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Samuel Ealy Johnson Jr.

Samuel Ealy Johnson Jr. (October 11, 1877 – October 23, 1937) was an American businessman and politician. He was a Democratic member of the Texas House of Representatives representing the 89th District. He served in the 29th, 30th, 35th, 37th, and 38th Texas Legislatures. He was the father of the 36th president of the United States, Lyndon B. Johnson, and the son of Samuel Ealy Johnson Sr. He was a struggling farmer and cattle speculator who lived in the Texas Hill Country.

Samuel Ealy Johnson Jr.
Johnson in 1907
Member of the Texas House of Representatives
from the 85th district
In office
January 9, 1923 – September 1, 1923
Member of the Texas House of Representatives
from the 87th district
In office
February 26, 1918 – January 9, 1923
Preceded byWilliam Bierchswale
Succeeded byBen F. Foster
Member of the Texas House of Representatives
from the 89th district
In office
January 10, 1905 – January 12, 1909
Preceded byJoseph Wilson Baines
Succeeded byWilliam Bierchswale
Personal details
Born
Samuel Ealy Johnson Jr.

(1877-10-11)October 11, 1877
Buda, Texas, U.S.
DiedOctober 23, 1937(1937-10-23) (aged 60)
Political partyDemocratic
SpouseRebekah Baines
Children
Parent(s)Samuel Ealy Johnson Sr.
Eliza Jane Bunton

Early life

Samuel Johnson was born in Buda, Texas in 1877, the fifth child of Eliza Jane (née Bunton) and Samuel Ealy Johnson Sr., and showed intelligence at an early age.[1] When he was ten years old, his family moved from Buda to the Pedernales. On his family's Pedernales farm, he developed a strong sense of competition. In his teens he developed a desire to be "more than a farmer" and began attending a local school.[1] However, at that time even so-called public schools required tuition, and his family struggled to afford the payments. When the barber of Johnson City retired, Sam bought his chair and tools with a loan and began practicing on his friends to gain skill at cutting hair. Once he learned, he was able to pay his school's tuition fees by selling haircuts in the evenings.[1]

He had to quit going to high school because of health problems, and his parents sent him to live on his uncle Lucius Bunton's ranch in Presidio County, Texas for several months.[2] When he returned home, Johnson had ambitions to become a teacher; however, the Texas hill country at that time had no state-accredited high schools and no colleges. He learned that he could get a state-issued teaching certificate without finishing high school by passing a state examination.[2] In 1896, with the thirteen textbooks he needed to study for the exam, he moved to his retired grandfather's nearby home to study in quiet.[3]

Johnson passed the exam and, for the next three years, taught in one-room school houses throughout the hill country.[3] He wanted to move on and become a lawyer, but financially he had to return home and work alongside his father on their family farm. Once his father became too old to work, Johnson began renting the farm from him and working it by himself. After a few years of plentiful rain and no flash floods, he had gained enough income to hire a number of farm hands and begin trading in cotton futures contracts in Fredericksburg, Texas.[3] Considered a very friendly person, he became a popular figure in the area surrounding Johnson City.[3]

Personal life

 
A Johnson Family gathering in 1912. The third adult from left in the back row is Sam Ealy Johnson Jr. His wife, Rebekah Baines Johnson is in front of him. Sam Ealy Johnson Jr.'s mother, Eliza Bunton Johnson is seated in the wheelchair. Lyndon B. Johnson (ca. 4 years old) is standing in front of the automobile.

He married Rebekah Baines (1881–1958), daughter of Joseph Wilson Baines and his wife, on August 20, 1907. Their first child, Lyndon B. Johnson, was born on August 27, 1908. They had four more children: Rebekah (1910–1978), Josefa (1912–1961), Sam Houston Johnson (1914–1978), and Lucia (1916–1997).

According to Lady Bird Johnson, Johnson's wife, he planned to join the Christadelphian Church, where his father and mother and sister were members, toward the end of his life.[4]

Political career

Sam Johnson served five terms in the Texas House of Representatives as a Populist Democrat.[5] During his time in the state legislature, he fought against conservative Democrats who served business interests.[5] While at the time, the lobbyists employed widespread bribery with the elected Texas officials. Representative Sam Johnson refused bribes and favors from lobbyists.[5] His son, Lyndon Johnson used his father's record as a Populist to aid his own political career.

