Bill Text: TX SR156 | 2023-2024 | 88th Legislature | Introduced
Bill Title: Recognizing the bicentennial of the Texas Rangers.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 4-0)
Status: (Passed) 2023-02-14 - Reported enrolled [SR156 Detail]
Download: Texas-2023-SR156-Introduced.html
2023S0098-1 02/07/23 | ||
By: Birdwell, Hughes, Middleton, Sparks | S.R. No. 156 |
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WHEREAS, The Texas Rangers, the oldest state law | ||
enforcement agency in the United States, is hosting a kickoff | ||
event in commemoration of the legendary organization's | ||
bicentennial on January 13, 2023; and | ||
WHEREAS, From the settlement of the Texas frontier to the | ||
struggle against lawlessness during the oil boom and the | ||
Prohibition era, the Texas Rangers have played a central role in | ||
the administration of justice throughout the history of the Lone | ||
Star State; the term "Rangers" was first applied to a group that | ||
was formed to protect colonists under Stephen F. Austin in 1823, | ||
and the establishment of the Texas Rangers was later formalized | ||
by his Permanent Council, which assigned to the unit the | ||
responsibility of guarding the frontier from Native American | ||
incursions until the end of the Texas Revolution; and | ||
WHEREAS, After Texas won independence, the Texas Rangers | ||
were mobilized to a number of counties, and by the mid to late | ||
1870s, their role resembled that of something between an army and | ||
a police force; they were typically called on to assist with | ||
cases that were considered beyond the means of local police, and | ||
by the turn of the 20th century, they had transitioned from their | ||
duties as a frontier militia to focus almost exclusively on law | ||
enforcement; the beginning of the century was rife with crime, | ||
and the Rangers spent several decades fending off raiders along | ||
the Mexican border, countering spies and saboteurs, and | ||
apprehending the various gamblers, horse thieves, cattle | ||
rustlers, smugglers, bootleggers, and other offenders that | ||
dominated West Texas at that time; and | ||
WHEREAS, The Texas Rangers subsequently began operating | ||
under the administration of the Department of Public Safety, | ||
which was created by the Texas Legislature on August 10, 1935; | ||
only 36 personnel were initially assigned to the agency, but | ||
their newfound access to the department's resources, including a | ||
state-of-the-art crime laboratory, greatly enhanced the Rangers' | ||
investigative capabilities; newer and more advanced technologies | ||
would further facilitate their development into a fully | ||
modernized police force, and from 1935 to 1955, their annual | ||
workload increased from approximately 255 cases to more than | ||
16,700; today, in addition to investigating high-profile crimes, | ||
the Rangers contribute to border security, tactical operations, | ||
and crisis negotiation and provide key support and intelligence | ||
to ensure that our state is protected at every level; and | ||
WHEREAS, Over the course of two centuries, the Texas | ||
Rangers have cemented an international reputation that has grown | ||
with their depiction in multitudes of books, movies, television | ||
and radio shows, and pulp novels; the Rangers are inextricably | ||
linked to the history and mythology of the Old West, where they | ||
brought such notorious outlaws to justice as serial murderer John | ||
Wesley Hardin and train robber Sam Bass; their ranks have | ||
included a number of lawmen who achieved renown for their | ||
crime-fighting feats, among them Frank H. Hamer, John S. Ford, | ||
John Coffee Hays, and Captain W. J. McDonald, who is credited | ||
with the phrase that became the Rangers' creed: "No man in the | ||
wrong can stand up against a fellow that's in the right and keeps | ||
on a-comin'"; and | ||
WHEREAS, The Texas Rangers of today are continuing a proud | ||
and storied tradition of service through their efforts to keep | ||
the peace and enforce the rule of law, and it is a pleasure to | ||
join in celebrating this significant milestone in the history of | ||
one of the most iconic institutions of the Lone Star State; now, | ||
therefore, be it | ||
RESOLVED, That the Senate of the State of Texas, 88th | ||
Legislature, hereby commemorate the bicentennial of the Texas | ||
Rangers and commend its members, past and present, for their | ||
steadfast courage and dedication to duty; and, be it further | ||
RESOLVED, That a copy of this Resolution be prepared for | ||
the Texas Rangers as an expression of high regard from the Texas | ||
Senate. |