Bill Text: TX HCR17 | 2021-2022 | 87th Legislature | Introduced
Bill Title: Directing the State Preservation Board to initiate steps to provide for the replacement of the Children of the Confederacy plaque with a plaque to honor victims of the state's convict leasing system.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2021-03-11 - Referred to Culture, Recreation & Tourism [HCR17 Detail]
Download: Texas-2021-HCR17-Introduced.html
87R6394 BHH-D | ||
By: Reynolds | H.C.R. No. 17 |
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WHEREAS, The convict leasing system that flourished in Texas | ||
in the late 19th and early 20th centuries began soon after the | ||
passage of the Thirteenth Amendment, which ended slavery or | ||
indentured servitude in the United States except as a punishment | ||
for a crime; and | ||
WHEREAS, Faced with housing and feeding an exploding number | ||
of new prisoners due to laws that were used to unjustly incarcerate | ||
free blacks after the Civil War, the State of Texas began leasing | ||
state prisoners to private businesses in 1867; the state took a | ||
negligent role in ensuring that the prisoners were treated | ||
appropriately, and working conditions at the sugarcane | ||
plantations, stone quarries, iron foundries, and other dangerous | ||
places were inhumane; and | ||
WHEREAS, The men and women who were victims of the state's | ||
convict leasing system suffered grievously, as shown in the remains | ||
of 95 African Americans that were discovered in 2018 on the grounds | ||
of the former Imperial Sugar Company State Prison Farm in Sugar | ||
Land; the remains indicate that amputations, bone breaks, extreme | ||
dehydration, mosquito-borne epidemics, frequent beatings, and a | ||
lack of medical care were common; and | ||
WHEREAS, For more than 30 years, the state's convict leasing | ||
system, an offshoot of slavery, provided revenue to the State of | ||
Texas and allowed the state to largely avoid the cost of housing and | ||
feeding state prisoners; for the businesses that employed the | ||
prisoners, the convict leasing system was also profitable, allowing | ||
the businesses to hire labor at a fraction of the appropriate cost; | ||
and | ||
WHEREAS, By the time the Texas Legislature passed S.B. 10, | ||
Acts of the 31st Legislature, 4th Called Session, 1910, to end | ||
convict leasing, the Capitol, officially completed in 1888, had | ||
already been built with convict labor; records show that the red | ||
granite and limestone used to construct the building were quarried | ||
by state prisoners and that all of the ironworks, including the | ||
dome, columns, gates, and interior decorative features, were | ||
fabricated by state prisoners; and | ||
WHEREAS, It is in the public's interest to create a plaque to | ||
inform visitors to the Capitol that the Capitol was built with | ||
convict labor and to show that the men and women who were victims of | ||
the state's convict leasing system played an important role in the | ||
history and economic development of Texas; now, therefore, be it | ||
RESOLVED, That the 87th Legislature of the State of Texas | ||
hereby direct the State Preservation Board to initiate steps to | ||
provide for the replacement of the Children of the Confederacy | ||
plaque with a plaque to honor victims of the state's convict leasing | ||
system; and, be it further | ||
RESOLVED, That the Texas secretary of state forward an | ||
official copy of this resolution to the executive director of the | ||
State Preservation Board. |