In 1896 and 1898, Republican Robert B. Hawley was elected by a plurality as Congressman, when the white vote was split between the Democrats and Populist Party. To reduce competition by Republicans and Populists, the state legislature in 1901 passed a poll tax, which had the desired effect of disfranchising most blacks, and many Latino and poor white voters.[6] Texas effectively became a one-party state, like the other states of the former Confederacy in this period, and blacks were blocked from the political process until civil rights legislation was passed in the mid-1960s.[7]

From 1867 to 1874 the Reconstruction era Republicans in the Texas State Legislature had raised taxes to provide for the first universal free education, and to start establishing welfare institutions such as hospitals, to serve the people.[8] To restrict the power of the legislature, the Democratic-dominated legislature amended the Constitution of the State of Texas in a measure passed by remaining white voters. The amendment scheduled the legislature to meet only every other year as well as setting legislators' pay at five dollars a day—which would be reduced to two dollars a day if the legislature ran longer than 60 days.

First term (1905–1907)

 
Sam Ealy Johnson Jr. as a Member of the Texas House of Representatives in 1905

Samuel Johnson's political career began in 1904, when his brother-in-law, Judge Clarence W. Martin, a former State Representative, encouraged him to run for the Democratic nomination to the state house from the 89th District. Given the Democrats' dominance by this time, the primary was the only competitive contest.[9] Johnson won the Democratic nomination unanimously and in his acceptance speech, he cast his campaign as part of a larger populist movement, although the Populist Party had largely died out. He won the election against his Republican opponent by winning large margins in Johnson City as well as the small towns along the Pedernales River.[10] His opponent, a Texas-German speaking lawyer, won only Gillespie County, a largely German and Republican area.[10]

When he arrived at the Texas State Capitol in January 1905 at the age of 27, Johnson adapted well to the life of a legislator. Although relatively unsophisticated, he became an expert at parliamentary procedure.[10] and persuading other legislators to his view. During his term he worked with two other legislators, "Honest Buck" Gray and Claude Hudspeth, to support Populist causes such as an eight-hour workday for railroad workers and a Franchise tax for corporations.[11] Although largely successful in terms of passing legislation, he and other populists were often on the losing side in trying to gain legislation to regulate Texas' large corporations.[11]

One of Johnson's early political achievements was preserving the Alamo as a part of Texas' heritage. Although many Texans worked on this project, previous attempts had failed because of lingering questions over jurisdiction and because legislators balked at the asking price of $65,000 to purchase the fort.[10] When Representative Johnson drafted the bill, he ensured the Alamo mission would be overseen by the Daughters of the Republic of Texas. On January 26, 1905, his bill passed into law. In 1905 Johnson also gained passage of legislation banning calf roping and a bill exempting Blanco County from state law requiring the payment of wolf bounties, which could have bankrupted the county.[10]

Second term (1907–1909)

In the 1906 election, Johnson faced David Martin, the owner of the Martin Telephone Company and a resident of Llano County, Texas, in the Democratic primary.[12] He had the support of newspapers in the four counties that comprised the 89th District. He won such large margins in the primary that the county Republicans did not put up a candidate for the general election.[13]

In the 1907 session of the Texas State Legislature, the re-election of Senator Joseph Weldon Bailey was the most controversial issue.[14] In 1907, Senators were still elected by their state legislatures. The Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which allowed for the direct election of Senators, had not yet been passed. Although Joseph Weldon Bailey had been one of the most prominent populists in the country at one time, in 1906 his opponents had accused him of taking large legal fees from railroads, lumber companies, and Standard Oil.[15] Samuel Johnson was one of a few members of the legislature who tried to postpone Bailey's election until the Texas House of Representatives had conducted an investigation.[16] When Bailey, backed by a number of railroads and oil companies, arrived at the Texas State Capitol, his forces bribed nearly all 133 members of the House of Representatives to vote in his favor. Despite being thousands of dollars in debt, Samuel Johnson refused any attempt to sway his vote. He did not vote for Bailey, and he was one of seven members to vote present.[17]

