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Wikipedia

Texas

Texas (/ˈtɛksəs/ TEK-səss, locally also /ˈtɛksɪz/ TEK-siz;[8] Spanish: Texas or Tejas,[b] pronounced [ˈtexas]) is the most populous state in the South Central region of the United States. It borders Louisiana to the east, Arkansas to the northeast, Oklahoma to the north, New Mexico to the west, and the Mexican states of Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo León, and Tamaulipas to the south and southwest. Texas has a coastline on the Gulf of Mexico to the southeast. Covering 268,596 square miles (695,660 km2), and with over 30 million residents as of 2023,[10][11][12] it is the second-largest U.S. state by both area and population.

Texas
Nickname
The Lone Star State
Motto
Friendship
Anthem: "Texas, Our Texas"
Map of the United States with Texas highlighted
CountryUnited States
Before statehoodRepublic of Texas
Admitted to the UnionDecember 29, 1845 (28th)
CapitalAustin
Largest cityHouston
Largest county or equivalentHarris
Largest metro and urban areasDallas–Fort Worth
Government
 • GovernorGreg Abbott (R)
 • Lieutenant GovernorDan Patrick (R)
LegislatureTexas Legislature
 • Upper houseSenate
 • Lower houseHouse of Representatives
JudiciarySupreme Court of Texas (Civil)
Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (Criminal)
U.S. senatorsJohn Cornyn (R)
Ted Cruz (R)
U.S. House delegation25 Republicans
13 Democrats (list)
Area
 • Total268,596[1] sq mi (695,662 km2)
 • Land261,232[1] sq mi (676,587 km2)
 • Water7,365[1] sq mi (19,075 km2)  2.7%
 • Rank2nd
Dimensions
 • Length801[2] mi (1,289 km)
 • Width773[2] mi (1,244 km)
Elevation
1,700 ft (520 m)
Highest elevation8,751 ft (2,667.4 m)
Lowest elevation0 ft (0 m)
Population
 (2023)
 • Total30,503,301[5]
 • Rank2nd
 • Density114/sq mi (42.9/km2)
  • Rank26th
 • Median household income
$66,963[6]
 • Income rank
22nd
Demonym(s)Texan
Texian (archaic)
Tejano (usually only used for Hispanics)
Language
 • Official languageNone
 • Spoken language
Time zones
Majority of stateUTC−06:00 (Central)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−05:00 (CDT)
El Paso, Hudspeth, and northwestern Culberson countiesUTC−07:00 (Mountain)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−06:00 (MDT)
USPS abbreviation
TX
ISO 3166 codeUS-TX
Traditional abbreviationTex.
Latitude25°50′ N to 36°30′ N
Longitude93°31′ W to 106°39′ W
Websitetexas.gov
State symbols of Texas
List of state symbols
SloganThe Friendly State
Living insignia
BirdNorthern mockingbird (Mimus polyglottos)
FishGuadalupe bass (Micropterus treculii)
FlowerBluebonnet (Lupinus spp., namely Texas bluebonnet, L. texensis)
InsectMonarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus)
MammalTexas longhorn, nine-banded armadillo (Dasypus novemcinctus)
MushroomTexas star (Chorioactis geaster)
ReptileTexas horned lizard (Phrynosoma cornutum)
TreePecan (Carya illinoinensis)
Inanimate insignia
FoodChili
GameTexas 42 dominoes
InstrumentGuitar
ShellLightning whelk (Busycon perversum pulleyi)
ShipUSS Texas
SoilHouston Black
SportRodeo
OtherMolecule: Buckyball (For more, see article)
State route marker
State quarter
Released in 2004
Lists of United States state symbols

Texas is nicknamed the Lone Star State for its former status as an independent republic. The Lone Star can be found on the Texas state flag and the Texas state seal.[13] Spain was the first European country to claim and control the area of Texas. Following a short-lived colony controlled by France, Mexico controlled the territory until 1836 when Texas won its independence, becoming the Republic of Texas. In 1845, Texas joined the United States as the 28th state.[14] The state's annexation set off a chain of events that led to the Mexican–American War in 1846. Following victory by the United States, Texas remained a slave state until the American Civil War, when it declared its secession from the Union in early 1861 before officially joining the Confederate States of America on March 2. After the Civil War and the restoration of its representation in the federal government, Texas entered a long period of economic stagnation.

Historically, four major industries shaped the Texas economy prior to World War II: cattle and bison, cotton, timber, and oil.[15] Before and after the Civil War, the cattle industry—which Texas came to dominate—was a major economic driver and created the traditional image of the Texas cowboy. In the later 19th century, cotton and lumber grew to be major industries as the cattle industry became less lucrative. Ultimately, the discovery of major petroleum deposits (Spindletop in particular) initiated an economic boom that became the driving force behind the economy for much of the 20th century. Texas developed a diversified economy and high tech industry during the mid-20th century. As of 2022, it has the most Fortune 500 company headquarters (53) in the United States.[16][17] With a growing base of industry, the state leads in many industries, including tourism, agriculture, petrochemicals, energy, computers and electronics, aerospace, and biomedical sciences. Texas has led the U.S. in state export revenue since 2002 and has the second-highest gross state product.

The Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex and Greater Houston areas are the nation's fourth and fifth-most populous urban regions respectively. Its capital city is Austin. Due to its size and geologic features such as the Balcones Fault, Texas contains diverse landscapes common to both the U.S. Southern and the Southwestern regions.[18] Most population centers are in areas of former prairies, grasslands, forests, and the coastline. Traveling from east to west, terrain ranges from coastal swamps and piney woods, to rolling plains and rugged hills, to the desert and mountains of the Big Bend.

Etymology

The name Texas, based on the Caddo word táy:shaʼ (/tə́jːʃaʔ/) 'friend', was applied, in the spelling Tejas or Texas,[19][20][21][1] by the Spanish to the Caddo themselves, specifically the Hasinai Confederacy.[22]

During Spanish colonial rule, in the 18th century, the area was known as Nuevas Filipinas ('New Philippines') and Nuevo Reino de Filipinas ('New Kingdom of the Philippines'),[23] or as provincia de los Tejas ('province of the Tejas'),[24] later also provincia de Texas (or de Tejas), ('province of Texas').[25][23] It was incorporated as provincia de Texas into the Mexican Empire in 1821, and declared a republic in 1836. The Royal Spanish Academy recognizes both spellings, Tejas and Texas, as Spanish-language forms of the name.[26]

The English pronunciation with /ks/ is unetymological, contrary to the historical value of the letter x (/ʃ/) in Spanish orthography. Alternative etymologies of the name advanced in the late 19th century connected the name Texas with the Spanish word teja, meaning 'roof tile', the plural tejas being used to designate Indigenous Pueblo settlements.[27] A 1760s map by Jacques-Nicolas Bellin shows a village named Teijas on the Trinity River, close to the site of modern Crockett.[27]

History

Precontact era

 
Early Native American tribal territories

Texas lies between two major cultural spheres of Pre-Columbian North America: the Southwestern and the Plains areas. Archaeologists have found that three major Indigenous cultures lived in this territory, and reached their developmental peak before the first European contact. These were:[28] the Ancestral Puebloans from the upper Rio Grande region, centered west of Texas; the Mississippian culture, also known as Mound Builders, which extended along the Mississippi River Valley east of Texas; and the civilizations of Mesoamerica, which were centered south of Texas. Influence of Teotihuacan in northern Mexico peaked around AD 500 and declined between the 8th and 10th centuries.

When Europeans arrived in the Texas region, the language families present in the state were Caddoan, Atakapan, Athabaskan, Coahuiltecan, and Uto-Aztecan, in addition to several language isolates such as Tonkawa. Uto-Aztecan Puebloan and Jumano peoples lived neared the Rio Grande in the western portion of the state and the Athabaskan-speaking Apache tribes lived throughout the interior. The agricultural, mound-building Caddo controlled much of the northeastern part of the state, along the Red, Sabine, and Neches River basins.[29][30] Atakapan peoples such as the Akokisa and Bidai lived along the northeastern Gulf Coast; the Karankawa lived along the central coast.[31] At least one tribe of Coahuiltecans, the Aranama, lived in southern Texas. This entire culture group, primarily centered in northeastern Mexico, is now extinct.

No culture was dominant across all of present-day Texas, and many peoples inhabited the area.[32] Native American tribes who have lived inside the boundaries of present-day Texas include the Alabama, Apache, Atakapan, Bidai, Caddo, Aranama, Comanche, Choctaw, Coushatta, Hasinai, Jumano, Karankawa, Kickapoo, Kiowa, Tonkawa, and Wichita.[33][34] Many of these peoples migrated from the north or east during the colonial period, such as the Choctaw, Alabama-Coushatta, and Delaware.[29]

The region was primarily controlled by the Spanish until the Texas Revolution. They were most interested in relationships with the Caddo, who were—like the Spanish—a settled, agricultural people. Several Spanish missions were opened in Caddo territory, but a lack of interest in Christianity among the Caddo meant that few were converted. Positioned between French Louisiana and Spanish Texas, the Caddo maintained relations with both, but were closer with the French.[35] After Spain took control of Louisiana, most of the missions in eastern Texas were closed and abandoned.[36] The United States obtained Louisiana following the 1803 Louisiana Purchase and began convincing tribes to self-segregate from whites by moving west; facing an overflow of native peoples in Missouri and Arkansas, they were able to negotiate with the Caddo to allow several displaced peoples to settle on unused lands in eastern Texas. These included the Muscogee, Houma Choctaw, Lenape and Mingo Seneca, among others, who came to view the Caddoans as saviors.[37][38]

The temperament of Native American tribes affected the fates of European explorers and settlers in that land.[39] Friendly tribes taught newcomers how to grow local crops, prepare foods, and hunt wild game. Warlike tribes resisted the settlers.[39] Prior treaties with the Spanish forbade either side from militarizing its native population in any potential conflict between the two nations. Several outbreaks of violence between Native Americans and Texans started to spread in the prelude to the Texas Revolution. Texans accused tribes of stealing livestock. While no proof was found,[29] those in charge of Texas at the time attempted to publicly blame and punish the Caddo, with the U.S. government trying to keep them in check. The Caddo never turned to violence because of the situation, except in cases of self-defense.[37]

By the 1830s, the U.S. had drafted the Indian Removal Act, which was used to facilitate the Trail of Tears. Fearing retribution, Indian Agents all over the eastern U.S. tried to convince all Indigenous peoples to uproot and move west. This included the Caddo of Louisiana and Arkansas. Following the Texas Revolution, the Texans chose to make peace with the Indigenous people, but did not honor former land claims or agreements.[citation needed] The first president of Texas, Sam Houston, aimed to cooperate and make peace with Native tribes, but his successor, Mirabeau B. Lamar, took a much more hostile stance. Hostility towards Natives by white Texans prompted the movement of most Native populations north into what would become Indian Territory (modern Oklahoma).[29][37] Only the Alabama-Coushatta would remain in the parts of Texas subject to white settlement, though the Comanche would continue to control most of the western half of the state until their defeat in the 1870s and 1880s.[40]

Colonization

The first historical document related to Texas was a map of the Gulf Coast, created in 1519 by Spanish explorer Alonso Álvarez de Pineda.[41] Nine years later, shipwrecked Spanish explorer Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca and his cohort became the first Europeans in what is now Texas.[42][43] Cabeza de Vaca reported that in 1528, when the Spanish landed in the area, "half the natives died from a disease of the bowels and blamed us."[44] Cabeza de Vaca also made observations about the way of life of the Ignaces Natives of Texas.[c][46] Francisco Vázquez de Coronado described another encounter with native people in 1541.[d][48]

The expedition of Hernando de Soto entered into Texas from the east, seeking a route to Mexico. They passed through the Caddo lands but turned back after reaching the River of Daycao (possibly the Brazos or Colorado), beyond which point the Native peoples were nomadic and did not have the agricultural stores to feed the expedition.[49][50]

European powers ignored the area until accidentally settling there in 1685. Miscalculations by René-Robert Cavelier de La Salle resulted in his establishing the colony of Fort Saint Louis at Matagorda Bay rather than along the Mississippi River.[51] The colony lasted only four years before succumbing to harsh conditions and hostile natives.[52] A small band of survivors traveled eastward into the lands of the Caddo, but La Salle was killed by disgruntled expedition members.[53]

In 1690 Spanish authorities, concerned that France posed a competitive threat, constructed several missions in East Texas among the Caddo.[54] After Caddo resistance, the Spanish missionaries returned to Mexico.[55] When France began settling Louisiana, in 1716 Spanish authorities responded by founding a new series of missions in East Texas.[56] Two years later, they created San Antonio as the first Spanish civilian settlement in the area.[57]

 
Nicolas de La Fora's 1771 map of the northern frontier of New Spain clearly shows the Provincia de los Tejas.[58]

Hostile native tribes and distance from nearby Spanish colonies discouraged settlers from moving to the area. It was one of New Spain's least populated provinces.[59] In 1749, the Spanish peace treaty with the Lipan Apache angered many tribes,[60] including the Comanche, Tonkawa, and Hasinai.[61] The Comanche signed a treaty with Spain in 1785 and later helped to defeat the Lipan Apache and Karankawa tribes.[62][63] With numerous missions being established, priests led a peaceful conversion of most tribes. By the end of the 18th century only a few nomadic tribes had not converted.[64]

 
Stephen F. Austin was the first American empresario given permission to operate a colony within Mexican Texas.
 
Mexico in 1824. Coahuila y Tejas is the northeasternmost state.

When the United States purchased Louisiana from France in 1803, American authorities insisted the agreement also included Texas. The boundary between New Spain and the United States was finally set in 1819 at the Sabine River, the modern border between Texas and Louisiana.[65] Eager for new land, many U.S. settlers refused to recognize the agreement. Several filibusters raised armies to invade the area west of the Sabine River.[66] Marked by the War of 1812, some men who had escaped from the Spanish, held (Old) Philippines had immigrated to and also passed through Texas (New Philippines)[67] and reached Louisiana where Philippine exiles aided the United States in the defense of New Orleans against a British invasion, with Filipinos in the Saint Malo settlement assisting Jean Lafitte in the Battle of New Orleans.[68]

In 1821, the Mexican War of Independence included the Texas territory, which became part of Mexico.[69] Due to its low population, the territory was assigned to other states and territories of Mexico; the core territory was part of the state of Coahuila y Tejas, but other parts of today's Texas were part of Tamaulipas, Chihuahua, or the Mexican Territory of Santa Fe de Nuevo México.[70]

Hoping more settlers would reduce the near-constant Comanche raids, Mexican Texas liberalized its immigration policies to permit immigrants from outside Mexico and Spain.[71] Large swathes of land were allotted to empresarios, who recruited settlers from the United States, Europe, and the Mexican interior, primarily the U.S. Austin's settlers, the Old Three Hundred, made places along the Brazos River in 1822.[72] The population of Texas grew rapidly. In 1825, Texas had about 3,500 people, with most of Mexican descent.[73] By 1834, the population had grown to about 37,800 people, with only 7,800 of Mexican descent.[74]

Many immigrants openly flouted Mexican law, especially the prohibition against slavery. Combined with United States' attempts to purchase Texas, Mexican authorities decided in 1830 to prohibit continued immigration from the United States.[75] However, illegal immigration from the United States into Mexico continued to increase the population of Texas.[76] New laws also called for the enforcement of customs duties angering native Mexican citizens (Tejanos) and recent immigrants alike.[77] The Anahuac Disturbances in 1832 were the first open revolt against Mexican rule, coinciding with a revolt in Mexico against the nation's president.[78] Texians sided with the federalists against the government and drove all Mexican soldiers out of East Texas.[79] They took advantage of the lack of oversight to agitate for more political freedom. Texians met at the Convention of 1832 to discuss requesting independent statehood, among other issues.[80] The following year, Texians reiterated their demands at the Convention of 1833.[81]

Republic

Within Mexico, tensions continued between federalists and centralists. In early 1835, wary Texians formed Committees of Correspondence and Safety.[82] The unrest erupted into armed conflict in late 1835 at the Battle of Gonzales.[83] This launched the Texas Revolution. Texians elected delegates to the Consultation, which created a provisional government.[84] The provisional government soon collapsed from infighting, and Texas was without clear governance for the first two months of 1836.[85]

 
Surrender of Santa Anna. Painting by William Henry Huddle, 1886.

Mexican President Antonio López de Santa Anna personally led an army to end the revolt.[86] General José de Urrea defeated all the Texian resistance along the coast culminating in the Goliad massacre.[87] López de Santa Anna's forces, after a thirteen-day siege, overwhelmed Texian defenders at the Battle of the Alamo. News of the defeats sparked panic among Texas settlers.[88]

 
The Republic of Texas with present-day borders superimposed

The newly elected Texian delegates to the Convention of 1836 quickly signed a declaration of independence on March 2, forming the Republic of Texas. After electing interim officers, the Convention disbanded.[89] The new government joined the other settlers in Texas in the Runaway Scrape, fleeing from the approaching Mexican army.[88]

After several weeks of retreat, the Texian Army commanded by Sam Houston attacked and defeated López de Santa Anna's forces at the Battle of San Jacinto.[90] López de Santa Anna was captured and forced to sign the Treaties of Velasco, ending the war.[91] The Constitution of the Republic of Texas prohibited the government from restricting slavery or freeing slaves, and required free people of African descent to leave the country.[92]

Political battles raged between two factions of the new Republic. The nationalist faction, led by Mirabeau B. Lamar, advocated the continued independence of Texas, the expulsion of the Native Americans, and the expansion of the Republic to the Pacific Ocean. Their opponents, led by Sam Houston, advocated the annexation of Texas to the United States and peaceful co-existence with Native Americans. The conflict between the factions was typified by an incident known as the Texas Archive War.[93] With wide popular support, Texas first applied for annexation to the United States in 1836, but its status as a slaveholding country caused its admission to be controversial and it was initially rebuffed. This status, and Mexican diplomacy in support of its claims to the territory, also complicated Texas's ability to form foreign alliances and trade relationships.[94]

The Comanche Indians furnished the main Native American opposition to the Texas Republic, manifested in multiple raids on settlements.[95] Mexico launched two small expeditions into Texas in 1842. The town of San Antonio was captured twice and Texans were defeated in battle in the Dawson massacre. Despite these successes, Mexico did not keep an occupying force in Texas, and the republic survived.[96] The cotton price crash of the 1840s depressed the country's economy.[94]

Statehood

 
On March 2, 1936, the U.S. Post Office issued a commemorative stamp commemorating the 100th anniversary of the Texas Declaration of Independence, featuring Sam Houston (left), Stephen Austin and the Alamo.

Texas was finally annexed when the expansionist James K. Polk won the election of 1844.[97] On December 29, 1845, the U.S. Congress admitted Texas to the U.S.[98] After Texas's annexation, Mexico broke diplomatic relations with the United States. While the United States claimed Texas's border stretched to the Rio Grande, Mexico claimed it was the Nueces River leaving the Rio Grande Valley under contested Texan sovereignty.[98] While the former Republic of Texas could not enforce its border claims, the United States had the military strength and the political will to do so. President Polk ordered General Zachary Taylor south to the Rio Grande on January 13, 1846. A few months later Mexican troops routed an American cavalry patrol in the disputed area in the Thornton Affair starting the Mexican–American War. The first battles of the war were fought in Texas: the Siege of Fort Texas, Battle of Palo Alto and Battle of Resaca de la Palma. After these decisive victories, the United States invaded Mexican territory, ending the fighting in Texas.[99]

 
Captain Charles A. May's squadron of the 2nd Dragoons slashes through the Mexican Army lines. Resaca de la Palma, Texas, May 1846.

The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo ended the two-year war. In return for US$18,250,000, Mexico gave the U.S. undisputed control of Texas, ceded the Mexican Cession in 1848, most of which today is called the American Southwest, and Texas's borders were established at the Rio Grande.[99]

The Compromise of 1850 set Texas's boundaries at their present position: Texas ceded its claims to land which later became half of present-day New Mexico,[100] a third of Colorado, and small portions of Kansas, Oklahoma, and Wyoming to the federal government, in return for the assumption of $10 million of the old republic's debt.[100] Post-war Texas grew rapidly as migrants poured into the cotton lands of the state.[101] They also brought or purchased enslaved African Americans, whose numbers tripled in the state from 1850 to 1860, from 58,000 to 182,566.[102]

Civil War to late 19th century

Texas re-entered war following the election of 1860. During this time, Black people comprised 30 percent of the state's population, and they were overwhelmingly enslaved.[103] When Abraham Lincoln was elected, South Carolina seceded from the Union; five other Deep South states quickly followed. A state convention considering secession opened in Austin on January 28, 1861. On February 1, by a vote of 166–8, the convention adopted an Ordinance of Secession. Texas voters approved this Ordinance on February 23, 1861. Texas joined the newly created Confederate States of America on March 4, 1861, ratifying the permanent C.S. Constitution on March 23.[1][104]

Not all Texans favored secession initially, although many of the same would later support the Southern cause. Texas's most notable Unionist was the state governor, Sam Houston. Not wanting to aggravate the situation, Houston refused two offers from President Lincoln for Union troops to keep him in office. After refusing to swear an oath of allegiance to the Confederacy, Houston was deposed.[105]

While far from the major battlefields of the American Civil War, Texas contributed large numbers of soldiers and equipment.[106] Union troops briefly occupied the state's primary port, Galveston. Texas's border with Mexico was known as the "backdoor of the Confederacy" because trade occurred at the border, bypassing the Union blockade.[107] The Confederacy repulsed all Union attempts to shut down this route,[106] but Texas's role as a supply state was marginalized in mid-1863 after the Union capture of the Mississippi River. The final battle of the Civil War was fought at Palmito Ranch, near Brownsville, Texas, and saw a Confederate victory.[108][109]

Texas descended into anarchy for two months between the surrender of the Army of Northern Virginia and the assumption of authority by Union General Gordon Granger. Violence marked the early months of Reconstruction.[106] Juneteenth commemorates the announcement of the Emancipation Proclamation in Galveston by General Gordon Granger, almost two and a half years after the original announcement.[110][111] President Johnson, in 1866, declared the civilian government restored in Texas.[112] Despite not meeting Reconstruction requirements, Congress resumed allowing elected Texas representatives into the federal government in 1870. Social volatility continued as the state struggled with agricultural depression and labor issues.[113]

Like most of the South, the Texas economy was devastated by the War. However, since the state had not been as dependent on slaves as other parts of the South, it was able to recover more quickly. The culture in Texas during the later 19th century exhibited many facets of a frontier territory. The state became notorious as a haven for people from other parts of the country who wanted to escape debt, war tensions, or other problems. "Gone to Texas" was a common expression for those fleeing the law in other states. Nevertheless, the state also attracted many businessmen and other settlers with more legitimate interests.[114]

The cattle industry continued to thrive, though it gradually became less profitable. Cotton and lumber became major industries creating new economic booms in various regions. Railroad networks grew rapidly as did the port at Galveston as commerce expanded. The lumber industry quickly expanded and was Texas' largest industry prior to the 20th century.[115]

Early to mid-20th century

 
Spindletop, the first major oil gusher

In 1900, Texas suffered the deadliest natural disaster in U.S. history during the Galveston hurricane.[116] On January 10, 1901, the first major oil well in Texas, Spindletop, was found south of Beaumont. Other fields were later discovered nearby in East Texas, West Texas, and under the Gulf of Mexico. The resulting "oil boom" transformed Texas.[117] Oil production averaged three million barrels per day at its peak in 1972.[118]

