Governor Elisha Marshall Pease
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member QuesterMark
N 30° 16.340 W 097° 44.500
14R E 621035 N 3349632
This marker is one of eight placed in the park that was made of the site of the Temporary State Capitol of the 1880's; at the southwest corner of 11th St. and Congress Ave.
Waymark Code: WM6D95
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 05/16/2009
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member clayj
Views: 21

City: Austin
County: Travis
Subject Codes: governors; judges; Civil War
Year Marker Erected: 1977
Marker Location: SW cor 11th St and Congress Ave
Marker Size: 27" x 42"
Marker Number: 14643

Marker Text:
(January 3, 1812 - August 26, 1883) In 1835 E. M. Pease migrated to Texas from his native Connecticut. He joined the Texian forces at the Battle of Gonzales, Oct. 2, 1835, which initiated the Texas War for Independence. In the early days of the Republic, he worked as a government clerk and later served in the Legislature and Senate. He was a prominent lawyer in Brazoria when elected Governor in 1853. During Gov. Pease's first two terms in office, 1853-57, a permanent school fund was established and Texas' first free public schools built. Other achievements included increased railroad construction and reduction of taxes and the state debt. Gov. Pease ordered Texas Rangers to the frontier to combat recurring Indian raids. The Pease family became the first to occupy the newly constructed Governor's Mansion in 1856. A staunch Unionist, Pease restricted his political activities during the Civil War (1861-65), in 1866 he again ran for Governor but lost to J. W. Throckmorton. Gen. Philip H. Sheridan, Federal military commander of Texas, removed Throckmorton in 1867 and appointed Pease provisional governor to enforce Reconstruction policies. Pease resigned in protest in 1869. At the time of his death he was an Austin banker. Married to Lucadia Niles (1813-1905), he had three daughters. (1977)


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