His stand against business interests made him a hero to political observers in Austin as well as his constituents in the 89th District.[16] Party officials in all four counties encouraged him to run for a third term, but because of his financial problems, Johnson left the legislature, returning to his farm in the Hill Country. Although most returning representatives were offered patronage jobs in the state government or with a railroad, oil company, or bank, because Samuel Johnson had refused to take bribes throughout his career, he was not offered one.[16]

Third Term (1918–1923)

In November 1917, a special election was called to fill a vacancy in the 89th District, the seat Samuel Johnson had vacated ten years earlier. In the interim, between 1907 and 1917, Johnson had re-established his financial standing and owned a number of local businesses. His reputation remained intact, largely because of his reputation of helping others. In April 1917, farmers from Blanco County elected him to the local draft board. When Johnson decided to run in the special election, no one ran against him, and he served out the rest of the term.

Business career

 
Portrait of Samuel Johnson's son, Lyndon B. Johnson

Samuel Johnson had made gains in the cotton futures market in 1902, 1903, and 1904; however in 1905, he lost all of the money he had invested. His son, Lyndon B. Johnson later noted, "My daddy went busted waiting for cotton to go up to twenty-one cents a pound, and the market fell apart when it hit twenty".[12] In 1906, he took out a loan and bought futures contracts on margin, but lost money again. When he arrived in the Texas State Capitol after his election in 1906, he was "several thousand dollars in debt".[8]

After retiring from the legislature in 1908, Johnson began to buy and sell real estate in addition to farming. He did well in selling real estate, so well that he hired a local teenager as a chauffeur and paid a staff of cleaning ladies to handle household tasks for his wife.[18] He re-invested the profits from real estate into buying local businesses. He bought several ranches, a small movie theater, as well as the only hotel in Johnson City.[18] In 1916, he bought the local newspaper, the Johnson City Record, an "eight page weekly" from its owner. Four months later, he sold the paper to Reverdy Giddon, as many of his subscribers could not pay in cash.[18] Having regained his financial footing, he ran for a third term in 1917.

In 1920, he sold all of his real estate, and went $40,000 into debt to restart cotton farming. He was motivated by post-WWI cotton prices, which were $0.40, but expected to rise to $0.50 or $0.60. Heavy spring storms repeatedly washed away the crops, and cotton prices fell to $0.08. The Johnson family lost everything.[8]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Caro 1982, p. 40
  2. ^ a b Caro 1982, p. 41
  3. ^ a b c d Caro 1982, p. 42
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on November 21, 2013.
  5. ^ a b c Savage 2004, p. 21
  6. ^ "Nixon v. Condon. Disfranchisement of the Negro in Texas", The Yale Law Journal, Vol. 41, No. 8, June 1932, p. 1212, accessed March 21, 2008
  7. ^ Michael Perman.Struggle for Mastery: Disenfranchisement in the South, 1888–1908. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2001, Introduction
  8. ^ a b c Caro 1982, p. 46
  9. ^ Caro 1982, p. 43
  10. ^ a b c d e Caro 1982, p. 44
  11. ^ a b Caro 1982, p. 44–45
  12. ^ a b Caro 1982, p. 45
  13. ^ Caro 1982, p. 45–46
  14. ^ Caro 1982, p. 47
  15. ^ Caro 1982, pp. 47–48
  16. ^ a b c Caro 1982, p. 48
  17. ^ Texas House Journal 1907, pp. 195–196, http://www.lrl.state.tx.us/scanned/HouseJournals/30/houseJournal30thLeg_101.pdf
  18. ^ a b c Caro 1982, p. 62

Bibliography

External links

Texas House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the Texas House of Representatives
from District 89 (Hye)(1)

1905–1909
Succeeded by
William Bierschwale
Preceded by
William Bierschwale
Member of the Texas House of Representatives
from District 87 (Fredericksburg)(2)

1918–1923
Succeeded by
Ben F. Foster
Notes and references
1. Hye for 29th Legislature and Stonewall for the 30th.
2. Fredericksburg for 35th Legislature, Johnson City for the 36th, and Stonewall for the 37th.