In 1901, the Democratic-dominated state legislature passed a bill requiring payment of a poll tax for voting, which effectively disenfranchised most Black and many poor White and Latino people. In addition, the legislature established white primaries, ensuring minorities were excluded from the formal political process. The number of voters dropped dramatically, and the Democrats crushed competition from the Republican and Populist parties.[119][120] The Socialist Party became the second-largest party in Texas after 1912,[121] coinciding with a large socialist upsurge in the United States during fierce battles in the labor movement and the popularity of national heroes like Eugene V. Debs. The socialists' popularity soon waned after their vilification by the federal government for their opposition to U.S. involvement in World War I.[122][123]

The Great Depression and the Dust Bowl dealt a double blow to the state's economy, which had significantly improved since the Civil War. Migrants abandoned the worst-hit sections of Texas during the Dust Bowl years. Especially from this period on, Black people left Texas in the Great Migration to get work in the Northern United States or California and to escape segregation.[103] In 1940, Texas was 74% White, 14.4% Black, and 11.5% Hispanic.[124]

World War II had a dramatic impact on Texas, as federal money poured in to build military bases, munitions factories, detention camps and Army hospitals; 750,000 Texans left for service; the cities exploded with new industry; and hundreds of thousands of poor farmers left the fields for much better-paying war jobs, never to return to agriculture.[125][126] Texas manufactured 3.1 percent of total United States military armaments produced during World War II, ranking eleventh among the 48 states.[127]

Texas modernized and expanded its system of higher education through the 1960s. The state created a comprehensive plan for higher education, funded in large part by oil revenues, and a central state apparatus designed to manage state institutions more efficiently. These changes helped Texas universities receive federal research funds.[128]

Mid-20th to early 21st century

Beginning around the mid-20th century, Texas began to transform from a rural and agricultural state to one urban and industrialized.[129] The state's population grew quickly during this period, with large levels of migration from outside the state.[129] As a part of the Sun Belt, Texas experienced strong economic growth, particularly during the 1970s and early 1980s.[129] Texas's economy diversified, lessening its reliance on the petroleum industry.[129] By 1990, Hispanics and Latino Americans overtook Blacks to become the largest minority group.[129] Texas has the largest Black population with over 3.9 million.[130]

During the late 20th century, the Republican Party replaced the Democratic Party as the dominant party in the state.[129] Beginning in the early 21st century, metropolitan areas including Dallas–Fort Worth and Greater Austin became centers for the Texas Democratic Party in statewide and national elections as liberal policies became more accepted in urban areas.[131][132][133][134]

From the mid-2000s to 2019, Texas gained an influx of business relocations and regional headquarters from companies in California.[135][136][137][138] Texas became a major destination for migration during the early 21st century and was named the most popular state to move for three consecutive years.[139] Another study in 2019 determined Texas's growth rate at 1,000 people per day.[140]

During the COVID-19 pandemic in Texas, the first confirmed case of the virus in Texas was announced on March 4, 2020.[141] On April 27, 2020, Governor Greg Abbott announced phase one of re-opening the economy.[142] Amid a rise in COVID-19 cases in autumn 2020, Abbott refused to enact further lockdowns.[143][144] In November 2020, Texas was selected as one of four states to test Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccine distribution.[145] As of February 2, 2021, there had been over 2.4 million confirmed cases in Texas, with at least 37,417 deaths.[146]

During February 13–17, 2021, the state faced a major weather emergency as Winter Storm Uri hit the state, as well as most of the Southeastern and Midwestern United States.[147][148] Historically high power usage across the state caused the state's power grid to become overworked and ERCOT (the main operator of the Texas Interconnection grid) declared an emergency and began to implement rolling blackouts across Texas, causing a power crisis.[149][150][151] Over 3 million Texans were without power and over 4 million were under boil-water notices.[152]

Geography

 
Sam Rayburn Reservoir
 
Texas Hill Country

Texas is the second-largest U.S. state by area, after Alaska, and the largest state within the contiguous United States, at 268,820 square miles (696,200 km2). If it were an independent country, Texas would be the 39th-largest.[153] It ranks 27th worldwide amongst country subdivisions by size.

Texas is in the south central part of the United States. The Rio Grande forms a natural border with the Mexican states of Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo León, and Tamaulipas to the south. The Red River forms a natural border with Oklahoma and Arkansas to the north. The Sabine River forms a natural border with Louisiana to the east. The Texas Panhandle has an eastern border with Oklahoma at 100° W, a northern border with Oklahoma at 36°30' N and a western border with New Mexico at 103° W. El Paso lies on the state's western tip at 32° N and the Rio Grande.[100]

With 10 climatic regions, 14 soil regions and 11 distinct ecological regions, regional classification becomes complicated with differences in soils, topography, geology, rainfall, and plant and animal communities.[154] One classification system divides Texas, in order from southeast to west, into the following: Gulf Coastal Plains, Interior Lowlands, Great Plains, and Basin and Range Province.[155]

The Gulf Coastal Plains region wraps around the Gulf of Mexico on the southeast section of the state. Vegetation in this region consists of thick piney woods. The Interior Lowlands region consists of gently rolling to hilly forested land and is part of a larger pine-hardwood forest. The Cross Timbers region and Caprock Escarpment are part of the Interior Lowlands.[155]

 
Steinhagen Reservoir

The Great Plains region in Central Texas spans through the state's panhandle and Llano Estacado to the state's hill country near Lago Vista and Austin. This region is dominated by prairie and steppe. "Far West Texas" or the "Trans-Pecos" region is the state's Basin and Range Province. The most varied of the regions, this area includes Sand Hills, the Stockton Plateau, desert valleys, wooded mountain slopes and desert grasslands.[156]

Texas has 3,700 named streams and 15 major rivers,[157][158] with the Rio Grande as the largest. Other major rivers include the Pecos, the Brazos, Colorado, and Red River. While Texas has few natural lakes, Texans have built more than a hundred artificial reservoirs.[159]

The size and unique history of Texas make its regional affiliation debatable; it can be considered a Southern or a Southwestern state, or both. The vast geographic, economic, and cultural diversity within the state itself prohibits easy categorization of the whole state into a recognized region of the United States. Notable extremes range from East Texas which is often considered an extension of the Deep South, to Far West Texas which is generally acknowledged to be part of the interior Southwest.[160]

Geology

 
Palo Duro Canyon
 
Franklin Mountains State Park
 
Big Bend National Park

Texas is the southernmost part of the Great Plains, which ends in the south against the folded Sierra Madre Occidental of Mexico. The continental crust forms a stable Mesoproterozoic craton which changes across a broad continental margin and transitional crust into true oceanic crust of the Gulf of Mexico. The oldest rocks in Texas date from the Mesoproterozoic and are about 1,600 million years old.[161]

This margin existed until Laurasia and Gondwana collided in the Pennsylvanian subperiod to form Pangea.[162] Pangea began to break up in the Triassic, but seafloor spreading to form the Gulf of Mexico occurred only in the mid- and late Jurassic. The shoreline shifted again to the eastern margin of the state and the Gulf of Mexico's passive margin began to form. Today 9 to 12 miles (14 to 19 km) of sediments are buried beneath the Texas continental shelf and a large proportion of remaining US oil reserves are here. The incipient Gulf of Mexico basin was restricted and seawater often evaporated completely to form thick evaporite deposits of Jurassic age. These salt deposits formed salt dome diapirs, and are found in East Texas along the Gulf coast.[163]

East Texas outcrops consist of Cretaceous and Paleogene sediments which contain important deposits of Eocene lignite. The Mississippian and Pennsylvanian sediments in the north; Permian sediments in the west; and Cretaceous sediments in the east, along the Gulf coast and out on the Texas continental shelf contain oil. Oligocene volcanic rocks are found in far west Texas in the Big Bend area. A blanket of Miocene sediments known as the Ogallala formation in the western high plains region is an important aquifer.[164] Located far from an active plate tectonic boundary, Texas has no volcanoes and few earthquakes.[165]

Wildlife

Texas is the home to 65 species of mammals, 213 species of reptiles and amphibians, including the American green tree frog, and the greatest diversity of bird life in the United States—590 native species in all.[166] At least 12 species have been introduced and now reproduce freely in Texas.[167]

Texas plays host to several species of wasps, including an abundance of Polistes exclamans,[168] and is an important ground for the study of Polistes annularis.[169]

During the spring Texas wildflowers such as the state flower, the bluebonnet, line highways throughout Texas. During the Johnson Administration the first lady, Lady Bird Johnson, worked to draw attention to Texas wildflowers.[170]

Climate

 
Köppen climate types in Texas

The large size of Texas and its location at the intersection of multiple climate zones gives the state highly variable weather. The Panhandle of the state has colder winters than North Texas, while the Gulf Coast has mild winters. Texas has wide variations in precipitation patterns. El Paso, on the western end of the state, averages 8.7 inches (220 mm) of annual rainfall,[171] while parts of southeast Texas average as much as 64 inches (1,600 mm) per year.[172] Dallas in the North Central region averages a more moderate 37 inches (940 mm) per year.[173]

Snow falls multiple times each winter in the Panhandle and mountainous areas of West Texas, once or twice a year in North Texas, and once every few years in Central and East Texas. Snow falls south of San Antonio or on the coast only in rare circumstances. Of note is the 2004 Christmas Eve snowstorm, when 6 inches (150 mm) of snow fell as far south as Kingsville, where the average high temperature in December is 65 °F.[174]

Night-time summer temperatures range from the upper 50s °F (14 °C) in the West Texas mountains to 80 °F (27 °C) in Galveston.[175][176]

The table below consists of averages for August (generally the warmest month) and January (generally the coldest) in selected cities in various regions of the state.

Average daily maximum and minimum temperatures for selected cities in Texas[177]
Location August (°F) August (°C) January (°F) January (°C)
Houston 94/75 34/24 63/54 17/12
San Antonio 96/74 35/23 63/40 17/5
Dallas 96/77 36/25 57/37 16/3
Austin 97/74 36/23 61/45 16/5
El Paso 92/67 33/21 57/32 14/0
Laredo 100/77 37/25 67/46 19/7
Amarillo 89/64 32/18 50/23 10/−4
Brownsville 94/76 34/24 70/51 21/11

Storms

Thunderstorms strike Texas often, especially the eastern and northern portions of the state. Tornado Alley covers the northern section of Texas. The state experiences the most tornadoes in the United States, an average of 139 a year. These strike most frequently in North Texas and the Panhandle.[178] Tornadoes in Texas generally occur in April, May, and June.[179]

Some of the most destructive hurricanes in U.S. history have impacted Texas. A hurricane in 1875 killed about 400 people in Indianola, followed by another hurricane in 1886 that destroyed the town. These events allowed Galveston to take over as the chief port city. The 1900 Galveston hurricane subsequently devastated that city, killing about 8,000 people or possibly as many as 12,000 in the deadliest natural disaster in U.S. history.[116] In 2017, Hurricane Harvey made landfall in Rockport as a Category 4 Hurricane, causing significant damage there. Its unprecedented amounts of rain over the Greater Houston area resulted in widespread and catastrophic flooding that inundated hundreds of thousands of homes. Harvey ultimately became the costliest hurricane worldwide, causing an estimated $198.6 billion in damage, surpassing the cost of Hurricane Katrina.[180]

Other devastating Texas hurricanes include the 1915 Galveston hurricane, Hurricane Audrey in 1957, Hurricane Carla in 1961, Hurricane Beulah in 1967, Hurricane Alicia in 1983, Hurricane Rita in 2005, and Hurricane Ike in 2008. Tropical storms have also caused their share of damage: Allison in 1989 and again during 2001, Claudette in 1979, and Tropical Storm Imelda in 2019.[181][182][183]

There is no substantial physical barrier between Texas and the polar region. Although it is unusual, it is possible for arctic or polar air masses to penetrate Texas,[184][185] as occurred during the February 13–17, 2021 North American winter storm.[186][187] Usually, prevailing winds in North America will push polar air masses to the southeast before they reach Texas. Because such intrusions are rare, and, perhaps, unexpected, they may result in crises such as the 2021 Texas power crisis.

Greenhouse gases

As of 2017, Texas emitted the most greenhouse gases in the U.S.[188] As of 2017 the state emits about 1,600 billion pounds (707 million metric tons) of carbon dioxide annually.[188] As an independent state, Texas would rank as the world's seventh-largest producer of greenhouse gases.[189] Causes of the state's vast greenhouse gas emissions include the state's large number of coal power plants and the state's refining and manufacturing industries.[189] In 2010, there were 2,553 "emission events" which poured 44.6 million pounds (20,200 metric tons) of contaminants into the Texas sky.[190]

Administrative divisions

Largest city in Texas by year[191]
Year(s) City
1850–1870 San Antonio[192]
1870–1890 Galveston[193]
1890–1900 Dallas[191]
1900–1930 San Antonio[192]
1930–present Houston[194]
 
Colonia in the Rio Grande Valley near the Mexico–United States border

The state has three cities with populations exceeding one million: Houston, San Antonio, and Dallas.[195] These three rank among the 10 most populous cities of the United States. As of 2020, six Texas cities had populations greater than 600,000. Austin, Fort Worth, and El Paso are among the 20 largest U.S. cities. Texas has four metropolitan areas with populations greater than a million: Dallas–Fort Worth–Arlington, Houston–Sugar Land–The Woodlands, San Antonio–New Braunfels, and Austin–Round Rock–San Marcos. The Dallas–Fort Worth and Houston metropolitan areas number about 7.5 million and 7 million residents as of 2019, respectively.[196]

Three interstate highwaysI-35 to the west (Dallas–Fort Worth to San Antonio, with Austin in between), I-45 to the east (Dallas to Houston), and I-10 to the south (San Antonio to Houston) define the Texas Urban Triangle region. The region of 60,000 square miles (160,000 km2) contains most of the state's largest cities and metropolitan areas as well as 17 million people, nearly 75 percent of Texas's total population.[197] Houston and Dallas have been recognized as world cities.[198] These cities are spread out amongst the state.[199]

In contrast to the cities, unincorporated rural settlements known as colonias often lack basic infrastructure and are marked by poverty.[200] The office of the Texas Attorney General stated, in 2011, that Texas had about 2,294 colonias, and estimates about 500,000 lived in the colonias. Hidalgo County, as of 2011, has the largest number of colonias.[201] Texas has the largest number of people living in colonias of all states.[200]

Texas has 254 counties, more than any other state.[202] Each county runs on Commissioners' Court system consisting of four elected commissioners (one from each of four precincts in the county, roughly divided according to population) and a county judge elected at large from the entire county. County government runs similar to a "weak" mayor-council system; the county judge has no veto authority, but votes along with the other commissioners.[203][204]

Although Texas permits cities and counties to enter "interlocal agreements" to share services, the state does not allow consolidated city-county governments, nor does it have metropolitan governments. Counties are not granted home rule status; their powers are strictly defined by state law. The state does not have townships—areas within a county are either incorporated or unincorporated. Incorporated areas are part of a municipality. The county provides limited services to unincorporated areas and to some smaller incorporated areas. Municipalities are classified either "general law" cities or "home rule".[205] A municipality may elect home rule status once it exceeds 5,000 population with voter approval.[206]

Texas also permits the creation of "special districts", which provide limited services. The most common is the school district, but can also include hospital districts, community college districts, and utility districts. Municipal, school district, and special district elections are nonpartisan,[207] though the party affiliation of a candidate may be well-known. County and state elections are partisan.[208]

 
 
Largest cities or towns in Texas
2022 U.S. Census Bureau Estimate[209]
Rank Name County Pop. Rank Name County Pop.
 
Houston
 
San Antonio
1 Houston Harris 2,302,878 11 Laredo Webb 256,187  
Dallas
 
Austin
2 San Antonio Bexar 1,472,909 12 Irving Dallas 254,715
3 Dallas Dallas 1,299,544 13 Garland Dallas 240,854
4 Austin Travis 974,447 14 Frisco Collin 219,587
5 Fort Worth Tarrant 956,709 15 McKinney Collin 207,507
6 El Paso El Paso 677,456 16 Grand Prairie Dallas 201,843
7 Arlington Tarrant 394,602 17 Amarillo Potter 201,291
8 Corpus Christi Nueces 316,239 18 Brownsville Cameron 189,382
9 Plano Collin 289,547 19 Killeen Bell 159,172
10 Lubbock Lubbock 263,930 20 Denton Denton 150,353

Demographics

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
1850212,592
1860604,215184.2%
1870818,57935.5%
18801,591,74994.5%
18902,235,52740.4%
19003,048,71036.4%
19103,896,54227.8%
19204,663,22819.7%
19305,824,71524.9%
19406,414,82410.1%
19507,711,19420.2%
19609,579,67724.2%
197011,196,73016.9%
198014,229,19127.1%
199016,986,51019.4%
200020,851,82022.8%
201025,145,56120.6%
202029,145,50515.9%
2023 (est.)30,503,3014.7%
1910–2020[5]
 
Texas population density map

The resident population of Texas was 29,145,505 in the 2020 census, a 15.9% increase since the 2010 census.[210][211] At the 2020 census, the apportioned population of Texas stood at 29,183,290.[212] The 2023 Texas Population Estimate program estimated the population was 30,503,301 on July 1, 2023.[213] In 2010, Texas had a census population of 25,145,561.[214] Texas is the second-most populous state in the United States after California and the only other U.S. state to surpass a total estimated population of 30 million people as of July 2, 2022.[215][216]

In 2015, Texas had 4.7 million foreign-born residents, about 17% of the population and 21.6% of the state workforce.[217] The major countries of origin for Texan immigrants were Mexico (55.1% of immigrants), India (5%), El Salvador (4.3%), Vietnam (3.7%), and China (2.3%).[217] Of immigrant residents, 35.8 percent were naturalized U.S. citizens.[217] As of 2018, the population increased to 4.9 million foreign-born residents or 17.2% of the state population, up from 2,899,642 in 2000.[218]

In 2014, there were an estimated 1.7 million undocumented immigrants in Texas, making up 35% of the total Texas immigrant population and 6.1% of the total state population.[217] In addition to the state's foreign-born population, an additional 4.1 million Texans (15% of the state's population) were born in the United States and had at least one immigrant parent.[217]

According to the American Community Survey's 2019 estimates, 1,739,000 residents were undocumented immigrants, a decrease of 103,000 since 2014 and increase of 142,000 since 2016. Of the undocumented immigrant population, 951,000 have resided in Texas from less than 5 up to 14 years. An estimated 788,000 lived in Texas from 15 to 19 and 20 years or more.[219]

Texas's Rio Grande Valley has seen significant migration from across the U.S.–Mexico border. During the 2014 crisis, many Central Americans, including unaccompanied minors traveling alone from Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador, reached the state, overwhelming Border Patrol resources for a time. Many sought asylum in the United States.[220][221]

Texas's population density as of 2010 is 96.3 people per square mile (37.2 people/km2) which is slightly higher than the average population density of the U.S. as a whole, at 87.4 people per square mile (33.7 people/km2). In contrast, while Texas and France are similarly sized geographically, the European country has a population density of 301.8 people per square mile (116.5 people/km2). Two-thirds of all Texans live in major metropolitan areas such as Houston.

According to HUD's 2022 Annual Homeless Assessment Report, there were an estimated 24,432 homeless people in Texas.[222][223]

Race and ethnicity

 
Map of counties in Texas by racial and ethnic plurality, per the 2020 U.S. census
Ethnic composition as of the 2020 census
Race and ethnicity[224] Alone Total
Hispanic or Latino[e] 40.2% 40.2
 
Non-Hispanic White 39.7% 39.7
 
39.8% 39.8
 
African American 11.8% 11.8
 
12.8% 12.8
 
Asian 5.4% 5.4
 
6.1% 6.1
 
Native American 0.3% 0.3
 
1.4% 1.4
 
Pacific Islander 0.1% 0.1
 
0.2% 0.2
 
Other 0.4% 0.4
 
1.0% 1
 

In 2019, non-Hispanic Whites represented 41.2% of Texas's population, reflecting a national demographic shift.[225][226][227] Black people made up 12.9%, American Indians and Alaska Natives 1.0%, Asian Americans 5.2%, Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders 0.1%, some other race 0.2%, and two or more races 1.8%. Hispanics or Latino Americans of any race made up 39.7% of the estimated population.[228]

At the 2020 census, the racial and ethnic composition of the state was 42.5% White (39.8% non-Hispanic White), 11.8% Black, 5.4% Asian, 0.3% American Indian and Alaska Native, 0.1% Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander, 13.6% some other race, 17.6% two or more races, and 40.2% Hispanic and Latino American of any race.[229][230]

In 2010, 49% of all births were Hispanics; 35% were non-Hispanic White; 11.5% were non-Hispanic Black, and 4.3% were Asians/Pacific Islanders.[231] Based on U.S. Census Bureau data released in February 2011, for the first time in recent history, Texas's White population is below 50% (45%) and Hispanics grew to 38%. Between 2000 and 2010, the total population grew by 20.6%, but Hispanics and Latino Americans grew by 65%, whereas non-Hispanic Whites grew by only 4.2%.[232] Texas has the fifth highest rate of teenage births in the nation and a plurality of these are to Hispanics or Latinos.[233][234] As of 2022, Hispanics and Latinos of any race replaced the non-Hispanic White population as the largest share of the state's population.[235]

Languages

Most common non-English languages
Language Population
(as of 2010)[236]
Spanish 29.2%
Vietnamese 0.8%
Chinese 0.6%
German 0.3%
Tagalog 0.3%
French 0.3%
Korean and Urdu (tied) 0.2%
Hindi 0.2%
Arabic 0.2%
Niger-Congo languages 0.2%

The most common accent or dialect spoken by natives throughout Texas is sometimes referred to as Texan English, itself a sub-variety of a broader category of American English known as Southern American English.[237][238] Creole language is spoken in some parts of East Texas.[239] In some areas of the state—particularly in the large cities—Western American English and General American English, is increasingly common. Chicano English—due to a growing Hispanic population—is widespread in South Texas, while African-American English is especially notable in historically minority areas of urban Texas.

At the 2020 American Community Survey's estimates, 64.9% of the population spoke only English, and 35.1% spoke a language other than English.[240] Roughly 30% of the total population spoke Spanish. By 2021, approximately 50,546 Texans spoke French or a French-creole language. German and other West Germanic languages were spoken by 49,565 residents; Russian, Polish, and other Slavic languages by 37,444; Korean by 31,673; Chinese 86,370; Vietnamese 92,410; Tagalog 40,124; and Arabic by 47,170 Texans.[241]

At the census of 2010, 65.8% (14,740,304) of Texas residents age 5 and older spoke only English at home, while 29.2% (6,543,702) spoke Spanish, 0.8 percent (168,886) Vietnamese, and Chinese (which includes Cantonese and Mandarin) was spoken by 0.6% (122,921) of the population over five.[236] Other languages spoken include German (including Texas German) by 0.3% (73,137), Tagalog with 0.3% (64,272) speakers, and French (including Cajun French) was spoken by 0.3% (55,773) of Texans.[236] Reportedly, Cherokee is the most widely spoken Native American language in Texas.[242] In total, 34.2% (7,660,406) of Texas's population aged five and older spoke a language at home other than English as of 2006.[236]

Religion

Religious affiliation (2020)[243]
Christian
75.5%
Catholic
28%
Protestant
47%
Other Christian
0.5%
Unaffiliated
20%
Jewish
1%
Muslim
1%
Buddhist
1%
Other faiths
5%

With the coming of Spanish Catholic and American Protestant missionary societies,[244] Indigenous American Indian religions and spiritual traditions dwindled. Since then, colonial and present-day Texas has become a predominantly Christian state, with 75.5% of the population identifying as such according to the Public Religion Research Institute in 2020.[245]

 
St. Mary's Cathedral Basilica of the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston

Among its majority Christian populace, the largest Christian denomination as of 2014 has been the Catholic Church, per the Pew Research Center at 23% of the population, although Protestants collectively constituted 50% of the Christian population in 2014;[246] in the 2020 study by the Public Religion Research Institute, the Catholic Church's membership increased to encompassing 28% of the population identifying with a religious or spiritual belief.[245] At the 2020 Association of Religion Data Archives study, there were 5,905,142 Catholics in the state.[247] The largest Catholic jurisdictions in Texas are the Archdiocese of Galveston–Houston—the first and oldest Latin Church diocese in Texas[248]—the dioceses of Dallas and Fort Worth, and the Archdiocese of San Antonio.

