A
andrewstx
Guest
As a Texan I resemble those words. Part of the Texas bloodshed will be accounted to by fact that the Commanches went on killing sprees and the Texans had to defend themselves.Texan - could I ask that you not refer to my prophet as “Joe”? It’s sort of insulting and dismissive. His name was Joseph.
Tangent - but your screen name - Texan? Do you know about, and take pride in, the history of the great state of Texas? How it came to be, and the wars fought, and how it ended up part of the United States? How it almost wasn’t? It’s a pretty fascinating history, involving no little amount of bloodshed, before it came into the union and was willing to entertain phrases like “it was declared illegal” from the tiny new federal government.
Utah (and a lot of the American west) has similar stories. For example, it wasn’t a state until 1896. Before that it was a territory. And before that there was all sorts of odd tinkering and ideas. The Mormons were sick of getting kicked around from place to place, and at one time, Utah (such as it was) was at the brink of war with the United States of America (such as it was).
Texas had a similar story, although much bloodier, because lots of entities wanted to fight over it. With Utah, it was just Mormons and Americans and Native Americans. But with Texas? Well, you use the phrase “it was declared illegal” like that means everything was settled, and Mormons are obviously lawbreakers. There were lots of groups, making all sorts of declarations, in the 1800’s, all over America, for the entire century. Pointing to an anecdote here and there and declaring mormons are lawbreakers? “So much for abiding by the laws of the land”, is about as valid as calling TexanKnight a lawbreaker because of Texan history.
All that said, the history of Utah, including the mormons, the US federal govt, how polygamy finally ended, and how Utah became a state, is fascinating and full of anecdotes anyone can use to justify almost any argument. But to post an anecdote or two on a message board and declare victory, seems a bit premature.
But the largest part is from the Civil War. But not all Texans claimed to own their fellow man. I descend from German settlers who remained “True to the Union” and some were killed for their troubles.
Texas never had polygamy though! Except for a small colony of non-LDS Mormons who lived here for a spell.
But if you examine history you will find that every state had it’s problems, not just Texas and Utah.