TEXAS DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE

The Texas Declaration of Independence.

The 'Texas Declaration of Independence' was the formal declaration of independence of the Republic of Texas from Mexico in the Texas Revolution. It was adopted at the Convention of 1836 at Washington-on-the-Brazos on March 2, 1836, and formally signed the following day after errors were noted in the text.
Richard Ellis, president of the convention, appointed a committee of five; George C. Childress, Edward Conrad, James Gaines, Bailey Hardeman, and Collin McKinney (the last being the oldest member of the convention at age 70), to write the declaration, but the declaration was largely the work of Childress. As the text was completed in only one day after the committee was appointed, it is largely believed that Childress came to the convention already prepared with a draft.
Among others, the declaration mentions the following reasons for the separation:

★ The 1824 Constitution of Mexico establishing a federal republic had been usurped and changed into a centralist military dictatorship under Antonio López de Santa Anna.

★ The Mexican government had invited settlers to Texas and promised them constitutional liberty and republican government, but then reneged on these guarantees.

★ Texas was in union with the Mexican state of Coahuila as Coahuila y Tejas, with the capital in distant Saltillo, and thus the affairs of Texas were decided at a great distance from the province and in the Spanish language.

★ Political rights to which the settlers had previously been accustomed, such as the right to bear arms and the right to trial by jury, were denied.

★ No system of public education had been established.

★ The settlers were not allowed freedom of religion.
Based upon the United States Declaration of Independence, the Texas Declaration also contains many memorable expressions of American political principles:

★ "''the right of trial by jury, that palladium of civil liberty, and only safe guarantee for the life, liberty, and property of the citizen.''"

★ "''our arms ... are essential to our defence, the rightful property of freemen, and formidable only to tyrannical governments.''"

Contents
Signatures
See also
External links

Signatures


Replica of the building at Washington-on-the-Brazos where the Texas Declaration was signed. An inscription reads: "Here a Nation was born".

The New Republic


Richard Ellis, President of the Convention and Delegate from Red River

Charles B. Stewart

Thomas Barnett

John S. D. Byrom

José Francisco Ruiz

José Antonio Navarro

Jesse B. Badgett

William D. Lacy

William Menefee

John Fisher

Matthew Caldwell

William Motley

Lorenzo de Zavala

Stephen H. Everett

George W. Smyth

Elijah Stapp

Claiborne West

William. B. Scates

Michel B. Menard

Augustine B. Hardin

J. W. Burton

Thomas J. Gazley

Robert M. Coleman

Sterling C. Robertson

Benjamin Briggs Goodrich

George Washington Barnett

James G. Swisher

Jesse Grimes

Samuel Rhoads Fisher

John W. Moore

John W. Bower

Samuel A. Maverick (from Bejar)

Sam P. Carson

Andrew Briscoe

James B. Woods

James Collinsworth

Edwin Waller

Asa Brigham

George C. Childress

Bailey Hardeman

Robert Potter

Thomas Jefferson Rusk

Charles S. Taylor

John S. Roberts

Robert Hamilton

Collin McKinney

Albert Hamilton Latimer

James Power

Sam Houston

David Thomas

Edward Conrad

Martin Parmer

Edwin O. Legrand

Stephen W. Blount

James Gaines

William Clark, Jr.

Sydney O. Pennington

William Carrol Crawford

John Turner

Herbert Simms Kimble, Secretary

See also



Texas Independence Day

Timeline of the Republic of Texas

External links



The Declaration of Independence, 1836 from Gammel's Laws of Texas, Vol. I. hosted by the Portal to Texas History.

Lone Star Junction Site

Special Report: Texas Independence Day by Texas Cooking



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