 
First Baptist Church of Dallas

Being part of the strongly, socially conservative Bible Belt,[249] Protestants as a whole declined to 47% of the population in the 2020 study by the Public Religion Research Institute. Predominantly-white Evangelical Protestantism declined to 14% of the Protestant Christian population. Mainline Protestants in contrast made up 15% of Protestant Texas. Hispanic or Latino American-dominated Protestant churches and historically Black or African American Protestantism grew to a collective 13% of the Protestant population.

Evangelical Protestants were 31% of the population in 2014, and Baptists were the largest Evangelical tradition (14%);[246] according to the 2014 study, they made up the second-largest Mainline Protestant group behind Methodists (4%). Nondenominational and interdenominational Protestant Christians were the second largest Evangelical group (7%) followed by Pentecostals (4%). The largest Evangelical Baptists in the state were the Southern Baptist Convention (9%) and independent Baptists (3%). The Assemblies of God USA was the largest Evangelical Pentecostal denomination in 2014. Among Mainline Protestants, the United Methodist Church was the largest denomination (4%) and the American Baptist Churches USA comprised the second-largest Mainline Protestant group (2%).

According to the Pew Research Center in 2014, the state's largest historically African American Christian denominations were the National Baptist Convention (USA) and the Church of God in Christ. Black Methodists and other Christians made up less than 1 percent each of the Christian demographic. Other Christians made up 1 percent of the total Christian population, and the Eastern and Oriental Orthodox formed less than 1 percent of the statewide Christian populace. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is the largest nontrinitarian Christian group in Texas alongside the Jehovah's Witnesses.[246]

Among its Protestant population, the Association of Religion Data Archives in 2020 determined Southern Baptists numbered 3,319,962; non-denominational Protestants 2,405,786 (including Christian Churches and Churches of Christ, and the Churches of Christ altogether numbering 2,758,353); and United Methodists 938,399 as the most numerous Protestant groups in the state.[247] Baptists altogether (Southern Baptists, American Baptist Associates, American Baptists, Full Gospel Baptists, General Baptists, Free Will Baptists, National Baptists, National Baptists of America, National Missionary Baptists, National Primitive Baptists, and Progressive National Baptists) numbered 3,837,306; Methodists within United Methodism, the AME, AME Zion, CME, and the Free Methodist Church numbered 1,026,453 Texans.

The same study tabulated 425,038 Pentecostals spread among the Assemblies of God, Church of God (Cleveland), and Church of God in Christ. Nontrinitarian or Oneness Pentecostals numbered 7,042 between Bible Way Church of Our Lord Jesus Christ, COOLJC, and the Pentecostal Assemblies of the World. Other Christians, including the Eastern and Oriental Orthodox, numbered 55,329 altogether, and Episcopalians numbered 134,318, although the Anglican Catholic Church, Anglican Church in America, Anglican Church in North America, Anglican Province of America, and Holy Catholic Church Anglican Rite had a collective presence in 114 churches.[250]

Non-Christian faiths accounted for 4% of the religious population in 2014, and 5% in 2020 per the Pew Research Center and Public Religion Research Institute.[246][245] Adherents of many other religions reside predominantly in the urban centers of Texas. Judaism, Islam, and Buddhism were tied as the second largest religion as of 2014 and 2020. In 2014, 18% of the state's population were religiously unaffiliated. Of the unaffiliated in 2014, an estimated 2% were atheists and 3% agnostic; in 2020, the Public Religion Research Institute noted the largest non-Christian groups were the irreligious (20%), Judaism (1%), Islam (1%), Buddhism (1%) and Hinduism, and other religions at less than 1 percent each.

In 1990, the Islamic population was about 140,000 with more recent figures putting the current number of Muslims between 350,000 and 400,000 as of 2012.[251] The Association of Religion Data Archives estimated there were 313,209 Muslims as of 2020.[247] Texas is the fifth-largest Muslim-populated state as of 2014.[252] The Jewish population was around 128,000 in 2008.[253] In 2020, the Jewish population grew to over 176,000.[254] According to ARDA's 2020 study, there were 43 Chabad synagogues; 17,513 Conservative Jews; 8,110 Orthodox Jews; and 31,378 Reform Jews. Around 146,000 adherents of religions such as Hinduism and Sikhism lived in Texas as of 2004.[255] By 2020, there were 112,153 Hindus and 20 Sikh gurdwaras; 60,882 Texans adhered to Buddhism.

Economy

 
A geomap depicting income by county as of 2014
 
Texas counties by GDP (2021)

As of 2022, Texas had a gross state product (GSP) of $2.4 trillion, the second highest in the U.S.[256] Its GSP is greater than the GDP of Italy, the world's 8th-largest economy.[257] The state ranks 22nd among U.S. states with a median household income of $64,034, while the poverty rate is 14.2%, making Texas the state with 14th highest poverty rate (compared to 13.15% nationally). Texas's economy is the second-largest of any country subdivision globally, behind California.

Texas's large population, an abundance of natural resources, thriving cities and leading centers of higher education have contributed to a large and diverse economy. Since oil was discovered, the state's economy has reflected the state of the petroleum industry. In recent times, urban centers of the state have increased in size, containing two-thirds of the population in 2005. The state's economic growth has led to urban sprawl and its associated symptoms.[258]

As of May 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, the state's unemployment rate was 13 percent.[259]

In 2010, Site Selection Magazine ranked Texas as the most business-friendly state, in part because of the state's three-billion-dollar Texas Enterprise Fund.[260] Texas has the highest number of Fortune 500 company headquarters in the United States as of 2022.[16][17] In 2010, there were 346,000 millionaires in Texas, the second-largest population of millionaires in the nation.[f][261] In 2018, the number of millionaire households increased to 566,578.[262]

Taxation

Texas has a reputation for a low tax.[263] According to the Tax Foundation, Texans' state and local tax burdens are seventh-lowest nationally; state and local taxes cost $3,580 per capita, or 8.4 percent of resident incomes.[264] Texas is one of seven states that lack a state income tax.[264][265]

Instead, the state collects revenue from property taxes (though these are collected at the county, city, and school district level; Texas has a state constitutional prohibition against a state property tax) and sales taxes. The state sales tax rate is 6.25 percent,[264][266] but local taxing jurisdictions (cities, counties, special purpose districts, and transit authorities) may also impose sales and use tax up to 2 percent for a total maximum combined rate of 8.25 percent.[267]

Texas is a "tax donor state"; in 2005, for every dollar Texans paid to the federal government in federal income taxes, the state got back about $0.94 in benefits.[264] To attract business, Texas has incentive programs worth $19 billion per year (2012); more than any other U.S. state.[268][269]

Agriculture and mining

 
Cotton modules after harvest in West Texas
 
An oil well
 
Brazos Wind Farm
 
Texas longhorn cattle in Boerne, Texas

Texas has the most farms and the highest acreage in the United States. The state is ranked No. 1 for revenue generated from total livestock and livestock products. It is ranked No. 2 for total agricultural revenue, behind California.[270] At $7.4 billion or 56.7 percent of Texas's annual agricultural cash receipts, beef cattle production represents the largest single segment of Texas agriculture. This is followed by cotton at $1.9 billion (14.6 percent), greenhouse/nursery at $1.5 billion (11.4 percent), broiler chickens at $1.3 billion (10 percent), and dairy products at $947 million (7.3 percent).[271]

Texas leads the nation in the production of cattle, horses, sheep, goats, wool, mohair and hay.[271] The state also leads the nation in production of cotton which is the number one crop grown in the state in terms of value.[270][272][273] The state grows significant amounts of cereal crops and produce.[270] Texas has a large commercial fishing industry. With mineral resources, Texas leads in creating cement, crushed stone, lime, salt, sand and gravel.[270] Texas throughout the 21st century has been hammered by drought, costing the state billions of dollars in livestock and crops.[274]

Energy

Ever since the discovery of oil at Spindletop, energy has been a dominant force politically and economically within the state.[275] If Texas were its own country it would be the sixth-largest oil producer in the world according to a 2014 study.[276]

The Railroad Commission of Texas regulates the state's oil and gas industry, gas utilities, pipeline safety, safety in the liquefied petroleum gas industry, and surface coal and uranium mining. Until the 1970s, the commission controlled the price of petroleum because of its ability to regulate Texas's oil reserves. The founders of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) used the Texas agency as one of their models for petroleum price control.[277]

As of January 1, 2021, Texas has proved recoverable petroleum reserves of about 15.6 billion barrels (2.48×109 m3) of crude oil (44% of the known U.S. reserves) and 9.5 billion barrels (1.51×109 m3) of natural gas liquids.[278][279] The state's refineries can process 5.95 million barrels (946,000 m3) of oil a day.[278][279] The Port Arthur Refinery in Southeast Texas is the largest refinery in the U.S.[278] Texas is also a leader in natural gas production at 28.8 billion cubic feet (820,000,000 m3) per day, some 32% of the nation's production.[280] Texas has 102.4 trillion cubic feet (2.90×1012 m3) of gas reserves which is 23% of the nation's gas reserves.[278][279] Many petroleum companies are based in Texas such as: ConocoPhillips,[281] EOG Resources, ExxonMobil,[282] Halliburton,[283] Hilcorp, Marathon Oil,[284] Occidental Petroleum,[285] Pioneer Natural Resources, Tesoro,[286] Valero Energy,[287] and Western Refining.[288]

According to the Energy Information Administration, Texans consume, on average, the fifth most energy (of all types) in the nation per capita and as a whole, following behind Wyoming, Alaska, Louisiana, North Dakota, and Iowa.[278]

Unlike the rest of the nation, most of Texas is on its own alternating current power grid, the Texas Interconnection. Texas has a deregulated electric service. Texas leads the nation in total net electricity production, generating 437,236 MWh in 2014, 89% more MWh than Florida, which ranked second.[289][290]

The state is a leader in renewable energy commercialization; it produces the most wind power in the nation.[278][291] In 2014, 10.6% of the electricity consumed in Texas came from wind turbines.[292] The Roscoe Wind Farm in Roscoe, Texas, is one of the world's largest wind farms with a 781.5 megawatt (MW) capacity.[293] The Energy Information Administration states the state's large agriculture and forestry industries could give Texas an enormous amount of biomass for use in biofuels. The state also has the highest solar power potential for development in the U.S.[278]

Technology

 
Astronaut training at the Johnson Space Center in Houston

With large universities systems coupled with initiatives like the Texas Enterprise Fund and the Texas Emerging Technology Fund, a wide array of different high tech industries have developed in Texas. The Austin area is nicknamed the "Silicon Hills" and the north Dallas area the "Silicon Prairie". Many high-tech companies are located in or have their headquarters in Texas (and Austin in particular), including Dell, Inc.,[294] Borland,[295] Forcepoint,[296] Indeed.com,[297] Texas Instruments,[298] Perot Systems,[299] Rackspace and AT&T.[300][301][302]

The National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center (NASA JSC) is located in Southeast Houston. Both SpaceX and Blue Origin have their test facilities in Texas.[303][304] Fort Worth hosts both Lockheed Martin's Aeronautics division and Bell Helicopter Textron.[305][306] Lockheed builds the F-16 Fighting Falcon, the largest Western fighter program, and its successor, the F-35 Lightning II in Fort Worth.[307]

Commerce

Texas's affluence stimulates a strong commercial sector consisting of retail, wholesale, banking and insurance, and construction industries. Examples of Fortune 500 companies not based on Texas traditional industries are AT&T, Kimberly-Clark, Blockbuster, J. C. Penney, Whole Foods Market, and Tenet Healthcare.[308]

Nationally, the Dallas–Fort Worth area, home to the second shopping mall in the United States, has the most shopping malls per capita of any American metropolitan statistical area.[309]

Mexico, the state's largest trading partner, imports a third of the state's exports because of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). NAFTA has encouraged the formation of maquiladoras on the Texas–Mexico border.[310]

Culture

 
The Alamo is one of the most recognized symbols of Texas.

Historically, Texas culture comes from a blend of Southern (Dixie), Western (frontier), and Southwestern (Mexican/Anglo fusion) influences, varying in degrees of such from one intrastate region to another. A popular food item, the breakfast burrito, draws from all three, having a soft flour tortilla wrapped around bacon and scrambled eggs or other hot, cooked fillings. Adding to Texas's traditional culture, established in the 18th and 19th centuries, immigration has made Texas a melting pot of cultures from around the world.[311][312]

Texas has made a strong mark on national and international pop culture. The entire state is strongly associated with the image of the cowboy shown in westerns and in country western music. The state's numerous oil tycoons are also a popular pop culture topic as seen in the hit TV series Dallas.[313]

The internationally known slogan "Don't Mess with Texas" began as an anti-littering advertisement. Since the campaign's inception in 1986, the phrase has become "an identity statement, a declaration of Texas swagger".[314]

Texas self-perception

 
Big Tex presided over every Texas State Fair since 1952 until it was destroyed by a fire in 2012. Since then a new Big Tex was created.

"Texas-sized" describes something that is about the size of the U.S. state of Texas,[315][316] or something (usually but not always originating from Texas) that is large compared to other objects of its type.[317][318][319] Texas was the largest U.S. state until Alaska became a state in 1959. The phrase "everything is bigger in Texas" has been in regular use since at least 1950.[320]

Arts

 
ZZ Top performing in 2016. The power trio are considered cultural icons of Texas and blues-inspired rock music.

Houston is one of only five American cities with permanent professional resident companies in all the major performing arts disciplines: the Houston Grand Opera, the Houston Symphony Orchestra, the Houston Ballet, and The Alley Theatre.[321] Known for the vibrancy of its visual and performing arts, the Houston Theater District ranks second in the country in the number of theater seats in a concentrated downtown area, with 12,948 seats for live performances and 1,480 movie seats.[321] Founded in 1892, Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, also called "The Modern", is Texas's oldest art museum. Fort Worth also has the Kimbell Art Museum, the Amon Carter Museum, the National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame, the Will Rogers Memorial Center, and the Bass Performance Hall downtown. The Arts District of Downtown Dallas has arts venues such as the Dallas Museum of Art, the Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center, the Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House, the Trammell & Margaret Crow Collection of Asian Art, and the Nasher Sculpture Center.[322]

 
Houston Symphony at the Jones Hall

The Deep Ellum district within Dallas became popular during the 1920s and 1930s as the prime jazz and blues hotspot in the Southern United States. The name Deep Ellum comes from local people pronouncing "Deep Elm" as "Deep Ellum".[323] Artists such as Blind Lemon Jefferson, Robert Johnson, Huddie "Lead Belly" Ledbetter, and Bessie Smith played in early Deep Ellum clubs.[324]

Austin, The Live Music Capital of the World, boasts "more live music venues per capita than such music hotbeds as Nashville, Memphis, Los Angeles, Las Vegas or New York City".[325] The city's music revolves around the nightclubs on 6th Street; events like the film, music, and multimedia festival South by Southwest; the longest-running concert music program on American television, Austin City Limits; and the Austin City Limits Music Festival held in Zilker Park.[326]

Since 1980, San Antonio has evolved into "The Tejano Music Capital Of The World".[327] The Tejano Music Awards have provided a forum to create greater awareness and appreciation for Tejano music and culture.[328]

Sports

 
AT&T Stadium, home of the Dallas Cowboys, who are commonly known as America's Team
 
Playoff game between the San Antonio Spurs (led by Tim Duncan, #21) and the Los Angeles Lakers in 2007; the Spurs won the NBA Finals that year.
 
Texan baseball fans attending a game between the state's two MLB teams (Texas Rangers and Houston Astros) at Globe Life Field in Arlington

Within the "Big Four" professional leagues, Texas has two NFL teams (the Dallas Cowboys and the Houston Texans), two MLB teams (the Houston Astros and the Texas Rangers),[329][330] three NBA teams (the San Antonio Spurs, the Houston Rockets, and the Dallas Mavericks), and one NHL team (the Dallas Stars). The Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex is one of only thirteen American metropolitan areas that host sports teams from all the "Big Four" professional leagues. Outside of the "Big Four", Texas also has a WNBA team (the Dallas Wings), three Major League Soccer teams (Austin FC, Houston Dynamo FC and FC Dallas), and one NWSL team (the Houston Dash).[citation needed]

Collegiate athletics have deep significance in Texas culture, especially football. The state has twelve Division I-FBS schools, the most in the nation. Four of the state's schools claim at least one national championship in football: the Texas Longhorns, the Texas A&M Aggies, the TCU Horned Frogs, and the SMU Mustangs.[331][332][333][334] According to a survey of Division I-A coaches, the rivalry between the University of Oklahoma and the University of Texas at Austin, the Red River Shootout, ranks the third-best in the nation.[335] The TCU Horned Frogs and SMU Mustangs also share a rivalry and compete annually in the Battle for the Iron Skillet. A fierce rivalry, the Lone Star Showdown, also exists between the state's two largest universities, Texas A&M University and the University of Texas at Austin. The athletics portion of the Lone Star Showdown rivalry has been put on hold after the Texas A&M Aggies joined the Southeastern Conference.[336]

The University Interscholastic League (UIL) organizes most primary and secondary school competitions. Events organized by UIL include contests in athletics (the most popular being high school football) as well as artistic and academic subjects.[337]

 
Rodeo (the state sport) in Austin

Texans also enjoy rodeo. The world's first rodeo was hosted in Pecos, Texas.[338] The annual Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo is the largest rodeo in the world. The Southwestern Exposition and Livestock Show in Fort Worth is the oldest continuously running rodeo incorporating many of the state's most historic traditions into its annual events. Dallas hosts the State Fair of Texas each year at Fair Park.[339]

Texas Motor Speedway hosts annual NASCAR Cup Series and IndyCar Series auto races since 1997. Since 2012, Austin's Circuit of the Americas plays host to a round of the Formula 1 World Championship.[340]

Education

The second president of the Republic of Texas, Mirabeau B. Lamar, is the Father of Texas Education. During his term, the state set aside three leagues in each county for public schools. An additional 50 leagues of land set aside for the support of two universities would later become the basis of the state's Permanent University Fund.[341] Lamar's actions set the foundation for a Texas-wide public school system.[342]

Between 2006 and 2007, Texas spent $7,275 per pupil, ranking it below the national average of $9,389. The pupil/teacher ratio was 14.9, below the national average of 15.3. Texas paid instructors $41,744, below the national average of $46,593. The Texas Education Agency (TEA) administers the state's public school systems. Texas has over 1,000 school districts; all districts except the Stafford Municipal School District are independent from municipal government and many cross city boundaries.[343] School districts have the power to tax their residents and to assert eminent domain over privately owned property. Due to court-mandated equitable school financing, the state has a tax redistribution system called the "Robin Hood plan" which transfers property tax revenue from wealthy school districts to poor ones.[344] The TEA has no authority over private or homeschooling activities.[345]

Students in Texas take the State of Texas Assessments of Academic Readiness (STAAR) in primary and secondary school. STAAR assess students' attainment of reading, writing, mathematics, science, and social studies skills required under Texas education standards and the No Child Left Behind Act. The test replaced the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills (TAKS) test in the 2011–2012 school year.[346]

Generally prohibited in the Western world, school corporal punishment is not unusual in the more conservative, rural areas of the state,[347][348][349] with 28,569 public school students paddled at least one time,[g] according to government data for the 2011–2012 school year.[350] The rate of school corporal punishment in Texas is surpassed only by Mississippi, Alabama, and Arkansas.[350]

Higher education

 
The University of Texas at Austin
 
University of Houston
 
Texas A&M University
 
Rice University

The state's two most widely recognized flagship universities are The University of Texas at Austin and Texas A&M University, ranked as the 21st[351] and 41st[352] best universities in the nation according to 2020's latest Center for World University Rankings report, respectively. Some observers[353] also include the University of Houston and Texas Tech University as tier one flagships alongside UT Austin and A&M.[354][355] The Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board ranks the state's public universities into three distinct tiers:[356]

Texas's alternative affirmative action plan, Texas House Bill 588, guarantees Texas students who graduated in the top 10 percent of their high school class automatic admission to state-funded universities. This does not apply to The University of Texas at Austin, which automatically admits Texas students who graduated in the top 6 percent of their high school class.[359] The bill encourages demographic diversity while attempting to avoid problems stemming from the Hopwood v. Texas (1996) case.[360]

Thirty-six public universities exist in Texas, of which 32 belong to one of the six state university systems.[361][362] Discovery of minerals on Permanent University Fund land, particularly oil, has helped fund the rapid growth of the state's two largest university systems: the University of Texas System and the Texas A&M System. The four other university systems: the University of Houston System, the University of North Texas System, the Texas State System, and the Texas Tech System are not funded by the Permanent University Fund.[363]

The Carnegie Foundation classifies four of Texas's universities as Tier One research institutions: The University of Texas at Austin, the Texas A&M University, the University of Houston and Texas Tech University. The University of Texas at Austin and Texas A&M University are the flagship universities of the University of Texas System and Texas A&M University System, respectively. Both were established by the Texas Constitution and hold stakes in the Permanent University Fund.[363]

The state has sought to expand the number of flagship universities by elevating some of its seven institutions designated as "emerging research universities". The two expected to emerge first are the University of Houston and Texas Tech University, likely in that order according to discussions on the House floor of the 82nd Texas Legislature.[364]

The state is home to various private institutions of higher learning—ranging from liberal arts colleges to a nationally recognized top-tier research university. Rice University in Houston is one of the leading teaching and research universities of the United States and is ranked the nation's 17th-best overall university by U.S. News & World Report.[365]

Trinity University, a private, primarily undergraduate liberal arts university in San Antonio, has ranked first among universities granting primarily bachelor's and select master's degrees in the Western United States for 20 consecutive years by U.S. News.[366] Private universities include Abilene Christian University, Austin College, Baylor University, University of Mary Hardin–Baylor, and Southwestern University.[367][368][369]

Universities in Texas host three presidential libraries: George Bush Presidential Library at Texas A&M University,[370] the Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum at The University of Texas at Austin,[371][372] and the George W. Bush Presidential Library at Southern Methodist University.[373]

Healthcare

Notwithstanding the concentration of elite medical centers in the state, The Commonwealth Fund ranks the Texas healthcare system the third worst in the nation.[374] Texas ranks close to last in access to healthcare, quality of care, avoidable hospital spending, and equity.[374] In May 2006, Texas initiated the program "code red" in response to the report the state had 25.1 percent of the population without health insurance, the largest proportion in the nation.[375]

The Trust for America's Health ranked Texas 15th highest in adult obesity: 27.2 percent of the state's population is obese.[376] The 2008 Men's Health obesity survey ranked four Texas cities among the top 25 fattest cities in America: Houston ranked 6th, Dallas 7th, El Paso 8th, and Arlington 14th.[377] Texas had only one city (Austin, ranked 21st) in the top 25 "fittest cities" in America.[377] The state is ranked forty-second in the percentage of residents who engage in regular exercise according to a 2007 study.[378]

Texas has the highest maternal mortality rate in the developed world, and the rate by which Texas women died from pregnancy-related complications doubled from 2010 to 2014, to 23.8 per 100,000—a rate unmatched in any other U.S. state or economically developed country.[379] In May 2021, the state legislature passed the Texas Heartbeat Act, which banned abortion from as early as six weeks of pregnancy, except to save the life of the mother. The Act allows private citizens to sue abortion providers and anyone else who assists in an abortion, except for the woman on whom the abortion is performed.[380][381] On August 25, 2022, another law took effect that made committing abortion at any stage of pregnancy a felony punishable by life in prison.[382]

Medical research

 
The Texas Medical Center in Houston

Texas has many elite research medical centers. The state has 15 medical schools,[383] four dental schools,[384] and two optometry schools.[385] Texas has two Biosafety Level 4 (BSL-4) laboratories: one at The University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB) in Galveston,[386] and the other at the Southwest Foundation for Biomedical Research in San Antonio—the first privately owned BSL-4 lab in the United States.[387]

The Texas Medical Center in Houston holds the world's largest concentration of research and healthcare institutions, with over 50 member institutions.[388] Texas Medical Center performs the most heart transplants in the world.[389] The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston is a highly regarded academic institution that centers around cancer patient care, research, education and prevention.[390]

San Antonio's South Texas Medical Center facilities rank sixth in clinical medicine research impact in the United States.[391] The University of Texas Health Science Center is another highly ranked research and educational institution in San Antonio.[392][393]

Both the American Heart Association and the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center call Dallas home.[394] The institution's medical school employs the most medical school Nobel laureates in the world.[394][395]

Transportation

 
The High Five Interchange in Dallas

The state's large size and rough terrain have historically complicated transportation. Texas has compensated by building the nation's largest highway and railway systems. The regulatory authority, the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT), maintains the state's highway system, regulates aviation,[396] and public transportation systems.[397]

The state is an important transportation hub. From the Dallas/Fort Worth area, trucks can reach 93 percent of the nation's population within 48 hours, and 37 percent within 24 hours.[398] Texas has 33 foreign trade zones (FTZ), the most in the nation.[399] In 2004, a combined total of $298 billion of goods passed through Texas FTZs.[399]

Highways

 
"Welcome to Texas" sign, entering the state from Arkansas on Interstate 30

The first Texas freeway was the Gulf Freeway opened in 1948 in Houston.[400] As of 2005, 79,535 miles (127,999 km) of public highway crisscrossed Texas (up from 71,000 miles or 114,000 km in 1984).[401] To fund recent growth in the state highways, Texas has 17 toll roads with several additional tollways proposed.[402] In Central Texas, the southern section of the State Highway 130 toll road has a speed limit of 85 miles per hour (137 km/h), the highest in the nation.[403] All federal and state highways in Texas are paved.

