar 11, 2021 · But Houston saw slavery as a necessary evil, not a patriotic cause. “It is necessity that produces slavery,” he said in 1855, and “it is ...