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HOUSE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
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WHEREAS, The State of Texas lost a renowned civil rights |
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leader and public servant with the death of former State |
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Representative Reby Cary of Fort Worth on December 7, 2018, at the |
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age of 98; and |
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WHEREAS, Reby Cary was born in Fort Worth on September 9, |
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1920, to Maggie B. Cary and the Reverend Smith Cary Jr.; he grew up |
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during the era of segregation and attended all-black schools, |
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graduating from I. M. Terrell High School in 1937 and earning a |
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bachelor's degree in history and political science from Prairie |
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View A&M College in 1941; answering his nation's call to duty at the |
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start of World War II, he became one of the first African Americans |
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to enlist in the U.S. Coast Guard as an apprentice seaman and one of |
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the first to train as a radio operator; he served in combat in the |
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South Pacific and participated in the invasions of Saipan, Tinian, |
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Leyte, Luzon, and Okinawa; and |
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WHEREAS, Following his discharge in November 1945, Mr. Cary |
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returned to Texas and cofounded the Fort Worth Negro Chamber of |
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Commerce and the McDonald College of Industrial Arts, a vocational |
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school for black veterans who were excluded from white schools; |
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after completing his master's degree, he began teaching history and |
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government, first at Dunbar Middle School and later at Tarrant |
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County Junior College; in 1969, he became the first African |
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American professor at The University of Texas at Arlington, where |
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he also served as associate dean of student affairs; while there, he |
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led the efforts to remove the Confederate flag from the campus and |
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to change the school's mascot from the Rebels to the Mavericks; in |
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addition, he helped establish the chapters of two fraternities and |
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a sorority at UTA, and he played a leading role in the creation of |
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the school's Minorities Cultural Center, one of the first of its |
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kind in the Southwest; and |
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WHEREAS, Mr. Cary was a member of the Texas House of |
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Representatives from 1979 to 1985, and over the course of his three |
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terms in the legislature, he served as the budget and oversight |
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chair of the Regions, Compacts, and Districts Committee, as vice |
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chair of the Energy Committee, and as a member of the County |
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Affairs, the Rules and Resolutions, and the Government Organization |
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Committees; moreover, he was the first African American elected to |
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the Fort Worth school board, and he was a founding member of the |
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Frederick Douglass Republicans of Fort Worth and Tarrant County, |
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the president of the Black Republican Council of Texas, and a member |
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of the State Republican Executive Committee; and |
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WHEREAS, Deeply engaged in a range of community issues, |
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Mr. Cary was active with the Fort Worth Transportation Authority, |
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the Tax Appraisal Review Board of Tarrant County, the Youth |
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Services Bureau of Tarrant County, the Fort Worth/Tarrant County |
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Minority Leaders and Citizens Council, the Fort Worth Metropolitan |
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Black Chamber of Commerce, the Boy Scouts of America, the United |
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Way, and Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity; in addition to his other |
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accomplishments, he was a prolific author, producing more than 20 |
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volumes about the history of African Americans in Fort Worth; and |
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WHEREAS, Mr. Cary enjoyed the love and support of his wife, |
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Nadine, and they shared a rewarding marriage that spanned 58 years |
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until her passing in 2003; the couple were the parents of a |
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treasured daughter, Faith; and |
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WHEREAS, Reby Cary made a lasting, positive difference |
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through his strong commitment to social progress and public |
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affairs, and his contributions and achievements will long resonate |
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in the community and state he proudly called home; now, therefore, |
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be it |
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RESOLVED, That the 86th Legislature of the State of Texas |
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hereby pay tribute to the life of former State Representative Reby |
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Cary and extend sincere condolences to all who mourn his passing; |
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and, be it further |
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RESOLVED, That an official copy of this resolution be |
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prepared for his family and that when the Texas House of |
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Representatives and Senate adjourn this day, they do so in memory of |
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Reby Cary. |
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Collier |
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Bonnen of Brazoria |
Goodwin |
Oliverson |
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Anderson |
Harris |
Patterson |
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Bell of Kaufman |
Hinojosa |
Price |
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Bell of Montgomery |
Holland |
Ramos |
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Biedermann |
Huberty |
Raymond |
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Bonnen of Galveston |
E. Johnson of Dallas |
Romero, Jr. |
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Bowers |
J. Johnson of Dallas |
Rose |
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Buckley |
Johnson of Harris |
Rosenthal |
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Burns |
King of Hemphill |
Schaefer |
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Burrows |
King of Parker |
Shaheen |
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Button |
King of Uvalde |
Sheffield |
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Capriglione |
Lambert |
Smithee |
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Craddick |
Longoria |
Talarico |
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Darby |
Lucio III |
Thompson of Brazoria |
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Davis of Dallas |
Martinez |
Thompson of Harris |
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Davis of Harris |
Martinez Fischer |
Tinderholt |
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Deshotel |
Meyer |
Turner of Dallas |
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Dominguez |
Meza |
Turner of Tarrant |
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Dutton |
Middleton |
VanDeaver |
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Gervin-Hawkins |
Murr |
Zedler |
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González of Dallas |
Nevárez |
Zwiener |
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González of El Paso |
Noble |
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______________________________ |
______________________________ |
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President of the Senate |
Speaker of the House |
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I certify that H.C.R. No. 54 was unanimously adopted by a rising |
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vote of the House on February 26, 2019. |
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______________________________ |
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Chief Clerk of the House |
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I certify that H.C.R. No. 54 was unanimously adopted by a rising |
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vote of the Senate on March 4, 2019. |
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______________________________ |
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Secretary of the Senate |
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APPROVED: __________________ |
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Date |
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__________________ |
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Governor |