Airports

 
Terminal D at Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport
 
Terminal E at George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston

Texas has 730 airports, second-most of any state in the nation. Largest in Texas by size and passengers served, Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport (DFW) is the second-largest by area in the United States, and fourth in the world with 18,076 acres (73.15 km2).[404] In traffic, DFW airport is the busiest in the state, the fourth busiest in the United States,[405] and sixth worldwide.[406] Southwest Airlines, headquartered in Dallas, has its operations at Dallas Love Field.[407] American Airlines Group's American / American Eagle, the world's largest airline in total passengers-miles transported and passenger fleet size,[408] uses DFW as its largest and main hub.

Texas's second-largest air facility is Houston's George Bush Intercontinental Airport (IAH). It serves as the largest hub for United Airlines, the world's third-largest airline, by passenger-miles flown.[409][h] IAH offers service to the most Mexican destinations of any U.S. airport.[410][411] The next five largest airports in the state all serve more than three million passengers annually; they include Austin-Bergstrom International Airport, William P. Hobby Airport, San Antonio International Airport, Dallas Love Field and El Paso International Airport. The smallest airport in the state to be designated an international airport is Del Rio International Airport.

Ports

 
Port of Houston along the Houston Ship Channel

Around 1,150 seaports dot Texas's coast with over 1,000 miles (1,600 km) of channels.[412] Ports employ nearly one-million people and handle an average of 317 million metric tons.[413] Texas ports connect with the rest of the U.S. Atlantic seaboard with the Gulf section of the Intracoastal Waterway.[412] The Port of Houston today is the busiest port in the United States in foreign tonnage, second in overall tonnage, and tenth worldwide in tonnage.[414] The Houston Ship Channel spans 530 feet (160 m) wide by 45 feet (14 m) deep by 50 miles (80 km) long.[415]

Railroads

 
DART Light Rail in Dallas
 
METRORail in Houston

Part of the state's tradition of cowboys is derived from the massive cattle drives which its ranchers organized in the nineteenth century to drive livestock to railroads and markets.

The first railroad to operate in Texas was the Buffalo Bayou, Brazos and Colorado Railway, opening in August 1853.[416] The first railroad to enter Texas from the north, completed in 1872, was the Missouri–Kansas–Texas Railroad.[417] With increasing railroad access, the ranchers did not have to take their livestock up to the Midwest and shipped beef out from Texas. This caused a decline in the economies of the cow towns.[418]

Since 1911, Texas has led the nation in length of railroad miles within the state. Texas railway length peaked in 1932 at 17,078 miles (27,484 km), but declined to 14,006 miles (22,540 km) by 2000. While the Railroad Commission of Texas originally regulated state railroads, in 2005 the state reassigned these duties to TxDOT.[419]

In the Dallas–Fort Worth area, three public transit agencies provide rail service: Dallas Area Rapid Transit (DART), Denton County Transportation Authority (DCTA), and Trinity Metro. DART began operating the first light rail system in the Southwest United States in 1996.[420] The Trinity Railway Express (TRE) commuter rail service, which connects Fort Worth and Dallas, is provided by Trinity Metro and DART.[421] Trinity Metro also operates the TEXRail commuter rail line, connecting downtown Fort Worth and Northeast Tarrant County to DFW Airport.[422] The A-train commuter rail line, operated by DCTA, acts as an extension of the DART Green line into Denton County.[423] In the Austin area, Capital Metropolitan Transportation Authority operates a commuter rail service known as Capital MetroRail to the northwestern suburbs. The Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County, Texas (METRO) operates light rail lines called METRORail in the Houston area.[424]

Amtrak provides Texas with limited intercity passenger rail service. Three scheduled routes serve the state: the daily Texas Eagle (Chicago–San Antonio); the tri-weekly Sunset Limited (New Orleans–Los Angeles), with stops in Texas; and the daily Heartland Flyer (Fort Worth–Oklahoma City). Texas may get one of the nation's first high-speed rail line. Plans for a privately funded high-speed rail line between Dallas and Houston have been planned by the Texas Central Railway company.[425]

Government and politics

The current Texas Constitution was adopted in 1876. Like many states, it explicitly provides for a separation of powers. The state's Bill of Rights is much larger than its federal counterpart, and has provisions unique to Texas.[426]

State government

 
The Texas State Capitol at night

Texas has a plural executive branch system limiting the power of the governor, which is a weak executive compared to some other states. Except for the secretary of state, voters elect executive officers independently; candidates are directly answerable to the public, not the governor.[427] This election system has led to some executive branches split between parties and reduced the ability of the governor to carry out a program. When Republican president George W. Bush served as Texas's governor, the state had a Democratic lieutenant governor, Bob Bullock. The executive branch positions consist of the governor, lieutenant governor, comptroller of public accounts, land commissioner, attorney general, agriculture commissioner, the three-member Texas Railroad Commission, the State Board of Education, and the secretary of state.[427]

The bicameral Texas Legislature consists of the House of Representatives, with 150 members, and a Senate, with 31 members. The Speaker of the House leads the House, and the lieutenant governor, the Senate.[428] The Legislature meets in regular session biennially for just over a hundred days, but the governor can call for special sessions as often as desired (notably, the Legislature cannot call itself into session).[429] The state's fiscal year begins September 1.[430]

The judiciary of Texas is among the most complex in the United States, with many layers and overlapping jurisdictions. Texas has two courts of last resort: the Texas Supreme Court, for civil cases, and the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. Except for some municipal benches, partisan elections select judges at all levels of the judiciary; the governor fills vacancies by appointment.[431] Texas is notable for its use of capital punishment, having led the country in executions since capital punishment was reinstated in the Gregg v. Georgia case.[432]

The Texas Ranger Division of the Texas Department of Public Safety is a law enforcement agency with statewide jurisdiction. Over the years, the Texas Rangers have investigated crimes ranging from murder to political corruption. They have acted as riot police and as detectives, protected the Texas governor, tracked down fugitives, and functioned as a paramilitary force. The Texas Rangers were unofficially created by Stephen F. Austin in 1823 and formally constituted in 1835. The Rangers were integral to several important events of Texas history and some of the best-known criminal cases in the history of the Old West.[433]

The Texas constitution defines the responsibilities of county governments, which serve as agents of the state. Commissioners court and court judges are elected to serve as the administrative arm. Most cities in the state, those over 5,000 in population, have home-rule governments. The vast majority of these have charters for council-manager forms of government, by which voters elect council members, who hire a professional city manager as an operating officer.[434]

Politics

 
Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas, 36th president of the United States
 
George W. Bush of Texas, 43rd president of the United States

The Democratic Party dominated Texas politics from the turn of the 20th century, imposing racial segregation and white supremacy. It held power until after passage in the mid-1960s of national civil rights legislation enforcing constitutional rights of all citizens.[435][436]

The state's conservative White voters began to support Republican presidential candidates by the mid-20th century. After this period, they supported Republicans for local and state offices as well, and most Whites became Republican Party members.[437] The party also attracted some minorities, but many have continued to vote for Democratic candidates. The shift to the Republican Party is much-attributed to the fact the Democratic Party became increasingly liberal during the 20th century, and thus increasingly out-of-touch with the average Texas voter.[438] As Texas was always a conservative state, voters switched to the Republicans, which now more closely reflected their beliefs.[438][439] Commentators have also attributed the shift to Republican political consultant Karl Rove, who managed numerous political campaigns in Texas in the 1980s and 1990s.[439] Other stated reasons included court-ordered redistricting and the demographic shift in relation to the Sun Belt that favored the Republican Party and conservatism.[129]

The 2003 Texas redistricting of Congressional districts led by Republican Tom DeLay, was called by The New York Times "an extreme case of partisan gerrymandering".[440] A group of Democratic legislators, the "Texas Eleven", fled the state in a quorum-busting effort to prevent the legislature from acting, but was unsuccessful.[441] The state had already redistricted following the 2000 census. Despite these efforts, the legislature passed a map heavily in favor of Republicans, based on 2000 data and ignoring the estimated nearly one million new residents in the state since then. Career attorneys and analysts at the Department of Justice objected to the plan as diluting the votes of African American and Hispanic voters, but political appointees overrode them and approved it.[440] Legal challenges to the redistricting reached the national Supreme Court in the case League of United Latin American Citizens v. Perry (2006), but the court ruled in favor of the state (and Republicans).[442]

In the 2014 Texas elections, the Tea Party movement made large gains, with numerous Tea Party favorites being elected into office, including Dan Patrick as lieutenant governor,[443][444] Ken Paxton as attorney general,[443][445] in addition to numerous other candidates[445] including conservative Republican Greg Abbott as governor.[446]

Texas voters lean toward fiscal conservatism, while enjoying the benefits of huge federal investment in the state in military and other facilities achieved by the power of the Solid South in the 20th century. They also tend to have socially conservative values.[263][447]

Since 1980, most Texas voters have supported Republican presidential candidates. Austin, Dallas, Houston, San Antonio, and El Paso consistently lean Democratic in both local and statewide elections.[131] Residents of counties along the Rio Grande closer to the Mexico–United States border, where there are many Latino residents, generally vote for Democratic Party candidates, while most other rural and suburban areas of Texas have shifted to voting for Republican Party candidates.[448][449]

As of the midterm elections of 2022, a large majority of the members of Texas's U.S. House delegation are Republican, along with both U.S. Senators. In the 118th United States Congress, of the 38 Congressional districts in Texas, 25 are held by Republicans and 13 by Democrats. Texas's Senators are John Cornyn and Ted Cruz. Since 1994, Texans have not elected a Democrat to a statewide office. The state's Democratic voters are made up primarily by liberal and minority groups in Austin, Beaumont, Dallas, El Paso, Houston, and San Antonio as well as minority voters in East and South Texas.[450][451][452] According to a study by the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank, Texas ranks last in personal freedom among the states, by factors including incarceration rates, cannabis laws, civil asset forfeiture policies, educational freedom, gambling laws, marriage freedom, and travel freedom.[453][454]

Criminal law

Texas has a reputation of very harsh criminal punishment for criminal offenses. It is one of the 32 states that practice capital punishment, and since the US Supreme Court allowed capital punishment to resume in 1976, 40% of all U.S. executions have taken place in Texas.[455] As of 2018, Texas had the 8th highest incarceration rate in the U.S.[456] Texas also has strong right of self-defense and self defense laws, allowing citizens to use lethal force to defend themselves, their families, or their property.[457]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Elevation adjusted to North American Vertical Datum of 1988.
  2. ^ In Peninsular Spanish, the spelling variant Tejas is also used alongside Texas. According to the Diccionario panhispánico de dudas by the Royal Spanish Academy and the Association of Academies of the Spanish Language, the spelling version with ⟨j⟩ aligns with modern-day orthographic conventions and is correct; however, the spelling with ⟨x⟩ is recommended, as it is the one that is used in Mexican Spanish.[9] See Spanish orthography § History.
  3. ^ Cabeza de Vaca wrote, "They went about with a firebrand, setting fire to the plains and timber so as to drive off the mosquitos, and also to get lizards and similar things which they eat, to come out of the soil. In the same manner they kill deer, encircling them with fires, and they do it also to deprive the animals of pasture, compelling them to go for food where the Indians want."[45]
  4. ^ Vázquez de Coronado wrote, "Two kinds of people travel around these plains with the cows; one is called Querechos and the others Teyas; they are very well built, and painted, and are enemies of each other. They have no other settlement or location than comes from traveling around with the cows. They kill all of these they wish and tan the hides, with which they clothe themselves and make their tents, and they eat the flesh, sometimes even raw, and they also even drink the blood when thirsty. The tents they make are like field tents, and they set them up over poles they have made for this purpose, which come together and are tied at the top, and when they go from one place to another they carry them on some dogs they have, of which they have many, and they load them with the tents and poles and other things, for the country is so level, as I said, that they can make use of these, because they carry the poles dragging along on the ground. The sun is what they worship most."[47]
  5. ^ Persons of Hispanic or Latino origin are not distinguished between total and partial ancestry.
  6. ^ Second to California.
  7. ^ This figure refers to only the number of students paddled, regardless of whether a student was spanked multiple times in a year, and does not refer to the number of instances of corporal punishment, which would be substantially higher.
  8. ^ Based on the industry-standard measure of revenue passenger-kilometers/miles flown.

