Traditional Muzzleloading Association

The Center of Camp => People of the Times => Topic started by: Craig Tx on June 05, 2022, 09:23:10 AM

Title: 6/05 A Two Fer!
Post by: Craig Tx on June 05, 2022, 09:23:10 AM
6/5/1856: Memucan Hunt, Texas diplomat and politician, dies

On this day in 1856, Memucan Hunt died at his brother's home in Tennessee.

He had come to Texas just after the battle of San Jacinto. President Houston appointed him agent to the United States to assist William H. Wharton in securing recognition of the Republic of Texas. That task successfully accomplished in March 1837, Hunt became Texan minister at Washington. Although his proposal of annexation was rejected by the United States (1837), he succeeded in negotiating a boundary agreement in 1838. Hunt served under President Burnet as secretary of the Texas Navy. In 1841 he ran unsuccessfully for vice-president. Hunt served briefly in the Mexican War and after annexation served one term in the Texas legislature. Hunt County is named in his honor.


6/5/1837: Republic of Texas charters Independence Academy

On this day in 1837, the Congress of the Republic of Texas granted a charter to the citizens of Independence, Washington County, for the establishment of a nonsectarian, nonpolitical "seminary."

The charter was a response to a petition presented a month before by John P. Coles, a large landowner and Old Three Hundred settler who had founded Coles' Settlement, later Independence. In order to carry out the charter, the young Henry F. Gillette bought an existing girls' school from Frances Thompson. Hugh Wilson, a Presbyterian minister, taught at the new academy. In 1839 the institution, known as Independence Female Academy, enrolled more than fifty students taught by a Miss McGuffin. In 1841 Edward Fontaine, a Methodist minister who later became an Episcopalian minister of considerable importance in Austin, taught at the school. Independence Academy closed in 1845. Its property was purchased and donated to the newly chartered Baylor University. Not until the Constitution of 1845 were the requirements for a system of public education legally and thoroughly specified.
Title: Re: 6/05 A Two Fer!
Post by: BEAVERMAN on June 05, 2022, 05:33:21 PM
 :hairy
Title: Re: 6/05 A Two Fer!
Post by: Butler Ford 40 on June 05, 2022, 09:59:45 PM
 :hairy