samuel, ealy, johnson, other, people, named, samuel, johnson, samuel, johnson, disambiguation, october, 1877, october, 1937, american, businessman, politician, democratic, member, texas, house, representatives, representing, 89th, district, served, 29th, 30th,. For other people named Samuel Johnson see Samuel Johnson disambiguation Samuel Ealy Johnson Jr October 11 1877 October 23 1937 was an American businessman and politician He was a Democratic member of the Texas House of Representatives representing the 89th District He served in the 29th 30th 35th 37th and 38th Texas Legislatures He was the father of the 36th president of the United States Lyndon B Johnson and the son of Samuel Ealy Johnson Sr He was a struggling farmer and cattle speculator who lived in the Texas Hill Country Samuel Ealy Johnson Jr Johnson in 1907Member of the Texas House of Representatives from the 85th districtIn office January 9 1923 September 1 1923Member of the Texas House of Representatives from the 87th districtIn office February 26 1918 January 9 1923Preceded byWilliam BierchswaleSucceeded byBen F FosterMember of the Texas House of Representatives from the 89th districtIn office January 10 1905 January 12 1909Preceded byJoseph Wilson BainesSucceeded byWilliam BierchswalePersonal detailsBornSamuel Ealy Johnson Jr 1877 10 11 October 11 1877Buda Texas U S DiedOctober 23 1937 1937 10 23 aged 60 Political partyDemocraticSpouseRebekah BainesChildrenLyndon B Johnson Rebekah Johnson Josefa Johnson Sam Houston Johnson Lucia HuffmanParent s Samuel Ealy Johnson Sr Eliza Jane Bunton Contents 1 Early life 2 Personal life 3 Political career 3 1 First term 1905 1907 3 2 Second term 1907 1909 3 3 Third Term 1918 1923 4 Business career 5 Notes 6 Bibliography 7 External linksEarly life EditSamuel Johnson was born in Buda Texas in 1877 the fifth child of Eliza Jane nee Bunton and Samuel Ealy Johnson Sr and showed intelligence at an early age 1 When he was ten years old his family moved from Buda to the Pedernales On his family s Pedernales farm he developed a strong sense of competition In his teens he developed a desire to be more than a farmer and began attending a local school 1 However at that time even so called public schools required tuition and his family struggled to afford the payments When the barber of Johnson City retired Sam bought his chair and tools with a loan and began practicing on his friends to gain skill at cutting hair Once he learned he was able to pay his school s tuition fees by selling haircuts in the evenings 1 He had to quit going to high school because of health problems and his parents sent him to live on his uncle Lucius Bunton s ranch in Presidio County Texas for several months 2 When he returned home Johnson had ambitions to become a teacher however the Texas hill country at that time had no state accredited high schools and no colleges He learned that he could get a state issued teaching certificate without finishing high school by passing a state examination 2 In 1896 with the thirteen textbooks he needed to study for the exam he moved to his retired grandfather s nearby home to study in quiet 3 Johnson passed the exam and for the next three years taught in one room school houses throughout the hill country 3 He wanted to move on and become a lawyer but financially he had to return home and work alongside his father on their family farm Once his father became too old to work Johnson began renting the farm from him and working it by himself After a few years of plentiful rain and no flash floods he had gained enough income to hire a number of farm hands and begin trading in cotton futures contracts in Fredericksburg Texas 3 Considered a very friendly person he became a popular figure in the area surrounding Johnson City 3 Personal life Edit A Johnson Family gathering in 1912 The third adult from left in the back row is Sam Ealy Johnson Jr His wife Rebekah Baines Johnson is in front of him Sam Ealy Johnson Jr s mother Eliza Bunton Johnson is seated in the wheelchair Lyndon B Johnson ca 4 years old is standing in front of the automobile He married Rebekah Baines 1881 1958 daughter of Joseph Wilson Baines and his wife on August 20 1907 Their first child Lyndon B Johnson was born on August 27 1908 They had four more children Rebekah 1910 1978 Josefa 1912 1961 Sam Houston Johnson 1914 1978 and Lucia 1916 1997 According to Lady Bird Johnson Johnson s wife he planned to join the Christadelphian Church where his father and mother and sister were members toward the end of his life 4 Political career EditMain article Disenfranchisement after the Reconstruction era Sam Johnson served five terms in the Texas House of Representatives as a Populist Democrat 5 During his time in the state legislature he fought against conservative Democrats who served business interests 5 