References

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  2. ^ a b "Environment". Texas Almanac. 2008. Retrieved June 28, 2020.
  3. ^ "El Capitan". NGS Data Sheet. National Geodetic Survey, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, United States Department of Commerce. Retrieved October 20, 2011.
  4. ^ a b . United States Geological Survey. 2001. Archived from the original on July 22, 2012. Retrieved October 24, 2011.
  5. ^ a b . Census.gov. United States Census Bureau. Archived from the original on April 29, 2021. Retrieved May 1, 2021.
  6. ^ "Texas". U.S. Census Bureau. 2021. Retrieved May 17, 2023.
  7. ^ "Languages Spoken at Home". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved June 5, 2020.
  8. ^ Wells, John C. (1982). Accents of English. Vol. 3: Beyond the British Isles (pp. i–xx, 467–674). Cambridge University Press. p. 551. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511611766. ISBN 0-52128541-0 .
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  10. ^ Carlson, Kara. More than 30 million people now call Texas home as state leads US population gains, Austin American-Statesman, December 23, 2022.
  11. ^ QuickFacts, Population Estimates, U.S. Census Bureau, July 1, 2023.
  12. ^ Press Release. Growth in U.S. Population Shows Early Indication of Recovery Amid COVID-19 Pandemic, U.S. Census Bureau, December 22, 2022.
  13. ^ "The State of Texas". Netstate.com. Retrieved April 11, 2010.
  14. ^ (PDF). legisworks.org. 1845. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 25, 2017. Retrieved May 16, 2017.
  15. ^ Ramos, Mary G.; Reavis, Dick J. (2004). Texas. Fodor's Travel Publications. p. 125. ISBN 978-0-676-90502-1.
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  17. ^ a b Miranda, Cynthia (May 25, 2022). "Texas houses the most Fortune 500 companies in the nation". KETK.com. Retrieved October 31, 2022.
  18. ^ Sansom, Andrew (2008). Water in Texas: An Introduction. University of Texas Press. p. 25. ISBN 978-0-292-71809-8.
  19. ^ José Arlegui, Chronica de la provincia de N.S.P.S. Francisco de Zacatecas Front Cover (1737), p. 53.
  20. ^ "Texas". Online Etymology Dictionary. Douglas Harper. Retrieved February 25, 2007.
  21. ^ Fry, Phillip L. (March 7, 2016) [July 15, 2010]. "Texas, Origin of Name". Handbook of Texas (online ed.). Texas State Historical Association.
  22. ^ Davis, Lucile (2003). The Caddo of Texas. Rosen Publishing. p. 5. ISBN 9780823964352.
  23. ^ a b Teja, Jesús de la (June 15, 2010). "New Philippines". Handbook of Texas (online ed.). Texas State Historical Association.
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texas, texan, redirects, here, other, uses, texan, disambiguation, disambiguation, səss, locally, also, spanish, tejas, pronounced, ˈtexas, most, populous, state, south, central, region, united, states, borders, louisiana, east, arkansas, northeast, oklahoma, . Texan redirects here For other uses see Texan disambiguation and Texas disambiguation Texas ˈ t ɛ k s e s TEK sess locally also ˈ t ɛ k s ɪ z TEK siz 8 Spanish Texas or Tejas b pronounced ˈtexas is the most populous state in the South Central region of the United States It borders Louisiana to the east Arkansas to the northeast Oklahoma to the north New Mexico to the west and the Mexican states of Chihuahua Coahuila Nuevo Leon and Tamaulipas to the south and southwest Texas has a coastline on the Gulf of Mexico to the southeast Covering 268 596 square miles 695 660 km2 and with over 30 million residents as of 2023 10 11 12 it is the second largest U S state by both area and population TexasStateFlagSealNickname The Lone Star StateMotto FriendshipAnthem Texas Our Texas Map of the United States with Texas highlightedCountryUnited StatesBefore statehoodRepublic of TexasAdmitted to the UnionDecember 29 1845 28th CapitalAustinLargest cityHoustonLargest county or equivalentHarrisLargest metro and urban areasDallas Fort WorthGovernment GovernorGreg Abbott R Lieutenant GovernorDan Patrick R LegislatureTexas Legislature Upper houseSenate Lower houseHouse of RepresentativesJudiciarySupreme Court of Texas Civil Texas Court of Criminal Appeals Criminal U S senatorsJohn Cornyn R Ted Cruz R U S House delegation25 Republicans13 Democrats list Area Total268 596 1 sq mi 695 662 km2 Land261 232 1 sq mi 676 587 km2 Water7 365 1 sq mi 19 075 km2 2 7 Rank2ndDimensions Length801 2 mi 1 289 km Width773 2 mi 1 244 km Elevation1 700 ft 520 m Highest elevation Guadalupe Peak 3 4 a 8 751 ft 2 667 4 m Lowest elevation Gulf of Mexico 4 0 ft 0 m Population 2023 Total30 503 301 5 Rank2nd Density114 sq mi 42 9 km2 Rank26th Median household income 66 963 6 Income rank22ndDemonym s TexanTexian archaic Tejano usually only used for Hispanics Language Official languageNone Spoken languageEnglish only 64 9 Spanish 28 8 7 Other 6 3 Time zonesMajority of stateUTC 06 00 Central Summer DST UTC 05 00 CDT El Paso Hudspeth and northwestern Culberson countiesUTC 07 00 Mountain Summer DST UTC 06 00 MDT USPS abbreviationTXISO 3166 codeUS TXTraditional abbreviationTex Latitude25 50 N to 36 30 NLongitude93 31 W to 106 39 WWebsitetexas wbr gov State symbols of TexasList of state symbolsFlag of TexasSeal of TexasSloganThe Friendly StateLiving insigniaBirdNorthern mockingbird Mimus polyglottos FishGuadalupe bass Micropterus treculii FlowerBluebonnet Lupinus spp namely Texas bluebonnet L texensis InsectMonarch butterfly Danaus plexippus MammalTexas longhorn nine banded armadillo Dasypus novemcinctus MushroomTexas star Chorioactis geaster ReptileTexas horned lizard Phrynosoma cornutum TreePecan Carya illinoinensis Inanimate insigniaFoodChiliGameTexas 42 dominoesInstrumentGuitarShellLightning whelk Busycon perversum pulleyi ShipUSS TexasSoilHouston BlackSportRodeoOtherMolecule Buckyball For more see article State route markerState quarterReleased in 2004Lists of United States state symbols Texas is nicknamed the Lone Star State for its former status as an independent republic The Lone Star can be found on the Texas state flag and the Texas state seal 13 Spain was the first European country to claim and control the area of Texas Following a short lived colony controlled by France Mexico controlled the territory until 1836 when Texas won its independence becoming the Republic of Texas In 1845 Texas joined the United States as the 28th state 14 The state s annexation set off a chain of events that led to the Mexican American War in 1846 Following victory by the United States Texas remained a slave state until the American Civil War when it declared its secession from the Union in early 1861 before officially joining the Confederate States of America on March 2 After the Civil War and the restoration of its representation in the federal government Texas entered a long period of economic stagnation Historically four major industries shaped the Texas economy prior to World War II cattle and bison cotton timber and oil 15 Before and after the Civil War the cattle industry which Texas came to dominate was a major economic driver and created the traditional image of the Texas cowboy In the later 19th century cotton and lumber grew to be major industries as the cattle industry became less lucrative Ultimately the discovery of major petroleum deposits Spindletop in particular initiated an economic boom that became the driving force behind the economy for much of the 20th century Texas developed a diversified economy and high tech industry during the mid 20th century As of 2022 update it has the most Fortune 500 company headquarters 53 in the United States 16 17 With a growing base of industry the state leads in many industries including tourism agriculture petrochemicals energy computers and electronics aerospace and biomedical sciences Texas has led the U S in state export revenue since 2002 and has the second highest gross state product The Dallas Fort Worth metroplex and Greater Houston areas are the nation s fourth and fifth most populous urban regions respectively Its capital city is Austin Due to its size and geologic features such as the Balcones Fault Texas contains diverse landscapes common to both the U S Southern and the Southwestern regions 18 Most population centers are in areas of former prairies grasslands forests and the coastline Traveling from east to west terrain ranges from coastal swamps and piney woods to rolling plains and rugged hills to the desert and mountains of the Big Bend Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Precontact era 2 2 Colonization 2 3 Republic 2 4 Statehood 2 5 Civil War to late 19th century 2 6 Early to mid 20th century 2 7 Mid 20th to early 21st century 3 Geography 3 1 Geology 3 2 Wildlife 3 3 Climate 3 3 1 Storms 3 4 Greenhouse gases 3 5 Administrative divisions 4 Demographics 4 1 Race and ethnicity 4 2 Languages 4 3 Religion 5 Economy 5 1 Taxation 5 2 Agriculture and mining 5 3 Energy 5 4 Technology 5 5 Commerce 6 Culture 6 1 Texas self perception 6 2 Arts 6 3 Sports 7 Education 7 1 Higher education 8 Healthcare 8 1 Medical research 9 Transportation 9 1 Highways 9 2 Airports 9 3 Ports 9 4 Railroads 10 Government and politics 10 1 State government 10 2 Politics 10 3 Criminal law 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 Bibliography 15 External links 15 1 State government 15 2 Federal governmentEtymologyThe name Texas based on the Caddo word tay shaʼ te jːʃaʔ friend was applied in the spelling Tejas or Texas 19 20 21 1 by the Spanish to the Caddo themselves specifically the Hasinai Confederacy 22 During Spanish colonial rule in the 18th century the area was known as Nuevas Filipinas New Philippines and Nuevo Reino de Filipinas New Kingdom of the Philippines 23 or as provincia de los Tejas province of the Tejas 24 later also provincia de Texas or de Tejas province of Texas 25 23 It was incorporated as provincia de Texas into the Mexican Empire in 1821 and declared a republic in 1836 The Royal Spanish Academy recognizes both spellings Tejas and Texas as Spanish language forms of the name 26 The English pronunciation with ks is unetymological contrary to the historical value of the letter x ʃ in Spanish orthography Alternative etymologies of the name advanced in the late 19th century connected the name Texas with the Spanish word teja meaning roof tile the plural tejas being used to designate Indigenous Pueblo settlements 27 A 1760s map by Jacques Nicolas Bellin shows a village named Teijas on the Trinity River close to the site of modern Crockett 27 HistoryPrecontact era Main article History of Texas Further information Pre Columbian Mexico and Native American tribes in Texas nbsp Early Native American tribal territoriesTexas lies between two major cultural spheres of Pre Columbian North America the Southwestern and the Plains areas Archaeologists have found that three major Indigenous cultures lived in this territory and reached their developmental peak before the first European contact These were 28 the Ancestral Puebloans from the upper Rio Grande region centered west of Texas the Mississippian culture also known as Mound Builders which extended along the Mississippi River Valley east of Texas and the civilizations of Mesoamerica which were centered south of Texas Influence of Teotihuacan in northern Mexico peaked around AD 500 and declined between the 8th and 10th centuries When Europeans arrived in the Texas region the language families present in the state were Caddoan Atakapan Athabaskan Coahuiltecan and Uto Aztecan in addition to several language isolates such as Tonkawa Uto Aztecan Puebloan and Jumano peoples lived neared the Rio Grande in the western portion of the state and the Athabaskan speaking Apache tribes lived throughout the interior The agricultural mound building Caddo controlled much of the northeastern part of the state along the Red Sabine and Neches River basins 29 30 Atakapan peoples such as the Akokisa and Bidai lived along the northeastern Gulf Coast the Karankawa lived along the central coast 31 At least one tribe of Coahuiltecans the Aranama lived in southern Texas This entire culture group primarily centered in northeastern Mexico is now extinct No culture was dominant across all of present day Texas and many peoples inhabited the area 32 Native American tribes who have lived inside the boundaries of present day Texas include the Alabama Apache Atakapan Bidai Caddo Aranama Comanche Choctaw Coushatta Hasinai Jumano Karankawa Kickapoo Kiowa Tonkawa and Wichita 33 34 Many of these peoples migrated from the north or east during the colonial period such as the Choctaw Alabama Coushatta and Delaware 29 The region was primarily controlled by the Spanish until the Texas Revolution They were most interested in relationships with the Caddo who were like the Spanish a settled agricultural people Several Spanish missions were opened in Caddo territory but a lack of interest in Christianity among the Caddo meant that few were converted Positioned between French Louisiana and Spanish Texas the Caddo maintained relations with both but were closer with the French 35 After Spain took control of Louisiana most of the missions in eastern Texas were closed and abandoned 36 The United States obtained Louisiana following the 1803 Louisiana Purchase and began convincing tribes to self segregate from whites by moving west facing an overflow of native peoples in Missouri and Arkansas they were able to negotiate with the Caddo to allow several displaced peoples to settle on unused lands in eastern Texas These included the Muscogee Houma Choctaw Lenape and Mingo Seneca among others who came to view the Caddoans as saviors 37 38 The temperament of Native American tribes affected the fates of European explorers and settlers in that land 39 Friendly tribes taught newcomers how to grow local crops prepare foods and hunt wild game Warlike tribes resisted the settlers 39 Prior treaties with the Spanish forbade either side from militarizing its native population in any potential conflict between the two nations Several outbreaks of violence between Native Americans and Texans started to spread in the prelude to the Texas Revolution Texans accused tribes of stealing livestock While no proof was found 29 those in charge of Texas at the time attempted to publicly blame and punish the Caddo with the U S government trying to keep them in check The Caddo never turned to violence because of the situation except in cases of self defense 37 By the 1830s the U S had drafted the Indian Removal Act which was used to facilitate the Trail of Tears Fearing retribution Indian Agents all over the eastern U S tried to convince all Indigenous peoples to uproot and move west This included the Caddo of Louisiana and Arkansas Following the Texas Revolution the Texans chose to make peace with the Indigenous people but did not honor former land claims or agreements citation needed The first president of Texas Sam Houston aimed to cooperate and make peace with Native tribes but his successor Mirabeau B Lamar took a much more hostile stance Hostility towards Natives by white Texans prompted the movement of most Native populations north into what would become Indian Territory modern Oklahoma 29 37 Only the Alabama Coushatta would remain in the parts of Texas subject to white settlement though the Comanche would continue to control most of the western half of the state until their defeat in the 1870s and 1880s 40 Colonization Main articles New France Louisiana New France French colonization of Texas French and Indian War Treaty of Paris 1763 New Spain Spanish Texas Seminole Wars Adams Onis Treaty Mexican War of Independence Treaty of Cordoba First Mexican Empire Mexican Texas Provisional Government of Mexico 1823 24 1824 Constitution of Mexico First Mexican Republic Siete Leyes and Centralist Republic of Mexico The first historical document related to Texas was a map of the Gulf Coast created in 1519 by Spanish explorer Alonso Alvarez de Pineda 41 Nine years later shipwrecked Spanish explorer Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca and his cohort became the first Europeans in what is now Texas 42 43 Cabeza de Vaca reported that in 1528 when the Spanish landed in the area half the natives died from a disease of the bowels and blamed us 44 Cabeza de Vaca also made observations about the way of life of the Ignaces Natives of Texas c 46 Francisco Vazquez de Coronado described another encounter with native people in 1541 d 48 The expedition of Hernando de Soto entered into Texas from the east seeking a route to Mexico They passed through the Caddo lands but turned back after reaching the River of Daycao possibly the Brazos or Colorado beyond which point the Native peoples were nomadic and did not have the agricultural stores to feed the expedition 49 50 European powers ignored the area until accidentally settling there in 1685 Miscalculations by Rene Robert Cavelier de La Salle resulted in his establishing the colony of Fort Saint Louis at Matagorda Bay rather than along the Mississippi River 51 The colony lasted only four years before succumbing to harsh conditions and hostile natives 52 A small band of survivors traveled eastward into the lands of the Caddo but La Salle was killed by disgruntled expedition members 53 In 1690 Spanish authorities concerned that France posed a competitive threat constructed several missions in East Texas among the Caddo 54 After Caddo resistance the Spanish missionaries returned to Mexico 55 When France began settling Louisiana in 1716 Spanish authorities responded by founding a new series of missions in East Texas 56 Two years later they created San Antonio as the first Spanish civilian settlement in the area 57 nbsp Nicolas de La Fora s 1771 map of the northern frontier of New Spain clearly shows the Provincia de los Tejas 58 Hostile native tribes and distance from nearby Spanish colonies discouraged settlers from moving to the area It was one of New Spain s least populated provinces 59 In 1749 the Spanish peace treaty with the Lipan Apache angered many tribes 60 including the Comanche Tonkawa and Hasinai 61 The Comanche signed a treaty with Spain in 1785 and later helped to defeat the Lipan Apache and Karankawa tribes 62 63 With numerous missions being established priests led a peaceful conversion of most tribes By the end of the 18th century only a few nomadic tribes had not converted 64 nbsp Stephen F Austin was the first American empresario given permission to operate a colony within Mexican Texas nbsp Mexico in 1824 Coahuila y Tejas is the northeasternmost state When the United States purchased Louisiana from France in 1803 American authorities insisted the agreement also included Texas The boundary between New Spain and the United States was finally set in 1819 at the Sabine River the modern border between Texas and Louisiana 65 Eager for new land many U S settlers refused to recognize the agreement Several filibusters raised armies to invade the area west of the Sabine River 66 Marked by the War of 1812 some men who had escaped from the Spanish held Old Philippines had immigrated to and also passed through Texas New Philippines 67 and reached Louisiana where Philippine exiles aided the United States in the defense of New Orleans against a British invasion with Filipinos in the Saint Malo settlement assisting Jean Lafitte in the Battle of New Orleans 68 In 1821 the Mexican War of Independence included the Texas territory which became part of Mexico 69 Due to its low population the territory was assigned to other states and territories of Mexico the core territory was part of the state of Coahuila y Tejas but other parts of today s Texas were part of Tamaulipas Chihuahua or the Mexican Territory of Santa Fe de Nuevo Mexico 70 Hoping more settlers would reduce the near constant Comanche raids Mexican Texas liberalized its immigration policies to permit immigrants from outside Mexico and Spain 71 Large swathes of land were allotted to empresarios who recruited settlers from the United States Europe and the Mexican interior primarily the U S Austin s settlers the Old Three Hundred made places along the Brazos River in 1822 72 The population of Texas grew rapidly In 1825 Texas had about 3 500 people with most of Mexican descent 73 By 1834 the population had grown to about 37 800 people with only 7 800 of Mexican descent 74 Many immigrants openly flouted Mexican law especially the prohibition against slavery Combined with United States attempts to purchase Texas Mexican authorities decided in 1830 to prohibit continued immigration from the United States 75 However illegal immigration from the United States into Mexico continued to increase the population of Texas 76 New laws also called for the enforcement of customs duties angering native Mexican citizens Tejanos and recent immigrants alike 77 The Anahuac Disturbances in 1832 were the first open revolt against Mexican rule coinciding with a revolt in Mexico against the nation s president 78 Texians sided with the federalists against the government and drove all Mexican soldiers out of East Texas 79 They took advantage of the lack of oversight to agitate for more political freedom Texians met at the Convention of 1832 to discuss requesting independent statehood among other issues 80 The following year Texians reiterated their demands at the Convention of 1833 81 Republic Main articles Texas Revolution Convention of 1836 Texas Declaration of Independence Treaties of Velasco and Republic of Texas Within Mexico tensions continued between federalists and centralists In early 1835 wary Texians formed Committees of Correspondence and Safety 82 The unrest erupted into armed conflict in late 1835 at the Battle of Gonzales 83 This launched the Texas Revolution Texians elected delegates to the Consultation which created a provisional government 84 The provisional government soon collapsed from infighting and Texas was without clear governance for the first two months of 1836 85 nbsp Surrender of Santa Anna Painting by William Henry Huddle 1886 Mexican President Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna personally led an army to end the revolt 86 General Jose de Urrea defeated all the Texian resistance along the coast culminating in the Goliad massacre 87 Lopez de Santa Anna s forces after a thirteen day siege overwhelmed Texian defenders at the Battle of the Alamo News of the defeats sparked panic among Texas settlers 88 nbsp The Republic of Texas with present day borders superimposed The newly elected Texian delegates to the Convention of 1836 quickly signed a declaration of independence on March 2 forming the Republic of Texas After electing interim officers the Convention disbanded 89 The new government joined the other settlers in Texas in the Runaway Scrape fleeing from the approaching Mexican army 88 After several weeks of retreat the Texian Army commanded by Sam Houston attacked and defeated Lopez de Santa Anna s forces at the Battle of San Jacinto 90 Lopez de Santa Anna was captured and forced to sign the Treaties of Velasco ending the war 91 The Constitution of the Republic of Texas prohibited the government from restricting slavery or freeing slaves and required free people of African descent to leave the country 92 Political battles raged between two factions of the new Republic The nationalist faction led by Mirabeau B Lamar advocated the continued independence of Texas the expulsion of the Native Americans and the expansion of the Republic to the Pacific Ocean Their opponents led by Sam Houston advocated the annexation of Texas to the United States and peaceful co existence with Native Americans The conflict between the factions was typified by an incident known as the Texas Archive War 93 With wide popular support Texas first applied for annexation to the United States in 1836 but its status as a slaveholding country caused its admission to be controversial and it was initially rebuffed This status and Mexican diplomacy in support of its claims to the territory also complicated Texas s ability to form foreign alliances and trade relationships 94 The Comanche Indians furnished the main Native American opposition to the Texas Republic manifested in multiple raids on settlements 95 Mexico launched two small expeditions into Texas in 1842 The town of San Antonio was captured twice and Texans were defeated in battle in the Dawson massacre Despite these successes Mexico did not keep an occupying force in Texas and the republic survived 96 The cotton price crash of the 1840s depressed the country s economy 94 Statehood Main article History of Texas 1845 1860 Further information Texas annexation Admission to the Union Mexican American War and Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo See also List of U S states by date of admission to the Union nbsp On March 2 1936 the U S Post Office issued a commemorative stamp commemorating the 100th anniversary of the Texas Declaration of Independence featuring Sam Houston left Stephen Austin and the Alamo Texas was finally annexed when the expansionist James K Polk won the election of 1844 97 On December 29 1845 the U S Congress admitted Texas to the U S 98 After Texas s annexation Mexico broke diplomatic relations with the United States While the United States claimed Texas s border stretched to the Rio Grande Mexico claimed it was the Nueces River leaving the Rio Grande Valley under contested Texan sovereignty 98 While the former Republic of Texas could not enforce its border claims the United States had the military strength and the political will to do so President Polk ordered General Zachary Taylor south to the Rio Grande on January 13 1846 A few months later Mexican troops routed an American cavalry patrol in the disputed area in the Thornton Affair starting the Mexican American War The first battles of the war were fought in Texas the Siege of Fort Texas Battle of Palo Alto and Battle of Resaca de la Palma After these decisive victories the United States invaded Mexican territory ending the fighting in Texas 99 nbsp Captain Charles A May s squadron of the 2nd Dragoons slashes through the Mexican Army lines Resaca de la Palma Texas May 1846 The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo ended the two year war In return for US 18 250 000 Mexico gave the U S undisputed control of Texas ceded the Mexican Cession in 1848 most of which today is called the American Southwest and Texas s borders were established at the Rio Grande 99 The Compromise of 1850 set Texas s boundaries at their present position Texas ceded its claims to land which later became half of present day New Mexico 100 a third of Colorado and small portions of Kansas Oklahoma and Wyoming to the federal government in return for the assumption of 10 million of the old republic s debt 100 Post war Texas grew rapidly as migrants poured into the cotton lands of the state 101 They also brought or purchased enslaved African Americans whose numbers tripled in the state from 1850 to 1860 from 58 000 to 182 566 102 Civil War to late 19th century Main article History of Texas 1865 1899 Further information Ordinance of Secession Confederate States of America and Texas in the American Civil War Texas re entered war following the election of 1860 During this time Black people comprised 30 percent of the state s population and they were overwhelmingly enslaved 103 When Abraham Lincoln was elected South Carolina seceded from the Union five other Deep South states quickly followed A state convention considering secession opened in Austin on January 28 1861 On February 1 by a vote of 166 8 the convention adopted an Ordinance of Secession Texas voters approved this Ordinance on February 23 1861 Texas joined the newly created Confederate States of America on March 4 1861 ratifying the permanent C S Constitution on March 23 1 104 Not all Texans favored secession initially although many of the same would later support the Southern cause Texas s most notable Unionist was the state governor Sam Houston Not wanting to aggravate the situation Houston refused two offers from President Lincoln for Union troops to keep him in office After refusing to swear an oath of allegiance to the Confederacy Houston was deposed 105 While far from the major battlefields of the American Civil War Texas contributed large numbers of soldiers and equipment 106 Union troops briefly occupied the state s primary port Galveston Texas s border with Mexico was known as the backdoor of the Confederacy because trade occurred at the border bypassing the Union blockade 107 The Confederacy repulsed all Union attempts to shut down this route 106 but Texas s role as a supply state was marginalized in mid 1863 after the Union capture of the Mississippi River The final battle of the Civil War was fought at Palmito Ranch near Brownsville Texas and saw a Confederate victory 108 109 Texas descended into anarchy for two months between the surrender of the Army of Northern Virginia and the assumption of authority by Union General Gordon Granger Violence marked the early months of Reconstruction 106 Juneteenth commemorates the announcement of the Emancipation Proclamation in Galveston by General Gordon Granger almost two and a half years after the original announcement 110 111 President Johnson in 1866 declared the civilian government restored in Texas 112 Despite not meeting Reconstruction requirements Congress resumed allowing elected Texas representatives into the federal government in 1870 Social volatility continued as the state struggled with agricultural depression and labor issues 113 Like most of the South the Texas economy was devastated by the War However since the state had not been as dependent on slaves as other parts of the South it was able to recover more quickly The culture in Texas during the later 19th century exhibited many facets of a frontier territory The state became notorious as a haven for people from other parts of the country who wanted to escape debt war tensions or other problems Gone to Texas was a common expression for those fleeing the law in other states Nevertheless the state also attracted many businessmen and other settlers with more legitimate interests 114 The cattle industry continued to thrive though it gradually became less profitable Cotton and lumber became major industries creating new economic booms in various regions Railroad networks grew rapidly as did the port at Galveston as commerce expanded The lumber industry quickly expanded and was Texas