|
|
|
CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
|
|
WHEREAS, Throughout the long and colorful history of Texas, |
|
the cannon has been an important weapon in the state's fight for |
|
liberty and independence as well as a symbol of the defiance and |
|
determination of its people; and |
|
WHEREAS, The very first conflict of the Texas Revolution, the |
|
Battle of Gonzales, was fought over a cannon; on October 2, 1835, |
|
the 150 Texian rebels at Gonzales refused to surrender their bronze |
|
six-pounder to Mexican dragoons; they pointed instead to the cannon |
|
and declared, "Come and take it!"; during the ensuing battle, this |
|
memorable catchphrase and a painted image of the cannon itself were |
|
raised on a makeshift flag that was created by the women of |
|
Gonzales; the legendary flag has since become one of the iconic |
|
images of the Lone Star State; and |
|
WHEREAS, In 1836, the defenders of the Alamo boasted the |
|
largest artillery contingent west of the Mississippi, an assortment |
|
of 18 to 21 artillery pieces, and after the Mexican army captured |
|
the fort, the cannons were destroyed or abandoned nearby; when the |
|
Alamo was avenged six weeks later by the Texian victory at the |
|
Battle of San Jacinto, the famous Twin Sisters, two six-pounders |
|
that had been donated to the rebellion by the people of Cincinnati, |
|
Ohio, played a decisive role in the defeat of Santa Anna's army; and |
|
WHEREAS, A cannon featured in a memorable incident in the |
|
early years of the Texas Republic; in 1842, Austin residents feared |
|
that President Sam Houston wanted to move the republic's capital |
|
from Austin to Houston, and when he sent Texas Rangers to take the |
|
government's archives, an Austin innkeeper named Angelina Eberly |
|
fired off a cannon on the corner of Sixth Street and Congress |
|
Avenue, rousing the city's population and blowing a hole in the |
|
General Land Office; and |
|
WHEREAS, Today, vintage artillery pieces can be seen at |
|
county courthouses, military installations, and historical sites |
|
across Texas; two 24-pound howitzers made especially for the new |
|
republic by Major General Thomas Jefferson Chambers in the 1830s |
|
guard the south entrance of the Texas Capitol, while two 12-pound |
|
field guns and a wrought iron cannon are also situated on the |
|
Capitol grounds; a cannon reputed to be the "Come and Take It" gun |
|
is on exhibit at the Gonzales Memorial Museum, a cannon used by |
|
Colonel James Fannin at the Battle of Coleto Creek is displayed in a |
|
park in Goliad, and a bronze cannon believed to have been used at |
|
the Alamo is on permanent loan to the Shrine of Texas Liberty by the |
|
San Jacinto Battleground Conservancy; and |
|
WHEREAS, The firing of a cannon continues to be an honored |
|
tradition at celebrations and commemorations across Texas; since |
|
1954, Smokey the Cannon has been discharged at every University of |
|
Texas home football game in Austin--at the kickoff and the end of |
|
each quarter, after the crowd sings "The Eyes of Texas," and each |
|
time the team scores; during the off-season, the cannon and its crew |
|
tour the country, representing the Longhorns at charity and |
|
volunteer events; other cannons help recreate Texas history, such |
|
as the fieldpiece fired for visitors by the "Living History" |
|
reenactors at the Fort Davis National Historical Site; and |
|
WHEREAS, These historic weapons serve as powerful reminders |
|
of our state's epic struggle for freedom, and they further |
|
highlight the unique heritage shared by all those who are proud to |
|
call Texas home; now, therefore, be it |
|
RESOLVED, That the 85th Legislature of the State of Texas |
|
hereby designate the cannon as the official state gun of Texas. |