Showing posts with label Bonnie and Clyde. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bonnie and Clyde. Show all posts

Saturday, March 12, 2022

Ma Ferguson: The First Female Governor of Texas by Bea Tifton

Miriam Amanda "Ma" Ferguson was the first woman governor of Texas.  She was born in Bell County in Texas June 13, 1875. She attended Salado College and the Baylor Female College at a time when few colleges in the South would allow women to be students.  Miriam married James Ferguson in 1899 on New Year's Eve.   James Ferguson was a lawyer and a banker in Belton, Texas. The devoted couple had two daughters. 

Miriam's husband served as governor of Texas  from 1915 to 1917.  He was investigated and impeached during his second term for misappropriation of funds and embezzlement and prohibited from holding any state office in Texas.  

In 1924, Miriam ran for governor as a puppet candidate for her husband, whom she openly said she would consult for advice. At campaign rallies, Miriam would make an introductory speech and her husband would then take the platform to speak. One of the campaign slogans was "Me for Ma, and I Ain't Got a Durned Thing Against Pa." Another popular slogan was "Getting Two Governors for the Price of One." She won the election and became the first female governor of Texas and the second female governor in the United States, along with  Wyoming's Nellie Ross.



Ma was defeated by Dan Moody, the man who had investigated her husband while Pa was in office, in the 1926 gubernatorial election.  Ma ran and won a second term in 1932.  The Texas Rangers had endorsed Ma's opponent in the 1932 election. Soon after she was elected Ma discharged all Texas Rangers, making Texas a safe hideout for Depression era gangsters such as Bonnie and Clyde and Pretty Boy Floyd.  New Texas Rangers were quickly appointed , but they were unqualified and ineffective toward stopping the rising crime rate. 

Ma's platform was opposing the Ku Klux Klan and Prohibition.  Her slogan during the 1924 Democratic Primary against Klan- backed Felix Robertson was, "Make a Choice: The Bonnet or the Hood." After she was elected, Ma passed the "Anti Mask" law, aimed directly at the Klan. She pardoned almost 4,000 people during her combined terms, many of whom were people who broke prohibition laws. Rumors abounded that the pardons were the result of payments made to Pa Ferguson. Investigations were made as the rumors persisted, but no one was ever able to prove the allegations.  As a result, voters passed an amendment in 1936 that pardons would be made not by the governor, but by the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles. 


Ma ran for governor again in 1940 but was defeated. She retired from politics. Pa died as the result of a stroke in 1944. Ma died from congestive heart failure in 1961 at age 86. She is buried the Texas State Cemetery in Austin. 


Ma is credited with the unfortunate quote that "English was good enough for Jesus Christ and it's good enough for the children of Texas." Historians agree that the quote is apocryphal and that Ma did not say it. Despite the shadows of suspected corruption during her terms, Ma Ferguson paved the way for future women in politics and made a positive contribution to Texas. 



Thursday, July 4, 2013

Politics, "Ma" Ferguson, and the Texas Rangers





Most of us from Texas have read about the origination of the Texas Rangers and the rough years they had with lack of state funding and low pay. But, it wasn’t until I was researching for my latest time travel, Birdie’s Nest, that I learned about the political problems the Rangers faced.

At the beginning of the 20th century, lawyers became a major threat to the Rangers. They challenged the legality of Ranger arrests by quoting the 1874 law that allowed only supervisors to make arrests of which there were only four in the state. Law on the Frontier faded and the Frontier Battalion ceased to exist when a new law went to affect. The new Ranger Force dropped to four companies of 20 men each.

In 1905, the Rangers still had their Wild West era reputation, but they were gradually evolving into detectives and solved cases with modern crime fighting techniques. They still dealt with trouble along the border and after Spindle Top, kept peace in oil Boom Towns.

From 1920-1933 the Rangers worked with Federal Agents to stop smuggling of alcohol across the border, destroy distilleries, shut down speakeasies and gambling parlors.

In 1927 Miriam “Ma” Ferguson, Democratic candidate, was elected the first woman Governor of Texas. Her husband, James Ferguson, served as Governor from 1915 to 1917 but during his second term he was impeached, convicted and removed from office to never hold office in Texas again.