largest industry prior to the 20th century 115 Early to mid 20th century nbsp Spindletop the first major oil gusher In 1900 Texas suffered the deadliest natural disaster in U S history during the Galveston hurricane 116 On January 10 1901 the first major oil well in Texas Spindletop was found south of Beaumont Other fields were later discovered nearby in East Texas West Texas and under the Gulf of Mexico The resulting oil boom transformed Texas 117 Oil production averaged three million barrels per day at its peak in 1972 118 In 1901 the Democratic dominated state legislature passed a bill requiring payment of a poll tax for voting which effectively disenfranchised most Black and many poor White and Latino people In addition the legislature established white primaries ensuring minorities were excluded from the formal political process The number of voters dropped dramatically and the Democrats crushed competition from the Republican and Populist parties 119 120 The Socialist Party became the second largest party in Texas after 1912 121 coinciding with a large socialist upsurge in the United States during fierce battles in the labor movement and the popularity of national heroes like Eugene V Debs The socialists popularity soon waned after their vilification by the federal government for their opposition to U S involvement in World War I 122 123 The Great Depression and the Dust Bowl dealt a double blow to the state s economy which had significantly improved since the Civil War Migrants abandoned the worst hit sections of Texas during the Dust Bowl years Especially from this period on Black people left Texas in the Great Migration to get work in the Northern United States or California and to escape segregation 103 In 1940 Texas was 74 White 14 4 Black and 11 5 Hispanic 124 World War II had a dramatic impact on Texas as federal money poured in to build military bases munitions factories detention camps and Army hospitals 750 000 Texans left for service the cities exploded with new industry and hundreds of thousands of poor farmers left the fields for much better paying war jobs never to return to agriculture 125 126 Texas manufactured 3 1 percent of total United States military armaments produced during World War II ranking eleventh among the 48 states 127 Texas modernized and expanded its system of higher education through the 1960s The state created a comprehensive plan for higher education funded in large part by oil revenues and a central state apparatus designed to manage state institutions more efficiently These changes helped Texas universities receive federal research funds 128 Mid 20th to early 21st century Beginning around the mid 20th century Texas began to transform from a rural and agricultural state to one urban and industrialized 129 The state s population grew quickly during this period with large levels of migration from outside the state 129 As a part of the Sun Belt Texas experienced strong economic growth particularly during the 1970s and early 1980s 129 Texas s economy diversified lessening its reliance on the petroleum industry 129 By 1990 Hispanics and Latino Americans overtook Blacks to become the largest minority group 129 Texas has the largest Black population with over 3 9 million 130 During the late 20th century the Republican Party replaced the Democratic Party as the dominant party in the state 129 Beginning in the early 21st century metropolitan areas including Dallas Fort Worth and Greater Austin became centers for the Texas Democratic Party in statewide and national elections as liberal policies became more accepted in urban areas 131 132 133 134 From the mid 2000s to 2019 Texas gained an influx of business relocations and regional headquarters from companies in California 135 136 137 138 Texas became a major destination for migration during the early 21st century and was named the most popular state to move for three consecutive years 139 Another study in 2019 determined Texas s growth rate at 1 000 people per day 140 During the COVID 19 pandemic in Texas the first confirmed case of the virus in Texas was announced on March 4 2020 141 On April 27 2020 Governor Greg Abbott announced phase one of re opening the economy 142 Amid a rise in COVID 19 cases in autumn 2020 Abbott refused to enact further lockdowns 143 144 In November 2020 Texas was selected as one of four states to test Pfizer s COVID 19 vaccine distribution 145 As of February 2 2021 there had been over 2 4 million confirmed cases in Texas with at least 37 417 deaths 146 During February 13 17 2021 the state faced a major weather emergency as Winter Storm Uri hit the state as well as most of the Southeastern and Midwestern United States 147 148 Historically high power usage across the state caused the state s power grid to become overworked and ERCOT the main operator of the Texas Interconnection grid declared an emergency and began to implement rolling blackouts across Texas causing a power crisis 149 150 151 Over 3 million Texans were without power and over 4 million were under boil water notices 152 GeographyMain article Geography of Texas nbsp Sam Rayburn Reservoir nbsp Texas Hill Country Texas is the second largest U S state by area after Alaska and the largest state within the contiguous United States at 268 820 square miles 696 200 km2 If it were an independent country Texas would be the 39th largest 153 It ranks 27th worldwide amongst country subdivisions by size Texas is in the south central part of the United States The Rio Grande forms a natural border with the Mexican states of Chihuahua Coahuila Nuevo Leon and Tamaulipas to the south The Red River forms a natural border with Oklahoma and Arkansas to the north The Sabine River forms a natural border with Louisiana to the east The Texas Panhandle has an eastern border with Oklahoma at 100 W a northern border with Oklahoma at 36 30 N and a western border with New Mexico at 103 W El Paso lies on the state s western tip at 32 N and the Rio Grande 100 With 10 climatic regions 14 soil regions and 11 distinct ecological regions regional classification becomes complicated with differences in soils topography geology rainfall and plant and animal communities 154 One classification system divides Texas in order from southeast to west into the following Gulf Coastal Plains Interior Lowlands Great Plains and Basin and Range Province 155 The Gulf Coastal Plains region wraps around the Gulf of Mexico on the southeast section of the state Vegetation in this region consists of thick piney woods The Interior Lowlands region consists of gently rolling to hilly forested land and is part of a larger pine hardwood forest The Cross Timbers region and Caprock Escarpment are part of the Interior Lowlands 155 nbsp Steinhagen Reservoir The Great Plains region in Central Texas spans through the state s panhandle and Llano Estacado to the state s hill country near Lago Vista and Austin This region is dominated by prairie and steppe Far West Texas or the Trans Pecos region is the state s Basin and Range Province The most varied of the regions this area includes Sand Hills the Stockton Plateau desert valleys wooded mountain slopes and desert grasslands 156 Texas has 3 700 named streams and 15 major rivers 157 158 with the Rio Grande as the largest Other major rivers include the Pecos the Brazos Colorado and Red River While Texas has few natural lakes Texans have built more than a hundred artificial reservoirs 159 The size and unique history of Texas make its regional affiliation debatable it can be considered a Southern or a Southwestern state or both The vast geographic economic and cultural diversity within the state itself prohibits easy categorization of the whole state into a recognized region of the United States Notable extremes range from East Texas which is often considered an extension of the Deep South to Far West Texas which is generally acknowledged to be part of the interior Southwest 160 Geology Main article Geology of Texas nbsp Palo Duro Canyon nbsp Franklin Mountains State Park nbsp Big Bend National Park Texas is the southernmost part of the Great Plains which ends in the south against the folded Sierra Madre Occidental of Mexico The continental crust forms a stable Mesoproterozoic craton which changes across a broad continental margin and transitional crust into true oceanic crust of the Gulf of Mexico The oldest rocks in Texas date from the Mesoproterozoic and are about 1 600 million years old 161 This margin existed until Laurasia and Gondwana collided in the Pennsylvanian subperiod to form Pangea 162 Pangea began to break up in the Triassic but seafloor spreading to form the Gulf of Mexico occurred only in the mid and late Jurassic The shoreline shifted again to the eastern margin of the state and the Gulf of Mexico s passive margin began to form Today 9 to 12 miles 14 to 19 km of sediments are buried beneath the Texas continental shelf and a large proportion of remaining US oil reserves are here The incipient Gulf of Mexico basin was restricted and seawater often evaporated completely to form thick evaporite deposits of Jurassic age These salt deposits formed salt dome diapirs and are found in East Texas along the Gulf coast 163 East Texas outcrops consist of Cretaceous and Paleogene sediments which contain important deposits of Eocene lignite The Mississippian and Pennsylvanian sediments in the north Permian sediments in the west and Cretaceous sediments in the east along the Gulf coast and out on the Texas continental shelf contain oil Oligocene volcanic rocks are found in far west Texas in the Big Bend area A blanket of Miocene sediments known as the Ogallala formation in the western high plains region is an important aquifer 164 Located far from an active plate tectonic boundary Texas has no volcanoes and few earthquakes 165 Wildlife See also List of mammals of Texas List of birds of Texas List of reptiles of Texas and List of amphibians of Texas Texas is the home to 65 species of mammals 213 species of reptiles and amphibians including the American green tree frog and the greatest diversity of bird life in the United States 590 native species in all 166 At least 12 species have been introduced and now reproduce freely in Texas 167 Texas plays host to several species of wasps including an abundance of Polistes exclamans 168 and is an important ground for the study of Polistes annularis 169 During the spring Texas wildflowers such as the state flower the bluebonnet line highways throughout Texas During the Johnson Administration the first lady Lady Bird Johnson worked to draw attention to Texas wildflowers 170 Climate Main article Climate of Texas nbsp Koppen climate types in Texas The large size of Texas and its location at the intersection of multiple climate zones gives the state highly variable weather The Panhandle of the state has colder winters than North Texas while the Gulf Coast has mild winters Texas has wide variations in precipitation patterns El Paso on the western end of the state averages 8 7 inches 220 mm of annual rainfall 171 while parts of southeast Texas average as much as 64 inches 1 600 mm per year 172 Dallas in the North Central region averages a more moderate 37 inches 940 mm per year 173 Snow falls multiple times each winter in the Panhandle and mountainous areas of West Texas once or twice a year in North Texas and once every few years in Central and East Texas Snow falls south of San Antonio or on the coast only in rare circumstances Of note is the 2004 Christmas Eve snowstorm when 6 inches 150 mm of snow fell as far south as Kingsville where the average high temperature in December is 65 F 174 Night time summer temperatures range from the upper 50s F 14 C in the West Texas mountains to 80 F 27 C in Galveston 175 176 The table below consists of averages for August generally the warmest month and January generally the coldest in selected cities in various regions of the state Average daily maximum and minimum temperatures for selected cities in Texas 177 Location August F August C January F January C Houston 94 75 34 24 63 54 17 12 San Antonio 96 74 35 23 63 40 17 5 Dallas 96 77 36 25 57 37 16 3 Austin 97 74 36 23 61 45 16 5 El Paso 92 67 33 21 57 32 14 0 Laredo 100 77 37 25 67 46 19 7 Amarillo 89 64 32 18 50 23 10 4 Brownsville 94 76 34 24 70 51 21 11 Storms See also List of Texas hurricanes Thunderstorms strike Texas often especially the eastern and northern portions of the state Tornado Alley covers the northern section of Texas The state experiences the most tornadoes in the United States an average of 139 a year These strike most frequently in North Texas and the Panhandle 178 Tornadoes in Texas generally occur in April May and June 179 Some of the most destructive hurricanes in U S history have impacted Texas A hurricane in 1875 killed about 400 people in Indianola followed by another hurricane in 1886 that destroyed the town These events allowed Galveston to take over as the chief port city The 1900 Galveston hurricane subsequently devastated that city killing about 8 000 people or possibly as many as 12 000 in the deadliest natural disaster in U S history 116 In 2017 Hurricane Harvey made landfall in Rockport as a Category 4 Hurricane causing significant damage there Its unprecedented amounts of rain over the Greater Houston area resulted in widespread and catastrophic flooding that inundated hundreds of thousands of homes Harvey ultimately became the costliest hurricane worldwide causing an estimated 198 6 billion in damage surpassing the cost of Hurricane Katrina 180 Other devastating Texas hurricanes include the 1915 Galveston hurricane Hurricane Audrey in 1957 Hurricane Carla in 1961 Hurricane Beulah in 1967 Hurricane Alicia in 1983 Hurricane Rita in 2005 and Hurricane Ike in 2008 Tropical storms have also caused their share of damage Allison in 1989 and again during 2001 Claudette in 1979 and Tropical Storm Imelda in 2019 181 182 183 There is no substantial physical barrier between Texas and the polar region Although it is unusual it is possible for arctic or polar air masses to penetrate Texas 184 185 as occurred during the February 13 17 2021 North American winter storm 186 187 Usually prevailing winds in North America will push polar air masses to the southeast before they reach Texas Because such intrusions are rare and perhaps unexpected they may result in crises such as the 2021 Texas power crisis Greenhouse gases Main article Climate change in Texas As of 2017 update Texas emitted the most greenhouse gases in the U S 188 As of 2017 update the state emits about 1 600 billion pounds 707 million metric tons of carbon dioxide annually 188 As an independent state Texas would rank as the world s seventh largest producer of greenhouse gases 189 Causes of the state s vast greenhouse gas emissions include the state s large number of coal power plants and the state s refining and manufacturing industries 189 In 2010 there were 2 553 emission events which poured 44 6 million pounds 20 200 metric tons of contaminants into the Texas sky 190 Administrative divisions See also List of counties in Texas List of Texas metropolitan areas and List of municipalities in Texas Largest city in Texas by year 191 Year s City 1850 1870 San Antonio 192 1870 1890 Galveston 193 1890 1900 Dallas 191 1900 1930 San Antonio 192 1930 present Houston 194 nbsp Colonia in the Rio Grande Valley near the Mexico United States border The state has three cities with populations exceeding one million Houston San Antonio and Dallas 195 These three rank among the 10 most populous cities of the United States As of 2020 six Texas cities had populations greater than 600 000 Austin Fort Worth and El Paso are among the 20 largest U S cities Texas has four metropolitan areas with populations greater than a million Dallas Fort Worth Arlington Houston Sugar Land The Woodlands San Antonio New Braunfels and Austin Round Rock San Marcos The Dallas Fort Worth and Houston metropolitan areas number about 7 5 million and 7 million residents as of 2019 respectively 196 Three interstate highways I 35 to the west Dallas Fort Worth to San Antonio with Austin in between I 45 to the east Dallas to Houston and I 10 to the south San Antonio to Houston define the Texas Urban Triangle region The region of 60 000 square miles 160 000 km2 contains most of the state s largest cities and metropolitan areas as well as 17 million people nearly 75 percent of Texas s total population 197 Houston and Dallas have been recognized as world cities 198 These cities are spread out amongst the state 199 In contrast to the cities unincorporated rural settlements known as colonias often lack basic infrastructure and are marked by poverty 200 The office of the Texas Attorney General stated in 2011 that Texas had about 2 294 colonias and estimates about 500 000 lived in the colonias Hidalgo County as of 2011 has the largest number of colonias 201 Texas has the largest number of people living in colonias of all states 200 Texas has 254 counties more than any other state 202 Each county runs on Commissioners Court system consisting of four elected commissioners one from each of four precincts in the county roughly divided according to population and a county judge elected at large from the entire county County government runs similar to a weak mayor council system the county judge has no veto authority but votes along with the other commissioners 203 204 Although Texas permits cities and counties to enter interlocal agreements to share services the state does not allow consolidated city county governments nor does it have metropolitan governments Counties are not granted home rule status their powers are strictly defined by state law The state does not have townships areas within a county are either incorporated or unincorporated Incorporated areas are part of a municipality The county provides limited services to unincorporated areas and to some smaller incorporated areas Municipalities are classified either general law cities or home rule 205 A municipality may elect home rule status once it exceeds 5 000 population with voter approval 206 Texas also permits the creation of special districts which provide limited services The most common is the school district but can also include hospital districts community college districts and utility districts Municipal school district and special district elections are nonpartisan 207 though the party affiliation of a candidate may be well known County and state elections are partisan 208 Largest cities or towns in Texas 2022 U S Census Bureau Estimate 209 Rank Name County Pop Rank Name County Pop nbsp Houston nbsp San Antonio 1 Houston Harris 2 302 878 11 Laredo Webb 256 187 nbsp Dallas nbsp Austin 2 San Antonio Bexar 1 472 909 12 Irving Dallas 254 715 3 Dallas Dallas 1 299 544 13 Garland Dallas 240 854 4 Austin Travis 974 447 14 Frisco Collin 219 587 5 Fort Worth Tarrant 956 709 15 McKinney Collin 207 507 6 El Paso El Paso 677 456 16 Grand Prairie Dallas 201 843 7 Arlington Tarrant 394 602 17 Amarillo Potter 201 291 8 Corpus Christi Nueces 316 239 18 Brownsville Cameron 189 382 9 Plano Collin 289 547 19 Killeen Bell 159 172 10 Lubbock Lubbock 263 930 20 Denton Denton 150 353DemographicsMain article Demographics of Texas Historical population CensusPop Note 1850212 592 1860604 215184 2 1870818 57935 5 18801 591 74994 5 18902 235 52740 4 19003 048 71036 4 19103 896 54227 8 19204 663 22819 7 19305 824 71524 9 19406 414 82410 1 19507 711 19420 2 19609 579 67724 2 197011 196 73016 9 198014 229 19127 1 199016 986 51019 4 200020 851 82022 8 201025 145 56120 6 202029 145 50515 9 2023 est 30 503 3014 7 1910 2020 5 nbsp Texas population density map The resident population of Texas was 29 145 505 in the 2020 census a 15 9 increase since the 2010 census 210 211 At the 2020 census the apportioned population of Texas stood at 29 183 290 212 The 2023 Texas Population Estimate program estimated the population was 30 503 301 on July 1 2023 213 In 2010 Texas had a census population of 25 145 561 214 Texas is the second most populous state in the United States after California and the only other U S state to surpass a total estimated population of 30 million people as of July 2 2022 215 216 In 2015 Texas had 4 7 million foreign born residents about 17 of the population and 21 6 of the state workforce 217 The major countries of origin for Texan immigrants were Mexico 55 1 of immigrants India 5 El Salvador 4 3 Vietnam 3 7 and China 2 3 217 Of immigrant residents 35 8 percent were naturalized U S citizens 217 As of 2018 the population increased to 4 9 million foreign born residents or 17 2 of the state population up from 2 899 642 in 2000 218 In 2014 there were an estimated 1 7 million undocumented immigrants in Texas making up 35 of the total Texas immigrant population and 6 1 of the total state population 217 In addition to the state s foreign born population an additional 4 1 million Texans 15 of the state s population were born in the United States and had at least one immigrant parent 217 According to the American Community Survey s 2019 estimates 1 739 000 residents were undocumented immigrants a decrease of 103 000 since 2014 and increase of 142 000 since 2016 Of the undocumented immigrant population 951 000 have resided in Texas from less than 5 up to 14 years An estimated 788 000 lived in Texas from 15 to 19 and 20 years or more 219 Texas s Rio Grande Valley has seen significant migration from across the U S Mexico border During the 2014 crisis many Central Americans including unaccompanied minors traveling alone from Guatemala Honduras and El Salvador reached the state overwhelming Border Patrol resources for a time Many sought asylum in the United States 220 221 Texas s population density as of 2010 is 96 3 people per square mile 37 2 people km2 which is slightly higher than the average population density of the U S as a whole at 87 4 people per square mile 33 7 people km2 In contrast while Texas and France are similarly sized geographically the European country has a population density of 301 8 people per square mile 116 5 people km2 Two thirds of all Texans live in major metropolitan areas such as Houston According to HUD s 2022 Annual Homeless Assessment Report there were an estimated 24 432 homeless people in Texas 222 223 Race and ethnicity nbsp Map of counties in Texas by racial and ethnic plurality per the 2020 U S census Non Hispanic White 20 30 30 40 40 50 50 60 60 70 70 80 80 90 Hispanic or Latino 40 50 50 60 60 70 70 80 80 90 90 Ethnic composition as of the 2020 census Race and ethnicity 224 Alone Total Hispanic or Latino e 40 2 40 2 Non Hispanic White 39 7 39 7 39 8 39 8 African American 11 8 11 8 12 8 12 8 Asian 5 4 5 4 6 1 6 1 Native American 0 3 0 3 1 4 1 4 Pacific Islander 0 1 0 1 0 2 0 2 Other 0 4 0 4 1 0 1 In 2019 non Hispanic Whites represented 41 2 of Texas s population reflecting a national demographic shift 225 226 227 Black people made up 12 9 American Indians and Alaska Natives 1 0 Asian Americans 5 2 Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders 0 1 some other race 0 2 and two or more races 1 8 Hispanics or Latino Americans of any race made up 39 7 of the estimated population 228 At the 2020 census the racial and ethnic composition of the state was 42 5 White 39 8 non Hispanic White 11 8 Black 5 4 Asian 0 3 American Indian and Alaska Native 0 1 Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander 13 6 some other race 17 6 two or more races and 40 2 Hispanic and Latino American of any race 229 230 In 2010 49 of all births were Hispanics 35 were non Hispanic White 11 5 were non Hispanic Black and 4 3 were Asians Pacific Islanders 231 Based on U S Census Bureau data released in February 2011 for the first time in recent history Texas s White population is below 50 45 and Hispanics grew to 38 Between 2000 and 2010 the total population grew by 20 6 but Hispanics and Latino Americans grew by 65 whereas non Hispanic Whites grew by only 4 2 232 Texas has the fifth highest rate of teenage births in the nation and a plurality of these are to Hispanics or Latinos 233 234 As of 2022 Hispanics and Latinos of any race replaced the non Hispanic White population as the largest share of the state s population 235 Languages Main article Languages of Texas Most common non English languages Language Population as of 2010 236 Spanish 29 2 Vietnamese 0 8 Chinese 0 6 German 0 3 Tagalog 0 3 French 0 3 Korean and Urdu tied 0 2 Hindi 0 2 Arabic 0 2 Niger Congo languages 0 2 The most common accent or dialect spoken by natives throughout Texas is sometimes referred to as Texan English itself a sub variety of a broader category of American English known as Southern American English 237 238 Creole language is spoken in some parts of East Texas 239 In some areas of the state particularly in the large cities Western American English and General American English is increasingly common Chicano English due to a growing Hispanic population is widespread in South Texas while African American English is especially notable in historically minority areas of urban Texas At the 2020 American Community Survey s estimates 64 9 of the population spoke only English and 35 1 spoke a language other than English 240 Roughly 30 of the total population spoke Spanish By 2021 approximately 50 546 Texans spoke French or a French creole language German and other West Germanic languages were spoken by 49 565 residents Russian Polish and other Slavic languages by 37 444 Korean by 31 673 Chinese 86 370 Vietnamese 92 410 Tagalog 40 124 and Arabic by 47 170 Texans 241 At the census of 2010 65 8 14 740 304 of Texas residents age 5 and older spoke only English at home while 29 2 6 543 702 spoke Spanish 0 8 percent 168 886 Vietnamese and Chinese which includes Cantonese and Mandarin was spoken by 0 6 122 921 of the population over five 236 Other languages spoken include German including Texas German by 0 3 73 137 Tagalog with 0 3 64 272 speakers and French including Cajun French was spoken by 0 3 55 773 of Texans 236 Reportedly Cherokee is the most widely spoken Native American language in Texas 242 In total 34 2 7 660 406 of Texas s population aged five and older spoke a language at home other than English as of 2006 236 Religion See also List of cathedrals in Texas Religious affiliation 2020 243 Christian 75 5 Catholic 28 Protestant 47 Other Christian 0 5 Unaffiliated 20 Jewish 1 Muslim 1 Buddhist 1 Other faiths 5 With the coming of Spanish Catholic and American Protestant missionary societies 244 Indigenous American Indian religions and spiritual traditions dwindled Since then colonial and present day Texas has become a predominantly Christian state with 75 5 of the population identifying as such according to the Public Religion Research Institute in 2020 245 nbsp St Mary s Cathedral Basilica of the Archdiocese of Galveston Houston Among its majority Christian populace the largest Christian denomination as of 2014 has been the Catholic Church per the Pew Research Center at 23 of the population although Protestants collectively constituted 50 of the Christian population in 2014 246 in the 2020 study by the Public Religion Research Institute the Catholic Church s membership increased to encompassing 28 of the population identifying with a religious or spiritual belief 245 At the 2020 Association of Religion Data Archives study there were 5 905 142 Catholics in the state 247 The largest Catholic jurisdictions in Texas are the Archdiocese of Galveston Houston the first and oldest Latin Church diocese in Texas 248 the dioceses of Dallas and Fort Worth and the Archdiocese of San Antonio nbsp First Baptist Church of Dallas Being part of the strongly socially conservative Bible Belt 249 Protestants as a whole declined to 47 of the population in the 2020 study by the Public Religion Research Institute Predominantly white Evangelical Protestantism declined to 14 of the Protestant Christian population Mainline Protestants in contrast made up 15 of Protestant Texas Hispanic or Latino American dominated Protestant churches and historically Black or African American Protestantism grew to a collective 13 of the Protestant population Evangelical Protestants were 31 of the population in 2014 and Baptists were the largest Evangelical tradition 14 246 according to the 2014 study they made up the second largest Mainline Protestant group behind Methodists 4 Nondenominational and interdenominational Protestant Christians were the second largest Evangelical group 7 followed by Pentecostals 4 The largest Evangelical Baptists in the state were the Southern Baptist Convention 9 and independent Baptists 3 The Assemblies of God USA was the largest Evangelical Pentecostal denomination in 2014 Among Mainline Protestants the United Methodist Church was the largest denomination 4 and the American Baptist Churches USA comprised the second largest Mainline Protestant group 2 According to the Pew Research Center in 2014 the state s largest historically African American Christian denominations were the National Baptist Convention USA and the Church of God in Christ Black Methodists and other Christians made up less than 1 percent each of the Christian demographic Other Christians made up 1 percent of the total Christian population and the Eastern and Oriental Orthodox formed less than 1 percent of the statewide Christian populace The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints is the largest nontrinitarian Christian group in Texas alongside the Jehovah s Witnesses 246 Among its Protestant population the Association of Religion Data Archives in 2020 determined Southern Baptists numbered 3 319 962 non denominational Protestants 2 405 786 including Christian Churches and Churches of Christ and the Churches of Christ altogether numbering 2 758 353 and United Methodists 938 399 as the most numerous Protestant groups in the state 247 Baptists altogether Southern Baptists American Baptist Associates American Baptists Full Gospel Baptists General Baptists Free Will Baptists National Baptists National Baptists of America National Missionary Baptists National Primitive Baptists and Progressive National Baptists numbered 3 837 306 Methodists within United Methodism the AME AME Zion CME and the Free Methodist Church numbered 1 026 453 Texans The same study tabulated 425 038 Pentecostals spread among the Assemblies of God Church of God Cleveland and Church of God in Christ Nontrinitarian or Oneness