ends & odd

A Yankee’s toast to Texas

“To Texas . . .
Joyous and sparkling,
Evergreen when it rains, enduring in drought,
Timeless, endless in boundaries, exciting,
Home to the adventurous of yesterday and today,
With shrines from the past, and space
and spirit for the future.
To Texas …
Everlasting in the hearts of your people!”

It was about fifteen years ago when, as editor of the Fort Stockton Pioneer (a Thursday morning weekly serving a West Texas community of about 10,000), I was handed a letter from one of our readers, for publication in the next issue … a letter admonishing our paper for not devoting adequate space to Texas Independence Day. She may have been DRT (I honestly don’t remember for certain), but she was certainly something of a Lone Star zealot … a perception of mine that was reinforced by her comment as she handed me the letter …

“You probably won’t realize the importance of this, not being from around here.”

Well, actually, I do, and so do a lot of dang Yankees from back east, such as myself. True, I am someone who — to borrow the old saying — wasn’t born in Texas, but got here as fast as I could. And the same could be said for Stephen Austin, William Travis, Davy Crockett, Jim Bowie, Mirabeau Lamar and Sam Houston.

Now, don’t get me wrong here … I do not equate myself with them. But it doesn’t hurt to remember that, with the exception of Juan Seguin and his company of Tejanos, there wasn’t a ‘native Texan’ to be found on the Texas side of the revolution.

The Keystone Stater in me would like to point out that there were an estimated 13 Pennsylvanians defending the walls of the Alamo, and offering up their lives for the revolution and the ideals it represented. And well they should. Because it was something that had been important to them, their parents and their grandparents for more than half a century.

Maybe that’s what bugged me about the woman’s remark … the fact that, ‘not being from around here,’ I would be unable to understand what was being decided in the Texas revolution. To my mind, it was something that all free-thinking people know … or should know.

You see, it wasn’t just people that came to Texas … the ideals adopted at Washington on the Brazos had been conceived many years before, in Philadelphia … and the determination to defend those ideals in Goliad and Gonzales, San Antonio and San Jacinto, had been inspired — again, many years before — by what took place at Bunker Hill and Valley Forge, Lexington, Concord and Cowpens.

And there was the material needed to pursue that defense, which  came from all over the United States. The decision by Alabama, for example, to strip its state arsenal of muskets and send them west. And the Twin Sisters — a pair of cannons donated by the ‘People of Cincinnati, Ohio’ and arriving just in time to blast a hole in the Mexicans’ makeshift breastworks at San Jacinto.

And so, I will lift my glass, and I will join the toast heard statewide today. But mine will be a private affair, and while I may follow closely the words printed at the top of this post, I will deviate on one point, and replace the word ‘Texas’ with ‘America’ … God Bless It!

There's a saying around here, something like, "I wasn't born in Texas, but I got here as fast as I could!" That's me. I'm a 'dang Yankee from back-east' who settled in the Lone Star State after some extended stays in the eastern U.S., and New Mexico. I worked as an archaeologist for a few years before dusting off my second major in English, and embarking on a 25-year career in journalism. Since then, I've embraced the dark side of the force, and now work in PR for a community college in Midland, Texas.

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