Legends Lore of the Texas Capitol by Mike Cox
Author:Mike Cox [Cox, Mike]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: History, United States, State & Local, Southwest (AZ; NM; OK; TX), Photography, Subjects & Themes, Regional, Historical, Social Science, Folklore & Mythology, Travel, Pictorials
ISBN: 9781467137584
Google: 8xDiDgAAQBAJ
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing
Published: 2017-06-26T15:55:59+00:00
Travis and OâReillyâless than a year after the San Antonio journalist rode through Austin with the message for the presidentâwould take part in an episode on the floor of the Texas Senate that, while it nearly erupted in bloodshed, amounts to one of the strongest stands for freedom of the press in the stateâs history.
By 1910, Travis had already helped to cover two regular sessions of the legislature and several special sessions. That summer, Governor Tom Campbell called a fourth special session of the Thirty-First Legislature.
âThe Legislature was a lot more important in those days than it is now,â Travis recalled years later. âI suppose we didnât have so many news services as weâve got now, but it was quite an honor to record its proceedings.â
Back then, literally everything the legislature did got news coverage, and the lawmakers were not always pleased with the way things came out in the papers. That year, a cloud of scandal hung over the capitol dome. Speaker of the House Austin M. Kennedy, a former newspaper publisher from Mexia who first gained election to the lower chamber in 1898, was suspected of misdeeds in office. On the Senate side, members expelled one of their own for accusing some of his colleagues of playing poker with lobbyists and assorted other ethical issues. Travis had written about all that, but it was the Speaker who reacted to Travisâs coverage with enmity.
âKennedy just hated my guts,â Travis said, laughing. âThere were a lot of rumors around about him getting rake-offs on furniture for the Speakerâs quarters. He had a secretary that would buy this furniture at a discount and heâd split it with her. [Then called a stenographer, the woman had been on the House payroll at $120 a month (around $2,500 in todayâs dollars) even though she had not moved to Texas until the sixth week of the special session.] Anyhow, he decided to meet those rumors head-on. So he demanded an investigation.â
Being Speaker (albeit having been elected to the post by only a six-vote majority), Kennedy appointed a three-member committeeâtwo of them close friendsâto conduct the probe.
âSo I began writing up that investigation as a whitewash,â Travis said. âThat made old Kennedy hate me worse than ever.â
A report that would clear the lawmaker was imminent, but Kennedy made a mistake when he addressed the committee. He gave out advance copies of his speech to all the statehouse reporters but Travis, which turned out to be the worst political blunder he ever made.
âHe made it very pointed that I was not to have any copies of his speech because I hadnât treated him right,â Travis said. âWell, the result of that was that I attended this session and the other newspapermen didnât. I sat there and took notes on it. And he launched into a tirade in the course of which he mentioned rumors that they hadnât gotten into at all and accused the governor of instigating all these charges against him.â
At the end of the speech, one of the committee members, John T.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
| United States |
In Cold Blood by Truman Capote(3305)
Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson(2830)
The Innovators: How a Group of Hackers, Geniuses, and Geeks Created the Digital Revolution by Walter Isaacson(2829)
All the President's Men by Carl Bernstein & Bob Woodward(2326)
Lonely Planet New York City by Lonely Planet(2170)
And the Band Played On by Randy Shilts(2127)
The Room Where It Happened by John Bolton;(2102)
The Poisoner's Handbook by Deborah Blum(2089)
The Murder of Marilyn Monroe by Jay Margolis(2057)
The Innovators by Walter Isaacson(2051)
Lincoln by David Herbert Donald(1943)
A Colony in a Nation by Chris Hayes(1880)
Under the Banner of Heaven: A Story of Violent Faith by Jon Krakauer(1745)
Amelia Earhart by Doris L. Rich(1645)
The Unsettlers by Mark Sundeen(1642)
Birdmen by Lawrence Goldstone(1618)
Being George Washington by Beck Glenn(1610)
Dirt by Bill Buford(1609)
Zeitoun by Dave Eggers(1588)