Pentecostals numbered 7 042 between Bible Way Church of Our Lord Jesus Christ COOLJC and the Pentecostal Assemblies of the World Other Christians including the Eastern and Oriental Orthodox numbered 55 329 altogether and Episcopalians numbered 134 318 although the Anglican Catholic Church Anglican Church in America Anglican Church in North America Anglican Province of America and Holy Catholic Church Anglican Rite had a collective presence in 114 churches 250 Non Christian faiths accounted for 4 of the religious population in 2014 and 5 in 2020 per the Pew Research Center and Public Religion Research Institute 246 245 Adherents of many other religions reside predominantly in the urban centers of Texas Judaism Islam and Buddhism were tied as the second largest religion as of 2014 and 2020 In 2014 18 of the state s population were religiously unaffiliated Of the unaffiliated in 2014 an estimated 2 were atheists and 3 agnostic in 2020 the Public Religion Research Institute noted the largest non Christian groups were the irreligious 20 Judaism 1 Islam 1 Buddhism 1 and Hinduism and other religions at less than 1 percent each In 1990 the Islamic population was about 140 000 with more recent figures putting the current number of Muslims between 350 000 and 400 000 as of 2012 251 The Association of Religion Data Archives estimated there were 313 209 Muslims as of 2020 247 Texas is the fifth largest Muslim populated state as of 2014 252 The Jewish population was around 128 000 in 2008 253 In 2020 the Jewish population grew to over 176 000 254 According to ARDA s 2020 study there were 43 Chabad synagogues 17 513 Conservative Jews 8 110 Orthodox Jews and 31 378 Reform Jews Around 146 000 adherents of religions such as Hinduism and Sikhism lived in Texas as of 2004 255 By 2020 there were 112 153 Hindus and 20 Sikh gurdwaras 60 882 Texans adhered to Buddhism EconomyMain article Economy of Texas See also Texas locations by per capita income nbsp A geomap depicting income by county as of 2014 nbsp Texas counties by GDP 2021 As of 2022 Texas had a gross state product GSP of 2 4 trillion the second highest in the U S 256 Its GSP is greater than the GDP of Italy the world s 8th largest economy 257 The state ranks 22nd among U S states with a median household income of 64 034 while the poverty rate is 14 2 making Texas the state with 14th highest poverty rate compared to 13 15 nationally Texas s economy is the second largest of any country subdivision globally behind California Texas s large population an abundance of natural resources thriving cities and leading centers of higher education have contributed to a large and diverse economy Since oil was discovered the state s economy has reflected the state of the petroleum industry In recent times urban centers of the state have increased in size containing two thirds of the population in 2005 The state s economic growth has led to urban sprawl and its associated symptoms 258 As of May 2020 during the COVID 19 pandemic the state s unemployment rate was 13 percent 259 In 2010 Site Selection Magazine ranked Texas as the most business friendly state in part because of the state s three billion dollar Texas Enterprise Fund 260 Texas has the highest number of Fortune 500 company headquarters in the United States as of 2022 16 17 In 2010 there were 346 000 millionaires in Texas the second largest population of millionaires in the nation f 261 In 2018 the number of millionaire households increased to 566 578 262 Taxation Texas has a reputation for a low tax 263 According to the Tax Foundation Texans state and local tax burdens are seventh lowest nationally state and local taxes cost 3 580 per capita or 8 4 percent of resident incomes 264 Texas is one of seven states that lack a state income tax 264 265 Instead the state collects revenue from property taxes though these are collected at the county city and school district level Texas has a state constitutional prohibition against a state property tax and sales taxes The state sales tax rate is 6 25 percent 264 266 but local taxing jurisdictions cities counties special purpose districts and transit authorities may also impose sales and use tax up to 2 percent for a total maximum combined rate of 8 25 percent 267 Texas is a tax donor state in 2005 for every dollar Texans paid to the federal government in federal income taxes the state got back about 0 94 in benefits 264 To attract business Texas has incentive programs worth 19 billion per year 2012 more than any other U S state 268 269 Agriculture and mining nbsp Cotton modules after harvest in West Texas nbsp An oil well nbsp Brazos Wind Farm nbsp Texas longhorn cattle in Boerne Texas Texas has the most farms and the highest acreage in the United States The state is ranked No 1 for revenue generated from total livestock and livestock products It is ranked No 2 for total agricultural revenue behind California 270 At 7 4 billion or 56 7 percent of Texas s annual agricultural cash receipts beef cattle production represents the largest single segment of Texas agriculture This is followed by cotton at 1 9 billion 14 6 percent greenhouse nursery at 1 5 billion 11 4 percent broiler chickens at 1 3 billion 10 percent and dairy products at 947 million 7 3 percent 271 Texas leads the nation in the production of cattle horses sheep goats wool mohair and hay 271 The state also leads the nation in production of cotton which is the number one crop grown in the state in terms of value 270 272 273 The state grows significant amounts of cereal crops and produce 270 Texas has a large commercial fishing industry With mineral resources Texas leads in creating cement crushed stone lime salt sand and gravel 270 Texas throughout the 21st century has been hammered by drought costing the state billions of dollars in livestock and crops 274 Energy See also Deregulation of the Texas electricity market and Economy of Texas Energy Ever since the discovery of oil at Spindletop energy has been a dominant force politically and economically within the state 275 If Texas were its own country it would be the sixth largest oil producer in the world according to a 2014 study 276 The Railroad Commission of Texas regulates the state s oil and gas industry gas utilities pipeline safety safety in the liquefied petroleum gas industry and surface coal and uranium mining Until the 1970s the commission controlled the price of petroleum because of its ability to regulate Texas s oil reserves The founders of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries OPEC used the Texas agency as one of their models for petroleum price control 277 As of January 1 2021 Texas has proved recoverable petroleum reserves of about 15 6 billion barrels 2 48 109 m3 of crude oil 44 of the known U S reserves and 9 5 billion barrels 1 51 109 m3 of natural gas liquids 278 279 The state s refineries can process 5 95 million barrels 946 000 m3 of oil a day 278 279 The Port Arthur Refinery in Southeast Texas is the largest refinery in the U S 278 Texas is also a leader in natural gas production at 28 8 billion cubic feet 820 000 000 m3 per day some 32 of the nation s production 280 Texas has 102 4 trillion cubic feet 2 90 1012 m3 of gas reserves which is 23 of the nation s gas reserves 278 279 Many petroleum companies are based in Texas such as ConocoPhillips 281 EOG Resources ExxonMobil 282 Halliburton 283 Hilcorp Marathon Oil 284 Occidental Petroleum 285 Pioneer Natural Resources Tesoro 286 Valero Energy 287 and Western Refining 288 According to the Energy Information Administration Texans consume on average the fifth most energy of all types in the nation per capita and as a whole following behind Wyoming Alaska Louisiana North Dakota and Iowa 278 Unlike the rest of the nation most of Texas is on its own alternating current power grid the Texas Interconnection Texas has a deregulated electric service Texas leads the nation in total net electricity production generating 437 236 MWh in 2014 89 more MWh than Florida which ranked second 289 290 The state is a leader in renewable energy commercialization it produces the most wind power in the nation 278 291 In 2014 10 6 of the electricity consumed in Texas came from wind turbines 292 The Roscoe Wind Farm in Roscoe Texas is one of the world s largest wind farms with a 781 5 megawatt MW capacity 293 The Energy Information Administration states the state s large agriculture and forestry industries could give Texas an enormous amount of biomass for use in biofuels The state also has the highest solar power potential for development in the U S 278 Technology nbsp Astronaut training at the Johnson Space Center in Houston With large universities systems coupled with initiatives like the Texas Enterprise Fund and the Texas Emerging Technology Fund a wide array of different high tech industries have developed in Texas The Austin area is nicknamed the Silicon Hills and the north Dallas area the Silicon Prairie Many high tech companies are located in or have their headquarters in Texas and Austin in particular including Dell Inc 294 Borland 295 Forcepoint 296 Indeed com 297 Texas Instruments 298 Perot Systems 299 Rackspace and AT amp T 300 301 302 The National Aeronautics and Space Administration s Lyndon B Johnson Space Center NASA JSC is located in Southeast Houston Both SpaceX and Blue Origin have their test facilities in Texas 303 304 Fort Worth hosts both Lockheed Martin s Aeronautics division and Bell Helicopter Textron 305 306 Lockheed builds the F 16 Fighting Falcon the largest Western fighter program and its successor the F 35 Lightning II in Fort Worth 307 Commerce Texas s affluence stimulates a strong commercial sector consisting of retail wholesale banking and insurance and construction industries Examples of Fortune 500 companies not based on Texas traditional industries are AT amp T Kimberly Clark Blockbuster J C Penney Whole Foods Market and Tenet Healthcare 308 Nationally the Dallas Fort Worth area home to the second shopping mall in the United States has the most shopping malls per capita of any American metropolitan statistical area 309 Mexico the state s largest trading partner imports a third of the state s exports because of the North American Free Trade Agreement NAFTA NAFTA has encouraged the formation of maquiladoras on the Texas Mexico border 310 CultureMain article Culture of Texas See also List of Texas symbols nbsp The Alamo is one of the most recognized symbols of Texas Historically Texas culture comes from a blend of Southern Dixie Western frontier and Southwestern Mexican Anglo fusion influences varying in degrees of such from one intrastate region to another A popular food item the breakfast burrito draws from all three having a soft flour tortilla wrapped around bacon and scrambled eggs or other hot cooked fillings Adding to Texas s traditional culture established in the 18th and 19th centuries immigration has made Texas a melting pot of cultures from around the world 311 312 Texas has made a strong mark on national and international pop culture The entire state is strongly associated with the image of the cowboy shown in westerns and in country western music The state s numerous oil tycoons are also a popular pop culture topic as seen in the hit TV series Dallas 313 The internationally known slogan Don t Mess with Texas began as an anti littering advertisement Since the campaign s inception in 1986 the phrase has become an identity statement a declaration of Texas swagger 314 Texas self perception nbsp Big Tex presided over every Texas State Fair since 1952 until it was destroyed by a fire in 2012 Since then a new Big Tex was created Texas sized describes something that is about the size of the U S state of Texas 315 316 or something usually but not always originating from Texas that is large compared to other objects of its type 317 318 319 Texas was the largest U S state until Alaska became a state in 1959 The phrase everything is bigger in Texas has been in regular use since at least 1950 320 Arts Further information Music of Texas nbsp ZZ Top performing in 2016 The power trio are considered cultural icons of Texas and blues inspired rock music Houston is one of only five American cities with permanent professional resident companies in all the major performing arts disciplines the Houston Grand Opera the Houston Symphony Orchestra the Houston Ballet and The Alley Theatre 321 Known for the vibrancy of its visual and performing arts the Houston Theater District ranks second in the country in the number of theater seats in a concentrated downtown area with 12 948 seats for live performances and 1 480 movie seats 321 Founded in 1892 Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth also called The Modern is Texas s oldest art museum Fort Worth also has the Kimbell Art Museum the Amon Carter Museum the National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame the Will Rogers Memorial Center and the Bass Performance Hall downtown The Arts District of Downtown Dallas has arts venues such as the Dallas Museum of Art the Morton H Meyerson Symphony Center the Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House the Trammell amp Margaret Crow Collection of Asian Art and the Nasher Sculpture Center 322 nbsp Houston Symphony at the Jones Hall The Deep Ellum district within Dallas became popular during the 1920s and 1930s as the prime jazz and blues hotspot in the Southern United States The name Deep Ellum comes from local people pronouncing Deep Elm as Deep Ellum 323 Artists such as Blind Lemon Jefferson Robert Johnson Huddie Lead Belly Ledbetter and Bessie Smith played in early Deep Ellum clubs 324 Austin The Live Music Capital of the World boasts more live music venues per capita than such music hotbeds as Nashville Memphis Los Angeles Las Vegas or New York City 325 The city s music revolves around the nightclubs on 6th Street events like the film music and multimedia festival South by Southwest the longest running concert music program on American television Austin City Limits and the Austin City Limits Music Festival held in Zilker Park 326 Since 1980 San Antonio has evolved into The Tejano Music Capital Of The World 327 The Tejano Music Awards have provided a forum to create greater awareness and appreciation for Tejano music and culture 328 Sports Main article Sports in Texas Further information List of University Interscholastic League events nbsp AT amp T Stadium home of the Dallas Cowboys who are commonly known as America s Team nbsp Playoff game between the San Antonio Spurs led by Tim Duncan 21 and the Los Angeles Lakers in 2007 the Spurs won the NBA Finals that year nbsp Texan baseball fans attending a game between the state s two MLB teams Texas Rangers and Houston Astros at Globe Life Field in Arlington Within the Big Four professional leagues Texas has two NFL teams the Dallas Cowboys and the Houston Texans two MLB teams the Houston Astros and the Texas Rangers 329 330 three NBA teams the San Antonio Spurs the Houston Rockets and the Dallas Mavericks and one NHL team the Dallas Stars The Dallas Fort Worth metroplex is one of only thirteen American metropolitan areas that host sports teams from all the Big Four professional leagues Outside of the Big Four Texas also has a WNBA team the Dallas Wings three Major League Soccer teams Austin FC Houston Dynamo FC and FC Dallas and one NWSL team the Houston Dash citation needed Collegiate athletics have deep significance in Texas culture especially football The state has twelve Division I FBS schools the most in the nation Four of the state s schools claim at least one national championship in football the Texas Longhorns the Texas A amp M Aggies the TCU Horned Frogs and the SMU Mustangs 331 332 333 334 According to a survey of Division I A coaches the rivalry between the University of Oklahoma and the University of Texas at Austin the Red River Shootout ranks the third best in the nation 335 The TCU Horned Frogs and SMU Mustangs also share a rivalry and compete annually in the Battle for the Iron Skillet A fierce rivalry the Lone Star Showdown also exists between the state s two largest universities Texas A amp M University and the University of Texas at Austin The athletics portion of the Lone Star Showdown rivalry has been put on hold after the Texas A amp M Aggies joined the Southeastern Conference 336 The University Interscholastic League UIL organizes most primary and secondary school competitions Events organized by UIL include contests in athletics the most popular being high school football as well as artistic and academic subjects 337 nbsp Rodeo the state sport in Austin Texans also enjoy rodeo The world s first rodeo was hosted in Pecos Texas 338 The annual Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo is the largest rodeo in the world The Southwestern Exposition and Livestock Show in Fort Worth is the oldest continuously running rodeo incorporating many of the state s most historic traditions into its annual events Dallas hosts the State Fair of Texas each year at Fair Park 339 Texas Motor Speedway hosts annual NASCAR Cup Series and IndyCar Series auto races since 1997 Since 2012 Austin s Circuit of the Americas plays host to a round of the Formula 1 World Championship 340 EducationMain article Education in Texas The second president of the Republic of Texas Mirabeau B Lamar is the Father of Texas Education During his term the state set aside three leagues in each county for public schools An additional 50 leagues of land set aside for the support of two universities would later become the basis of the state s Permanent University Fund 341 Lamar s actions set the foundation for a Texas wide public school system 342 Between 2006 and 2007 Texas spent 7 275 per pupil ranking it below the national average of 9 389 The pupil teacher ratio was 14 9 below the national average of 15 3 Texas paid instructors 41 744 below the national average of 46 593 The Texas Education Agency TEA administers the state s public school systems Texas has over 1 000 school districts all districts except the Stafford Municipal School District are independent from municipal government and many cross city boundaries 343 School districts have the power to tax their residents and to assert eminent domain over privately owned property Due to court mandated equitable school financing the state has a tax redistribution system called the Robin Hood plan which transfers property tax revenue from wealthy school districts to poor ones 344 The TEA has no authority over private or homeschooling activities 345 Students in Texas take the State of Texas Assessments of Academic Readiness STAAR in primary and secondary school STAAR assess students attainment of reading writing mathematics science and social studies skills required under Texas education standards and the No Child Left Behind Act The test replaced the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills TAKS test in the 2011 2012 school year 346 Generally prohibited in the Western world school corporal punishment is not unusual in the more conservative rural areas of the state 347 348 349 with 28 569 public school students paddled at least one time g according to government data for the 2011 2012 school year 350 The rate of school corporal punishment in Texas is surpassed only by Mississippi Alabama and Arkansas 350 Higher education Further information List of colleges and universities in Texas nbsp The University of Texas at Austin nbsp University of Houston nbsp Texas A amp M University nbsp Rice University The state s two most widely recognized flagship universities are The University of Texas at Austin and Texas A amp M University ranked as the 21st 351 and 41st 352 best universities in the nation according to 2020 s latest Center for World University Rankings report respectively Some observers 353 also include the University of Houston and Texas Tech University as tier one flagships alongside UT Austin and A amp M 354 355 The Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board ranks the state s public universities into three distinct tiers 356 National Research Universities Tier 1 357 358 The University of Texas at Austin Texas A amp M University Texas Tech University University of Houston The University of Texas at Arlington The University of Texas at Dallas The University of North Texas The University of Texas at El Paso Emerging Research Universities Tier 2 356 The University of Texas at San Antonio Texas State University Comprehensive Universities Tier 3 356 All other public universities 25 in total Texas s alternative affirmative action plan Texas House Bill 588 guarantees Texas students who graduated in the top 10 percent of their high school class automatic admission to state funded universities This does not apply to The University of Texas at Austin which automatically admits Texas students who graduated in the top 6 percent of their high school class 359 The bill encourages demographic diversity while attempting to avoid problems stemming from the Hopwood v Texas 1996 case 360 Thirty six public universities exist in Texas of which 32 belong to one of the six state university systems 361 362 Discovery of minerals on Permanent University Fund land particularly oil has helped fund the rapid growth of the state s two largest university systems the University of Texas System and the Texas A amp M System The four other university systems the University of Houston System the University of North Texas System the Texas State System and the Texas Tech System are not funded by the Permanent University Fund 363 The Carnegie Foundation classifies four of Texas s universities as Tier One research institutions The University of Texas at Austin the Texas A amp M University the University of Houston and Texas Tech University The University of Texas at Austin and Texas A amp M University are the flagship universities of the University of Texas System and Texas A amp M University System respectively Both were established by the Texas Constitution and hold stakes in the Permanent University Fund 363 The state has sought to expand the number of flagship universities by elevating some of its seven institutions designated as emerging research universities The two expected to emerge first are the University of Houston and Texas Tech University likely in that order according to discussions on the House floor of the 82nd Texas Legislature 364 The state is home to various private institutions of higher learning ranging from liberal arts colleges to a nationally recognized top tier research university Rice University in Houston is one of the leading teaching and research universities of the United States and is ranked the nation s 17th best overall university by U S News amp World Report 365 Trinity University a private primarily undergraduate liberal arts university in San Antonio has ranked first among universities granting primarily bachelor s and select master s degrees in the Western United States for 20 consecutive years by U S News 366 Private universities include Abilene Christian University Austin College Baylor University University of Mary Hardin Baylor and Southwestern University 367 368 369 Universities in Texas host three presidential libraries George Bush Presidential Library at Texas A amp M University 370 the Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum at The University of Texas at Austin 371 372 and the George W Bush Presidential Library at Southern Methodist University 373 HealthcareMain article Healthcare in Texas See also List of hospitals in Texas Notwithstanding the concentration of elite medical centers in the state The Commonwealth Fund ranks the Texas healthcare system the third worst in the nation 374 Texas ranks close to last in access to healthcare quality of care avoidable hospital spending and equity 374 In May 2006 Texas initiated the program code red in response to the report the state had 25 1 percent of the population without health insurance the largest proportion in the nation 375 The Trust for America s Health ranked Texas 15th highest in adult obesity 27 2 percent of the state s population is obese 376 The 2008 Men s Health obesity survey ranked four Texas cities among the top 25 fattest cities in America Houston ranked 6th Dallas 7th El Paso 8th and Arlington 14th 377 Texas had only one city Austin ranked 21st in the top 25 fittest cities in America 377 The state is ranked forty second in the percentage of residents who engage in regular exercise according to a 2007 study 378 Texas has the highest maternal mortality rate in the developed world and the rate by which Texas women died from pregnancy related complications doubled from 2010 to 2014 to 23 8 per 100 000 a rate unmatched in any other U S state or economically developed country 379 In May 2021 the state legislature passed the Texas Heartbeat Act which banned abortion from as early as six weeks of pregnancy except to save the life of the mother The Act allows private citizens to sue abortion providers and anyone else who assists in an abortion except for the woman on whom the abortion is performed 380 381 On August 25 2022 another law took effect that made committing abortion at any stage of pregnancy a felony punishable by life in prison 382 Medical research nbsp The Texas Medical Center in Houston Texas has many elite research medical centers The state has 15 medical schools 383 four dental schools 384 and two optometry schools 385 Texas has two Biosafety Level 4 BSL 4 laboratories one at The University of Texas Medical Branch UTMB in Galveston 386 and the other at the Southwest Foundation for Biomedical Research in San Antonio the first privately owned BSL 4 lab in the United States 387 The Texas Medical Center in Houston holds the world s largest concentration of research and healthcare institutions with over 50 member institutions 388 Texas Medical Center performs the most heart transplants in the world 389 The University of Texas M D Anderson Cancer Center in Houston is a highly regarded academic institution that centers around cancer patient care research education and prevention 390 San Antonio s South Texas Medical Center facilities rank sixth in clinical medicine research impact in the United States 391 The University of Texas Health Science Center is another highly ranked research and educational institution in San Antonio 392 393 Both the American Heart Association and the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center call Dallas home 394 The institution s medical school employs the most medical school Nobel laureates in the world 394 395 TransportationMain article Transportation in Texas nbsp The High Five Interchange in Dallas The state s large size and rough terrain have historically complicated transportation Texas has compensated by building the nation s largest highway and railway systems The regulatory authority the Texas Department of Transportation TxDOT maintains the state s highway system regulates aviation 396 and public transportation systems 397 The state is an important transportation hub From the Dallas Fort Worth area trucks can reach 93 percent of the nation s population within 48 hours and 37 percent within 24 hours 398 Texas has 33 foreign trade zones FTZ the most in the nation 399 In 2004 a combined total of 298 billion of goods passed through Texas FTZs 399 Highways Main article Texas state highways nbsp Welcome to Texas sign entering the state from Arkansas on Interstate 30 The first Texas freeway was the Gulf Freeway opened in 1948 in Houston 400 As of 2005 79 535 miles 127 999 km of public highway crisscrossed Texas up from 71 000 miles or 114 000 km in 1984 401 To fund recent growth in the state highways Texas has 17 toll roads with several additional tollways proposed 402 In Central Texas the southern section of the State Highway 130 toll road has a speed limit of 85 miles per hour 137 km h the highest in the nation 403 All federal and state highways in Texas are paved Airports See also List of airports in Texas nbsp Terminal D at Dallas Fort Worth International Airport nbsp Terminal E at George Bush Intercontinental Airport in HoustonTexas has 730 airports second most of any state in the nation Largest in Texas by size and passengers served Dallas Fort Worth International Airport DFW is the second largest by area in the United States and fourth in the world with 18 076 acres 73 15 km2 404 In traffic DFW airport is the busiest in the state the fourth busiest in the United States 405 and sixth worldwide 406 Southwest Airlines headquartered in Dallas has its operations at Dallas Love Field 407 American Airlines Group s American American Eagle the world s largest airline in total passengers miles transported and passenger fleet size 408 uses DFW as its largest and main hub Texas s second largest air facility is Houston s George Bush Intercontinental Airport IAH It serves as the largest hub for United Airlines the world s third largest airline by passenger miles flown 409 h IAH offers service to the most Mexican destinations of any U S airport 410 411 The next five largest airports in the state all serve more than three million passengers annually they include Austin Bergstrom International Airport William P Hobby Airport San Antonio International Airport Dallas Love Field and El Paso International Airport The smallest airport in the state to be designated an international airport is Del Rio International Airport Ports Main article List of ports in the United States nbsp Port of Houston along the Houston Ship Channel Around 1 150 seaports dot Texas s coast with over 1 000 miles 1 600 km of channels 412 Ports employ nearly one million people and handle an average of 317 million metric tons 413 Texas ports connect with the rest of the U S Atlantic seaboard with the Gulf section of the Intracoastal Waterway 412 The Port of Houston today is the busiest port in the United States in foreign tonnage second in overall tonnage and tenth worldwide in tonnage 414 The Houston Ship Channel spans 530 feet 160 m wide by 45 feet 14 m deep by 50 miles 80 km long 415 Railroads nbsp DART Light Rail in Dallas nbsp METRORail in Houston See also List of Texas railroadsPart of the state s tradition of cowboys is derived from the massive cattle drives which its ranchers organized in the nineteenth century to drive livestock to railroads and markets The first railroad to operate in Texas was the Buffalo Bayou Brazos and