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The
Founding
When the Republic of Texas was
but a few months old, a group of gentlemen met in the capitol at
Houston to organize The Philosophical Society of
Texas. Aware of the potential
greatness of the new Republic, these men were eager to provide for
the symmetrical progress of the nation and to disseminate accurate
information regarding the region. An account of the first meeting
was published in the Telegraph and Texas Register for January 13,
1838, and the original draft of the By-Laws, signed by the charter
members, is in the San Jacinto Museum of History.
The first meeting, on December 5, 1837,
was attended by Mirabeau B. Lamar, Ashbel Smith, Thos. J. Rusk,
Wm. H. Wharton, Joseph Rowe, Angus McNeill, A. C. Allen, G. W. Bonnell,
Joseph Baker, Patrick C. Jack, W. Fairfax Gray, Jno. A. Wharton,
D. S. Kaufman, Jas. Collinsworth, Anson Jones, Littleton Fowler,
A. C. Horton, J. W. Bunton, Edward T. Branch, Henry Smith, Hugh
McLeod, T. Jefferson Chambers, Sam Houston, and R. A. Irion.
The Memorial which was adopted
at this meeting indicates that the founders used the word "Philosophical"
in its general, not its restricted sense:
| We the
undersigned form ourselves into a society for the collection
and diffusion of knowledge subscribing fully to the opinion
of Lord Chancellor Bacon, that "knowledge is power";
we need not here dilate on its importance. The field of
our researches is as boundless in its extent and as various
in its character as the subjects of knowledge are numberless
and diversified. But our object more especially at the present
time is to concentrate the efforts of the enlightened and
patriotic citizens of Texas, of our distinguished military
commanders and travelers of our scholars and men of science,
of our learned members of the different Professions, in
the collection and diffusion of correct information regarding
the moral and social condition of our country; its finances,
statistics and political and military history; its climate,
soil and productions; the animals that roam over our broad
prairies or swim in our noble streams; the customs, language
and history of the aboriginal tribes that hunt or plunder
on our borders; the natural curiosities of the country;
our mines of untold wealth, and the thousand other topics
of interest which our new and rising republic unfolds to
the philosopher, the scholar, and the man of the world.
Texas having fought the battles of liberty, and triumphantly
achieved a separate political existence, now thrown upon
her internal resources for the performance of her institutions,
moral and political, calls upon all persons to use all their
efforts for the increase and diffusion of useful knowledge
and sound information; to take measures that will be rightly
appreciated abroad, and acquire promptly and fully sustain
among the the high standing to which she is destined among
the civilized nations of the world. She calls on her intelligent
and patriotic citizens to furnish to the rising generation
the means of instruction within our own borders, where our
children to whose charge after all the vestal flame of Texian
Liberty must be committed may be indoctrinated in sound
principles and imbibe with their education respect for their
country's laws, love of her soil, and veneration for her
institutions. We have endeavored to respond to this call
by the formation of this Society, with the hope that if
not to us, to our sons and successors it may be given to
make the star, the single star of the West, as resplendent
for all the acts that adorn civilized life as it is now
glorious in military renown. Texas has her captains let
her have her wise men. |
In considering the Society, one
is impressed by two things: first, by the fact that men who were
busily engaged in laying the foundations of a new government nevertheless
found the time to establish such an organization; and second, by
the varied backgrounds and unusual personal excellence of the founders.
The
Revival
During the period of preparation for the celebration
of the centennial of independence, a group of citizens of modern
Texas decided to revive and perpetuate the Society as a memorial
to the twenty-six founders. Many of its original functions have
been appropriated by other organizations, and it is not contemplated
that The Philosophical Society of Texas will overlap their activities
in any manner. Rather it is hoped that it will become what, by inference,
it originally was: a fellowship of persons who, in various fields
of endeavor, have contributed to the achievement of the original
aims of the Society.
On January 18, 1936, a charter for The Philosophical
Society of Texas as an educational, non-profit-sharing corporation
without capital stock, was obtained from the State of Texas by the
following persons:
George Waverley Briggs, Vice-President,
First National Bank, Dallas
James Quayle Dealey, Editor-in-chief of the Dallas News;
Professor Emeritus of Social and Political Science, Brown University
Herbert Pickens Gambrell, Director of Historical Exhibits,
Texas Centennial Exposition
Samuel Wood Geiser, Professor of Biology, Southern Methodist
University
Lucius Mirabeau Lamar, Lawyer
Umphrey Lee, Dean of the School of Religion, Vanderbilt University
Charles Shirley Potts, Dean of the School of Law, Southern
Methodist University
William Alexander Rhea, Professor of Law, Southern Methodist
University
Ira Kendrick Stephens, Professor of Philosophy, Southern
Methodist University
William Embry Wrather, Geologist; President, Texas State
Historical Association
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