While at the time the lobbyists employed widespread bribery with the elected Texas officials Representative Sam Johnson refused bribes and favors from lobbyists 5 His son Lyndon Johnson used his father s record as a Populist to aid his own political career In 1896 and 1898 Republican Robert B Hawley was elected by a plurality as Congressman when the white vote was split between the Democrats and Populist Party To reduce competition by Republicans and Populists the state legislature in 1901 passed a poll tax which had the desired effect of disfranchising most blacks and many Latino and poor white voters 6 Texas effectively became a one party state like the other states of the former Confederacy in this period and blacks were blocked from the political process until civil rights legislation was passed in the mid 1960s 7 From 1867 to 1874 the Reconstruction era Republicans in the Texas State Legislature had raised taxes to provide for the first universal free education and to start establishing welfare institutions such as hospitals to serve the people 8 To restrict the power of the legislature the Democratic dominated legislature amended the Constitution of the State of Texas in a measure passed by remaining white voters The amendment scheduled the legislature to meet only every other year as well as setting legislators pay at five dollars a day which would be reduced to two dollars a day if the legislature ran longer than 60 days First term 1905 1907 Edit Sam Ealy Johnson Jr as a Member of the Texas House of Representatives in 1905 Samuel Johnson s political career began in 1904 when his brother in law Judge Clarence W Martin a former State Representative encouraged him to run for the Democratic nomination to the state house from the 89th District Given the Democrats dominance by this time the primary was the only competitive contest 9 Johnson won the Democratic nomination unanimously and in his acceptance speech he cast his campaign as part of a larger populist movement although the Populist Party had largely died out He won the election against his Republican opponent by winning large margins in Johnson City as well as the small towns along the Pedernales River 10 His opponent a Texas German speaking lawyer won only Gillespie County a largely German and Republican area 10 When he arrived at the Texas State Capitol in January 1905 at the age of 27 Johnson adapted well to the life of a legislator Although relatively unsophisticated he became an expert at parliamentary procedure 10 and persuading other legislators to his view During his term he worked with two other legislators Honest Buck Gray and Claude Hudspeth to support Populist causes such as an eight hour workday for railroad workers and a Franchise tax for corporations 11 Although largely successful in terms of passing legislation he and other populists were often on the losing side in trying to gain legislation to regulate Texas large corporations 11 One of Johnson s early political achievements was preserving the Alamo as a part of Texas heritage Although many Texans worked on this project previous attempts had failed because of lingering questions over jurisdiction and because legislators balked at the asking price of 65 000 to purchase the fort 10 When Representative Johnson drafted the bill he ensured the Alamo mission would be overseen by the Daughters of the Republic of Texas On January 26 1905 his bill passed into law In 1905 Johnson also gained passage of legislation banning calf roping and a bill exempting Blanco County from state law requiring the payment of wolf bounties which could have bankrupted the county 10 Second term 1907 1909 Edit In the 1906 election Johnson faced David Martin the owner of the Martin Telephone Company and a resident of Llano County Texas in the Democratic primary 12 He had the support of newspapers in the four counties that comprised the 89th District He won such large margins in the primary that the county Republicans did not put up a candidate for the general election 13 In the 1907 session of the Texas State Legislature the re election of Senator Joseph Weldon Bailey was the most controversial issue 14 In 1907 Senators were still elected by their state legislatures The Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution which allowed for the direct election of Senators had not yet been passed Although Joseph Weldon Bailey had been one of the most prominent populists in the country at one time in 1906 his opponents had accused him of taking large legal fees from railroads lumber companies and Standard Oil 15 Samuel Johnson was one of a few members of the legislature who tried to postpone Bailey s election until the Texas House of Representatives had conducted an investigation 16 When Bailey backed by a number of railroads and oil companies arrived at the