Colorado Railway opening in August 1853 416 The first railroad to enter Texas from the north completed in 1872 was the Missouri Kansas Texas Railroad 417 With increasing railroad access the ranchers did not have to take their livestock up to the Midwest and shipped beef out from Texas This caused a decline in the economies of the cow towns 418 Since 1911 Texas has led the nation in length of railroad miles within the state Texas railway length peaked in 1932 at 17 078 miles 27 484 km but declined to 14 006 miles 22 540 km by 2000 While the Railroad Commission of Texas originally regulated state railroads in 2005 the state reassigned these duties to TxDOT 419 In the Dallas Fort Worth area three public transit agencies provide rail service Dallas Area Rapid Transit DART Denton County Transportation Authority DCTA and Trinity Metro DART began operating the first light rail system in the Southwest United States in 1996 420 The Trinity Railway Express TRE commuter rail service which connects Fort Worth and Dallas is provided by Trinity Metro and DART 421 Trinity Metro also operates the TEXRail commuter rail line connecting downtown Fort Worth and Northeast Tarrant County to DFW Airport 422 The A train commuter rail line operated by DCTA acts as an extension of the DART Green line into Denton County 423 In the Austin area Capital Metropolitan Transportation Authority operates a commuter rail service known as Capital MetroRail to the northwestern suburbs The Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County Texas METRO operates light rail lines called METRORail in the Houston area 424 Amtrak provides Texas with limited intercity passenger rail service Three scheduled routes serve the state the daily Texas Eagle Chicago San Antonio the tri weekly Sunset Limited New Orleans Los Angeles with stops in Texas and the daily Heartland Flyer Fort Worth Oklahoma City Texas may get one of the nation s first high speed rail line Plans for a privately funded high speed rail line between Dallas and Houston have been planned by the Texas Central Railway company 425 Government and politicsThe current Texas Constitution was adopted in 1876 Like many states it explicitly provides for a separation of powers The state s Bill of Rights is much larger than its federal counterpart and has provisions unique to Texas 426 State government Main article Government of Texas Further information Law of Texas See also List of Texas state agencies nbsp The Texas State Capitol at night Texas has a plural executive branch system limiting the power of the governor which is a weak executive compared to some other states Except for the secretary of state voters elect executive officers independently candidates are directly answerable to the public not the governor 427 This election system has led to some executive branches split between parties and reduced the ability of the governor to carry out a program When Republican president George W Bush served as Texas s governor the state had a Democratic lieutenant governor Bob Bullock The executive branch positions consist of the governor lieutenant governor comptroller of public accounts land commissioner attorney general agriculture commissioner the three member Texas Railroad Commission the State Board of Education and the secretary of state 427 The bicameral Texas Legislature consists of the House of Representatives with 150 members and a Senate with 31 members The Speaker of the House leads the House and the lieutenant governor the Senate 428 The Legislature meets in regular session biennially for just over a hundred days but the governor can call for special sessions as often as desired notably the Legislature cannot call itself into session 429 The state s fiscal year begins September 1 430 The judiciary of Texas is among the most complex in the United States with many layers and overlapping jurisdictions Texas has two courts of last resort the Texas Supreme Court for civil cases and the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals Except for some municipal benches partisan elections select judges at all levels of the judiciary the governor fills vacancies by appointment 431 Texas is notable for its use of capital punishment having led the country in executions since capital punishment was reinstated in the Gregg v Georgia case 432 The Texas Ranger Division of the Texas Department of Public Safety is a law enforcement agency with statewide jurisdiction Over the years the Texas Rangers have investigated crimes ranging from murder to political corruption They have acted as riot police and as detectives protected the Texas governor tracked down fugitives and functioned as a paramilitary force The Texas Rangers were unofficially created by Stephen F Austin in 1823 and formally constituted in 1835 The Rangers were integral to several important events of Texas history and some of the best known criminal cases in the history of the Old West 433 The Texas constitution defines the responsibilities of county governments which serve as agents of the state Commissioners court and court judges are elected to serve as the administrative arm Most cities in the state those over 5 000 in population have home rule governments The vast majority of these have charters for council manager forms of government by which voters elect council members who hire a professional city manager as an operating officer 434 Politics Main article Politics of Texas Further information Political party strength in Texas See also Republican Party of Texas and Texas Democratic Party nbsp Lyndon B Johnson of Texas 36th president of the United States nbsp George W Bush of Texas 43rd president of the United States The Democratic Party dominated Texas politics from the turn of the 20th century imposing racial segregation and white supremacy It held power until after passage in the mid 1960s of national civil rights legislation enforcing constitutional rights of all citizens 435 436 The state s conservative White voters began to support Republican presidential candidates by the mid 20th century After this period they supported Republicans for local and state offices as well and most Whites became Republican Party members 437 The party also attracted some minorities but many have continued to vote for Democratic candidates The shift to the Republican Party is much attributed to the fact the Democratic Party became increasingly liberal during the 20th century and thus increasingly out of touch with the average Texas voter 438 As Texas was always a conservative state voters switched to the Republicans which now more closely reflected their beliefs 438 439 Commentators have also attributed the shift to Republican political consultant Karl Rove who managed numerous political campaigns in Texas in the 1980s and 1990s 439 Other stated reasons included court ordered redistricting and the demographic shift in relation to the Sun Belt that favored the Republican Party and conservatism 129 The 2003 Texas redistricting of Congressional districts led by Republican Tom DeLay was called by The New York Times an extreme case of partisan gerrymandering 440 A group of Democratic legislators the Texas Eleven fled the state in a quorum busting effort to prevent the legislature from acting but was unsuccessful 441 The state had already redistricted following the 2000 census Despite these efforts the legislature passed a map heavily in favor of Republicans based on 2000 data and ignoring the estimated nearly one million new residents in the state since then Career attorneys and analysts at the Department of Justice objected to the plan as diluting the votes of African American and Hispanic voters but political appointees overrode them and approved it 440 Legal challenges to the redistricting reached the national Supreme Court in the case League of United Latin American Citizens v Perry 2006 but the court ruled in favor of the state and Republicans 442 In the 2014 Texas elections the Tea Party movement made large gains with numerous Tea Party favorites being elected into office including Dan Patrick as lieutenant governor 443 444 Ken Paxton as attorney general 443 445 in addition to numerous other candidates 445 including conservative Republican Greg Abbott as governor 446 Texas voters lean toward fiscal conservatism while enjoying the benefits of huge federal investment in the state in military and other facilities achieved by the power of the Solid South in the 20th century They also tend to have socially conservative values 263 447 Since 1980 most Texas voters have supported Republican presidential candidates Austin Dallas Houston San Antonio and El Paso consistently lean Democratic in both local and statewide elections 131 Residents of counties along the Rio Grande closer to the Mexico United States border where there are many Latino residents generally vote for Democratic Party candidates while most other rural and suburban areas of Texas have shifted to voting for Republican Party candidates 448 449 As of the midterm elections of 2022 a large majority of the members of Texas s U S House delegation are Republican along with both U S Senators In the 118th United States Congress of the 38 Congressional districts in Texas 25 are held by Republicans and 13 by Democrats Texas s Senators are John Cornyn and Ted Cruz Since 1994 Texans have not elected a Democrat to a statewide office The state s Democratic voters are made up primarily by liberal and minority groups in Austin Beaumont Dallas El Paso Houston and San Antonio as well as minority voters in East and South Texas 450 451 452 According to a study by the Cato Institute a libertarian think tank Texas ranks last in personal freedom among the states by factors including incarceration rates cannabis laws civil asset forfeiture policies educational freedom gambling laws marriage freedom and travel freedom 453 454 Criminal law Main article Crime in Texas See also List of law enforcement agencies in Texas Texas has a reputation of very harsh criminal punishment for criminal offenses It is one of the 32 states that practice capital punishment and since the US Supreme Court allowed capital punishment to resume in 1976 40 of all U S executions have taken place in Texas 455 As of 2018 Texas had the 8th highest incarceration rate in the U S 456 Texas also has strong right of self defense and self defense laws allowing citizens to use lethal force to defend themselves their families or their property 457 See also nbsp Texas portal nbsp United States portal Outline of Texas Index of Texas related articles List of people from Texas USS Texas 4 shipsNotes Elevation adjusted to North American Vertical Datum of 1988 In Peninsular Spanish the spelling variant Tejas is also used alongside Texas According to the Diccionario panhispanico de dudas by the Royal Spanish Academy and the Association of Academies of the Spanish Language the spelling version with j aligns with modern day orthographic conventions and is correct however the spelling with x is recommended as it is the one that is used in Mexican Spanish 9 See Spanish orthography History Cabeza de Vaca wrote They went about with a firebrand setting fire to the plains and timber so as to drive off the mosquitos and also to get lizards and similar things which they eat to come out of the soil In the same manner they kill deer encircling them with fires and they do it also to deprive the animals of pasture compelling them to go for food where the Indians want 45 Vazquez de Coronado wrote Two kinds of people travel around these plains with the cows one is called Querechos and the others Teyas they are very well built and painted and are enemies of each other They have no other settlement or location than comes from traveling around with the cows They kill all of these they wish and tan the hides with which they clothe themselves and make their tents and they eat the flesh sometimes even raw and they also even drink the blood when thirsty The tents they make are like field tents and they set them up over poles they have made for this purpose which come together and are tied at the top and when they go from one place to another they carry them on some dogs they have of which they have many and they load them with the tents and poles and other things for the country is so level as I said that they can make use of these because they carry the poles dragging along on the ground The sun is what they worship most 47 Persons of Hispanic or Latino origin are not distinguished between total and partial ancestry Second to California This figure refers to only the number of students paddled regardless of whether a student was spanked multiple times in a year and does not refer to the number of instances of corporal punishment which would be substantially higher Based on the industry standard measure of revenue passenger kilometers miles flown References a b c d e Plocheck Robert November 20 2017 Facts Texas Almanac 2010 2011 ed Archived from the original on February 28 2011 a b Environment Texas Almanac 2008 Retrieved June 28 2020 El Capitan NGS Data Sheet National Geodetic Survey National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration United States Department of Commerce Retrieved October 20 2011 a b Elevations and Distances in the United States United States Geological Survey 2001 Archived from the original on July 22 2012 Retrieved October 24 2011 a b Historical Population Change Data 1910 2020 Census gov United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on April 29 2021 Retrieved May 1 2021 Texas U S Census Bureau 2021 Retrieved May 17 2023 Languages Spoken at Home United States Census Bureau Retrieved June 5 2020 Wells John C 1982 Accents of English Vol 3 Beyond the British Isles pp i xx 467 674 Cambridge University Press p 551 doi 10 1017 CBO9780511611766 ISBN 0 52128541 0 Texas in Diccionario panhispanico de dudas by Royal Spanish Academy and Association of Academies of the Spanish Language Madrid Santillana 2005 ISBN 978 8 429 40623 8 Carlson Kara More than 30 million people now call Texas home as state leads US population gains Austin American Statesman December 23 2022 QuickFacts Population Estimates U S Census Bureau July 1 2023 Press Release Growth in U S Population Shows Early Indication of Recovery Amid COVID 19 Pandemic U S Census Bureau December 22 2022 The State of Texas Netstate com Retrieved April 11 2010 Twenty ninth Congress Resolutions PDF legisworks org 1845 Archived from the original PDF on May 25 2017 Retrieved May 16 2017 Ramos Mary G Reavis Dick J 2004 Texas Fodor s Travel Publications p 125 ISBN 978 0 676 90502 1 a b Texas leads nation as home to the most Fortune 500 companies FOX 7 Austin May 24 2022 Retrieved October 31 2022 a b Miranda Cynthia May 25 2022 Texas houses the most Fortune 500 companies in the nation KETK com Retrieved October 31 2022 Sansom Andrew 2008 Water in Texas An Introduction University of Texas Press p 25 ISBN 978 0 292 71809 8 Jose Arlegui Chronica de la provincia de N S P S Francisco de Zacatecas Front Cover 1737 p 53 Texas Online Etymology Dictionary Douglas Harper Retrieved February 25 2007 Fry Phillip L March 7 2016 July 15 2010 Texas Origin of Name Handbook of Texas online ed Texas State Historical Association Davis Lucile 2003 The Caddo of Texas Rosen Publishing p 5 ISBN 9780823964352 a b Teja Jesus de la June 15 2010 New Philippines Handbook of Texas online ed Texas State Historical Association Oakah L Jones Los Paisanos Spanish Settlers on the Northern Frontier of New Spain University of Oklahoma Press 1996 p 277 citing a document dated November 5 1730 Joseph de Laporte El viagero universal o Noticia del mundo antiguo y nuevo vol 27 1799 p 114 Texas Grafia recomendada para el nombre de este estado norteamericano Su pronunciacion correcta es tejas no teksas Se recomienda escribir asimismo con x el gentilicio correspondiente texano Son tambien validas las grafias con j Tejas tejano de uso mayoritario en Espana Diccionario panhispanico de dudas Real Academia Espanola 2005 s v Texas a b Charles Dimitry American Geographical Nomenclature Appletons Journal 15 1876 758f Richardson et al 2021 p 9 a b c d Carter Cecile Elkins 1995 Caddo Indians where we come from University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 0 585 17049 5 OCLC 1253386080 The Caddo Nation University of Texas Press 1993 doi 10 7560 711501 ISBN 978 0 292 79978 3 Aten Lawrence E 1983 Indians of the upper Texas coast Academic Pr ISBN 0 12 065740 6 OCLC 254092448 Richardson et al 2021 p 10 Richardson et al 2021 p 12 Klos George June 15 2010 Indians Handbook of Texas online ed Texas State Historical Association Barr Juliana November 2009 Peace Came in the Form of a Woman Indians and Spaniards in the Texas Borderlands University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 1 4696 0470 1 OCLC 1148108904 Galan Francis X 2020 Los Adaes the first capital of Spanish Texas Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 978 1 62349 878 8 OCLC 1128731300 a b c Glover William B A History of the Caddo Indians Reprinted from The Louisiana Historical Quarterly Vol 18 No 4 October 1935 Swanton John R Indians of the Southeastern United States Washington United States Government Printing Office 1946 p 139 a b Richardson Rupert N Anderson Adrian Wintz Cary D Wallace Ernest 2005 Texas the Lone Star State 9th ed Prentice Hall pp 10 16 ISBN 978 0 1318 3550 4 Gwynne S C 2011 Empire of the Summer Moon Constable amp Robinson ISBN 978 1 84901 820 3 OCLC 968100096 Chipman 1992 p 243 Weber 1992 p 34 Chipman Donald E August 3 2017 June 12 2010 Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca Handbook of Texas online ed Texas State Historical Association Chipman Donald E January 23 2017 June 15 2010 Spanish Texas Handbook of Texas online ed Texas State Historical Association The Journey of Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca American Journeys Wisconsin Historical Society Archived from the original on October 5 2012 Davidson James West Lytle Mark H 2010 Chapter 1 After the Fact The Art of Historical Detection Vol 1 6th ed McGraw Hill p 7 ISBN 978 0 0733 8548 8 Davidson James West Lytle Mark H 2010 Chapter 1 After the Fact The Art of Historical Detection Vol 1 6th ed McGraw Hill p 7 ISBN 978 0 0733 8548 8 Winship George Parker ed 1904 The Journey of Coronado 1540 1542 A S Barnes amp Company pp 210 211 Winship George Parker ed 1904 The Journey of Coronado 1540 1542 A S Barnes amp Company pp 210 211 Hudson Charles M 2018 Knights of Spain warriors of the sun Hernando De Soto and the South s ancient chiefdoms University of Georgia Press ISBN 978 0 8203 5160 5 OCLC 981166517 Clayton Lawrence A Knight Vernon J Moore Edward C 1995 The De Soto chronicles the expedition of Hernando de Soto to North America in 1539 1543 University of Alabama Press ISBN 0 585 36805 8 OCLC 47010055 Weber 1992 p 149 Chipman 1992 p 83 Joutel Henri 1998 The La Salle expedition to Texas the journal of Henri Joutel 1684 1687 Texas State Historical Association ISBN 0 87611 165 7 OCLC 962854705 Chipman 1992 p 89 Weber 1992 p 155 Chipman 1992 pp 111 112 Weber 1992 p 160 Weber 1992 p 163 Bolton Herbert Eugene 1915 Texas in the Middle 18th Century University of California Press p facing p 382 Chipman 1992 p 205 Weber 1992 p 193 Weber 1992 p 189 Weddle 1995 p 164 Chipman 1992 p 200 Weddle 1995 p 163 Chipman 1992 p 202 Weber 1992 pp 291 299 Davis 2006 p 46 Most of the Filipinos in Texas are comparatively recent arrivals Strong economic and political ties with the Spanish empire from the 16th to the 19th centuries brought few known individuals to the Americas but United States control in the early 20th century was responsible for Filipino settlement in every metropolitan area in the state Considering the Spanish trade with the Philippines the Manila galleons operated between Acapulco and Manila from 1565 to 1815 travelers from the islands may have been in Mexico after the mid 16th century PDF Texascultures housing utexas edu Retrieved April 17 2021 Hinton Matthew October 23 2019 From Manila to the Marigny How Philippine pioneers left a mark at the end of world in New Orleans Very Local New Orleans Weber 1992 p 300 Manchaca 2001 p 162 Manchaca 2001 p 164 Manchaca 2001 p 198 Edmondson 2000 p 75 Manchaca 2001 p 172 201 Edmondson 2000 p 78 Manchaca 2001 p 200 Davis 2006 p 77 Davis 2006 p 85 Davis 2006 pp 86 89 Davis 2006 p 92 Steen Ralph W June 12 2010 Convention of 1833 Handbook of Texas online ed Texas State Historical Association Huson Hobart 1974 Captain Phillip Dimmitt s Commandancy of Goliad 1835 1836 An Episode of the Mexican Federalist War in Texas Usually Referred to as the Texian Revolution Von Boeckmann Jones Co p 4 Hardin 1994 p 12 Winders 2004 p 72 Winders 2004 pp 90 92Hardin 1994 p 109 Hardin 1994 p 102 Roell Craig H July 12 2016 June 12 2010 Coleto Battle of Handbook of Texas online ed Texas State Historical Association a b Todish Todish amp Spring 1998 p 68 Roberts and Olson 2001 p 144 Todish Todish amp Spring 1998 p 69 Todish Todish amp Spring 1998 p 70 Tarlton Law Library Constitution of the Republic of Texas 1836 General Provisions tarlton law utexas edu Retrieved December 28 2020 No free person of African descent either in whole or in part shall be permitted to reside permanently in the Republic without the consent of Congress and the importation or admission of Africans or negroes into this Republic excepting from the United States of America is forever prohibited and declared to be piracy The Archives War Texas Treasures The Republic The Texas State Library and Archives Commission November 2 2005 Archived from the original on January 7 2009 Retrieved January 3 2009 a b Andrew J Torget 2015 Seeds of Empire Cotton Slavery and the Transformation of the Texas Borderlands 1800 1850 The University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 1469624242 This had also been their policy toward neighboring tribes before the arrival of the settlers Gwinnett S C 2010 Empire of the Summer Moon Quanah Parker and the Rise and Fall of the Comanches the Most Powerful Indian Tribe in American History Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 1 4165 9106 1 Calvert Robert A Leon Arnoldo De Cantrell Gregg 2002 The History of Texas Harlan Davidson ISBN 978 0 88295 966 5 Buescher John Senatorial Division Teachinghistory org accessed August 21 2011 Archived July 11 2011 at the Wayback Machine a b Neu C T December 2 2015 June 9 2010 Annexation Handbook of Texas online ed Texas State Historical Association a b Bauer K Jack March 28 2016 June 15 2010 Mexican War Handbook of Texas online ed Texas State Historical Association a b c Griffin Roger A March 21 2016 June 12 2010 Compromise of 1850 Handbook of Texas online ed Texas State Historical Association Britton Karen Gerhardt Elliott Fred C Miller E A June 12 2010 Cotton Culture Handbook of Texas online ed Texas State Historical Association Schulte Susan December 9 2010 Visualizing Slavery A Map of Slavery Interactive Feature The New York Times a b Dulaney W Marvin July 25 2016 June 9 2010 African Americans Handbook of Texas online ed Texas State Historical Association Buenger Walter L March 8 2011 June 15 2010 Secession Convention Handbook of Texas online ed Texas State Historical Association Kreneck Thomas H March 30 2017 June 15 2010 Houston Samuel Handbook of Texas online ed Texas State Historical Association a b c Wooster Ralph A January 30 2017 June 12 2010 Civil War Handbook of Texas online ed Texas State Historical Association Federal Writers Project December 1997 Texas A Guide to the Lone Star State Brownsville Native American Books Distributor p 206 ISBN 978 0 403 02192 5 Hunt Jeffrey William April 20 2021 1952 Palmito Ranch Battle of Handbook of Texas online ed Texas State Historical Association Archived from the original on April 10 2023 Marvel William June 12 2006 Battle of Palmetto Ranch American Civil War s Final Battle HistoryNet Archived from the original on January 22 2021 Retrieved December 28 2020 Historical Barriers to Voting Texas Politics University of Texas Archived from the original on April 2 2008 Retrieved October 13 2008 Acosta Teresa Palomo October 6 2017 June 15 2010 Juneteenth Handbook of Texas online ed Texas State Historical Association Johnson Andrew August 20 1866 Proclamation Declaring the Insurrection at an End American Historical Documents President of the United States Retrieved April 28 2008 Moneyhon Carl H January 30 2017 June 15 2010 Restoration Handbook of Texas online ed Texas State Historical Association Pettit Gwen Between the Creeks PDF texashistory unt edu Retrieved December 28 2020 The Southern states especially the hills of Tennessee and Alabama were impoverished war tensions still split neighborhoods Soon empty houses had crude signs that stated that the former inhabitants had Gone to Texas Church records also had the phrase Gone to Texas by numerous names on their roles So many families left Maury County Tenn to settle in eastern Collin County just across East Fork that several communities such as Culleoka have names directly from south Maury County That group joined relatives that had come here in the 1850s Most new immigrants had some link to Collin County which brought them here They stayed with relatives and friends until they could find a place to settle Landowners recruited farmers from the old states by persuading relatives and former neighbors to come However numerous families in the pioneer tradition loaded their children and belongings in a wagon and headed toward the unknown west Clarksville Bonham and Dallas newspapers reported how many wagons passed through each day and how many were camped on the jockey yards waiting to find a place to settle Some of these had sold farms and had money to buy land but most of these immigrants became tenant farmers and worked on shares Maxwell Robert S February 15 2012 1976 Lumber Industry Handbook of Texas TSHA Retrieved December 28 2020 But relatively the industry s status is far below its dominant position at the beginning of the twentieth century Then it was the state s largest manufacturing enterprise first among Texas industries in generating income and the largest employer of labor in the Lone Star State a b Blake Eric S Rappaport Edward N Landsea Christopher W April 15 2007 The Deadliest Costliest and Most Intense United States Tropical Cyclones From 1851 to 2006 PDF National Weather Service National Hurricane Center Archived PDF from the original on December 17 2023 Wooster Robert Sanders Christine Moor April 2 2019 June 15 2010 Spindletop Oilfield Handbook of Texas online ed Texas State Historical Association Olien Roger M August 19 2016 June 15 2010 Oil and Gas Industry Handbook of Texas online ed Texas State Historical Association Nixon v Condon Disfranchisement of the Negro in Texas The Yale Law Journal 41 8 1212 1221 June 1932 doi 10 2307 791091 JSTOR 791091 Texas Politics Historical Barriers to Voting University of Texas at Austin 2006 Archived from the original on April 2 2008 Alwyn Barr June 15 2010 Socialist Party Handbook of Texas online ed Texas State Historical Association World War I and the Suppression of Dissent Wendy McElroy The Independent Institute Retrieved December 28 2020 War against war Americans for peace in World War I National Constitution Center National Constitution Center constitutioncenter org Retrieved December 28 2020 Morris Hillquit sought to keep alive the ties of his Socialist Party to its comrades abroad Senator Robert La Follette filled many a speech with praise for progressives in other countries who shared his hatred for militarism Henry Ford chartered an ocean liner to transport himself and dozens of other activists across the Atlantic where they lobbied neutral governments to embrace a peace plan they would press on the warring powers These Americans like most critics of the war elsewhere in the world wanted to create a new global order based on cooperative relationships between nation states and their gradual disarmament Militarism they argued isolated peoples behind walls of mutual fear and loathing Until April 1917 this formidable coalition of idealists or realists did much to keep the nation at peace They may even have had a majority of Americans on their side until just weeks before Congress at Wilson s behest voted to declare war To prevent that from happening peace activists pressed for a national referendum on the question confident that the people would recoil from fighting and paying the bills in order to help one group of European powers conquer another Jillson Cal 2011 Texas Politics Governing the Lone Star State Taylor amp Francis p 11 ISBN 978 0 203 82941 7 Lee James Ward Barnes Carolyn N Bowman Kent Adam 1991 1941 Texas Goes to War University of North Texas Press ISBN 978 0 929398 29 7 Fairchild Louis 2012 They Called It the War Effort Oral Histories from World War II Orange Texas second ed Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 978 0 87611 259 5 Peck Merton J Scherer Frederic M 1962 The weapons acquisition process an economic analysis Division of Research Graduate School of Business Administration Harvard University p 111 Blanton Carlos Kevin 2005 The Campus and the Capitol John B Connally and the Struggle over Texas Higher Education Policy 1950 1970 Southwestern Historical Quarterly 108 4 468 497 ISSN 0038 478X a b c d e f g Calvert Robert A January 30 2017 June 15 2010 Texas Since World War II Handbook of Texas online ed Texas State Historical Association Tamir Christine March 25 2021 The Growing Diversity of Black America Pew Research Center s Social amp Demographic Trends Project a b Red State Blue Cities City Journal September 12 2016 Retrieved October 9 2020 Chart of the Week The most liberal and conservative big cities Pew Research Center Retrieved October 9 2020 Meet the Next Texans a population boom that will change our politics Dallas News February 22 2018 Retrieved October 9 2020 Tan Anjelica January 26 2020 Why Republicans may lose Texas The Hill Retrieved October 20 2020 Fechter Joshua December 28 2018 Texas leads in job imports but figures show a mixed bag ExpressNews com Retrieved December 29 2020 Hethcock Bill December 10 2020 Here are the California companies that relocated to Dallas Fort Worth in 2020 Dallas Business Journal Retrieved December 29 2020 Calvey Mark October 11 2018 North Texas among the regions benefitting from Bay Area 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