Bill Text: TX HCR38 | 2025-2026 | 89th Legislature | Introduced
Bill Title: Expressing support for designating January 19 as Confederate Freedom Day.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Introduced) 2024-12-23 - Filed [HCR38 Detail]
Download: Texas-2025-HCR38-Introduced.html
89R9251 TBO-D | ||
By: Dutton | H.C.R. No. 38 |
|
||
WHEREAS, On June 19, 1865, Union Major General Gordon Granger | ||
arrived in Galveston with federal troops to provide military | ||
support for Reconstruction efforts and to enforce President Abraham | ||
Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation; that same day, General | ||
Granger read publicly his General Order No. 3, which proclaimed | ||
that all slaves were undeniably free from that date onward and that | ||
there would be "an absolute equality of rights and rights of | ||
property between former masters and slaves"; and | ||
WHEREAS, The proclamation sought to break the physical chains | ||
that bound slaves to their masters, but it could not sufficiently | ||
address the mental shackles that prevented many former slaveowners | ||
from truly accepting the freedom of former slaves; over time, the | ||
racist ideology engendered by former slaveowners has remained | ||
pervasive in American society; and | ||
WHEREAS, Each year, the State of Texas observes Confederate | ||
Heroes Day on January 19 to commemorate the lives of Confederate | ||
President Jefferson Davis and General Robert E. Lee as well as | ||
Confederate soldiers who died during the Civil War; opponents of | ||
the holiday have spoken out about the need to preserve history | ||
without glorifying individuals who fought to keep slaves in | ||
bondage; and | ||
WHEREAS, Eliminating Confederate Heroes Day and creating | ||
Confederate Freedom Day would symbolize the state's commitment to | ||
the values of liberty and equality, and the new holiday would help | ||
to unite Texans in the fight against institutional racism and | ||
discrimination; now, therefore, be it | ||
RESOLVED, That the 89th Legislature of the State of Texas | ||
hereby express support for designating January 19 as Confederate | ||
Freedom Day. |