Texas State Capitol his forces bribed nearly all 133 members of the House of Representatives to vote in his favor Despite being thousands of dollars in debt Samuel Johnson refused any attempt to sway his vote He did not vote for Bailey and he was one of seven members to vote present 17 His stand against business interests made him a hero to political observers in Austin as well as his constituents in the 89th District 16 Party officials in all four counties encouraged him to run for a third term but because of his financial problems Johnson left the legislature returning to his farm in the Hill Country Although most returning representatives were offered patronage jobs in the state government or with a railroad oil company or bank because Samuel Johnson had refused to take bribes throughout his career he was not offered one 16 Third Term 1918 1923 Edit In November 1917 a special election was called to fill a vacancy in the 89th District the seat Samuel Johnson had vacated ten years earlier In the interim between 1907 and 1917 Johnson had re established his financial standing and owned a number of local businesses His reputation remained intact largely because of his reputation of helping others In April 1917 farmers from Blanco County elected him to the local draft board When Johnson decided to run in the special election no one ran against him and he served out the rest of the term Business career Edit Portrait of Samuel Johnson s son Lyndon B Johnson Samuel Johnson had made gains in the cotton futures market in 1902 1903 and 1904 however in 1905 he lost all of the money he had invested His son Lyndon B Johnson later noted My daddy went busted waiting for cotton to go up to twenty one cents a pound and the market fell apart when it hit twenty 12 In 1906 he took out a loan and bought futures contracts on margin but lost money again When he arrived in the Texas State Capitol after his election in 1906 he was several thousand dollars in debt 8 After retiring from the legislature in 1908 Johnson began to buy and sell real estate in addition to farming He did well in selling real estate so well that he hired a local teenager as a chauffeur and paid a staff of cleaning ladies to handle household tasks for his wife 18 He re invested the profits from real estate into buying local businesses He bought several ranches a small movie theater as well as the only hotel in Johnson City 18 In 1916 he bought the local newspaper the Johnson City Record an eight page weekly from its owner Four months later he sold the paper to Reverdy Giddon as many of his subscribers could not pay in cash 18 Having regained his financial footing he ran for a third term in 1917 In 1920 he sold all of his real estate and went 40 000 into debt to restart cotton farming He was motivated by post WWI cotton prices which were 0 40 but expected to rise to 0 50 or 0 60 Heavy spring storms repeatedly washed away the crops and cotton prices fell to 0 08 The Johnson family lost everything 8 Notes Edit a b c Caro 1982 p 40 a b Caro 1982 p 41 a b c d Caro 1982 p 42 Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum Religion and President Johnson Archived from the original on November 21 2013 a b c Savage 2004 p 21 Nixon v Condon Disfranchisement of the Negro in Texas The Yale Law Journal Vol 41 No 8 June 1932 p 1212 accessed March 21 2008 Michael Perman Struggle for Mastery Disenfranchisement in the South 1888 1908 Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 2001 Introduction a b c Caro 1982 p 46 Caro 1982 p 43 a b c d e Caro 1982 p 44 a b Caro 1982 p 44 45 a b Caro 1982 p 45 Caro 1982 p 45 46 Caro 1982 p 47 Caro 1982 pp 47 48 a b c Caro 1982 p 48 Texas House Journal 1907 pp 195 196 http www lrl state tx us scanned HouseJournals 30 houseJournal30thLeg 101 pdf a b c Caro 1982 p 62Bibliography EditCaro Robert A 1982 The Years of Lyndon Johnson The Path to Power Vintage Books ISBN 978 0 679 72945 7 Savage Sean J 2004 JFK LBJ and the Democratic Party SUNY Press ISBN 978 0 7914 6169 3 retrieved June 15 2010External links EditSamuel Ealy Johnson Jr from the Handbook of Texas Online Johnson City from the Handbook of Texas OnlineTexas House of RepresentativesPreceded byJoseph Wilson Baines Member of the Texas House of Representativesfrom District 89 Hye 1 1905 1909 Succeeded byWilliam BierschwalePreceded byWilliam Bierschwale Member of the Texas House of Representativesfrom District 87 Fredericksburg 2 1918 1923 Succeeded byBen F FosterNotes and references1 Hye for 29th Legislature and Stonewall for the 30th 2 Fredericksburg for 35th Legislature Johnson City for the 36th and Stonewall for the 37th Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Samuel Ealy Johnson Jr amp oldid 1127253786, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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