by Marie Watts | Feb 14, 2022 | Blog, Lagniappe
In honor of Black History Month, I am sharing this article I wrote for the historical series, Footprints of Fayette County. The article is titled FAYETTE COUNTY JURY DERAILS CIVIL RIGHTS ACTIVIST. African-Americans learned that they were free from slavery on...
by Marie Watts | Jun 12, 2019 | Lagniappe
Today, we hear politicians decry that the federal government is killing the private enterprise of coal mining by imposing environmental regulations and supporting other forms of energy. This is nothing new. The same scenario played out when, in 1935, the Rural...
by Marie Watts | Jun 12, 2019 | Lagniappe
Prior to the end of the Civil War, the right to bear arms in Texas was absolute. However, fear of armed freedmen brought the first legislation limiting the unrestrained possession of weapons. In 1871, the Texas legislature passed “An Act to Regulate the...
by Marie Watts | Sep 2, 2016 | Lagniappe
After emancipation the State of Texas began to pass Jim Crow laws (laws requiring racial segregation). The Lone Star state eventually passed 27 of these laws which were not repealed until 1964. Blacks were segregated in schools and when using public...
by Marie Watts | Sep 2, 2016 | Lagniappe
Today Sam Houston is a beloved and revered figure in Texas history. However, his relationship with the citizens of La Grange was a rocky one. Soon after his arrival in Texas in December, 1832, Houston began to exasperate area residents. Houston went to Gonzales to...
by Marie Watts | Sep 2, 2016 | Lagniappe
After Emancipation, African Americans struggled to reunite families, set up households, start their own churches and schools, and establish their own rural communities. While newspaper editorials railed against African Americans in general—vigorously opposing their...
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