His wife decided to run in his place promising to follow the advise of her husband. “A common campaign slogan was, ‘Me for Ma, and I Ain’t Got a Durned Thing Against Pa.’” During her first term, Ma averaged over 100 pardons a month. There were accusations of bribes and kickbacks, but attempts to impeach failed.

“Ma’s” second term was less controversial but rumors abounded that state highway contracts went to those companies that advertised in the Fergusons’ newspaper. A House committee found no wrongdoing. Ma was instrumental in establishing the University of Houston as a four-year institution. Though both she and her husband were teetotalers; she aligned herself with the “wets” in the war on prohibition. She took a firm stand against the Ku Klux Klan and pushed for sales tax and corporate income tax.

During her two terms, she granted almost four thousand pardons, many were those convicted of violating prohibition laws. Rumors circulated that pardons were available in exchange for cash payments to the governor’s husband. In 1936 the Texas Board of Paroles was invented to take over the power.

When “Ma” was re-elected, in protest over political corruption, 40 Rangers quit the force; the remaining Rangers were fired. Political appointments replaced them. The Texas Highway Patrol was established in 1929 to enforce traffic laws. In 1934, after an investigation of corruption, a panel recommended the formation of the Texas Department of Public Safety to be headed by an Independent Public Safety Commission. The newly elected Governor Allred revoked the commission of all Rangers appointed by the Ferguson administration.

In 1935, the Texas Highway Patrol and the Texas Rangers merge to form the Department of Public Safety begins operation. Tom Hickman is commissioned Senior Ranger. He later serves as a member of the Public Safety Commission. By the late 1930s, the DPS has a state-of-the art crime lab at their headquarters at Camp Mabry in Austin. The hiring of Rangers became less political and for the first time, Rangers had training furnished by the state of Texas.














Former Rangers Frank Hamer and Manny Gault are commissioned to end the crime spree of outlaws Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker. To the left is Clyde and Bonnie. Pictured is the Posse of Six, the officers who ended the life of the two outlaws. Manny Gault is standing on the right and Frank Hamer is kneeling on the left. The duo, who had killed 14 law-enforcement officers, were shown no mercy when ambushed by the six officers. 

In 1939, despite the neutrality of the US, Captain Frank Hamer and 49 retired Rangers offered their services to the King of England to protect their shores against Nazi invasion. The King thanked them for their offer. The US State Department was not amused.

During WWII, US Army Intelligence Division Officers trained with the Texas Rangers in Austin at the DPS Headquarters.

References:

Texas Ranger History: Timeline - Order Out of Chaos (See The Official Ranger Hall of Fame and Museum in Waco, Texas Website.)

www.texasalmanac.com/topics/history/texas-rangers-horses-helicopters 

In my novel, Birdie' Nest, my heroine is a Texas Ranger, proud of the Texas Star she was awarded when inducted. When she wakes up in 1890, one the hardest adaptations she has to make is giving up the job she so dearly loved. No one believes she is a Texas Ranger or that she can handle herself like one of the rough crew of the day.

Here is a blurb:


Texas Ranger, Birdie Braxton boards the Brazos Belle to attend a costume party, gets tossed into the
Brazos and when she's pulled from the river she's told the year is 1890. A fact she can’t accept … until she looks across the river to see Birdie’s Nest, her ancestral home, no longer exists.

Tad Lockhart is a content man—a prosperous rancher with a ladylove in Waco. He's not interested in marriage and family, yet … until he pulls an unconscious woman from the Brazos who insists she's a Texas Ranger from the year 2012.

As romance blooms between Tad and Birdie, she struggles to earn enough money to build Birdie’s Nest, and Tad strives to mold Birdie into a Victorian lady suitable to be his wife. Can Birdie give up dabbling in police work and other unladylike pursuits yet stay true to herself? When faced with an indiscretion from Tad's past, is Birdie's love strong enough to support her man and be the woman he needs?

Thank you for stopping by. 

Happy Reading and Writing!