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in the conspiracy, and given the
State over to the absolute rule of the Secessionists; and when the
Convention again assembled, its work was easy.
The votes of the people on secession were counted on the 5th, and when the result was announced by the
President there was great cheering, and he proceeded to declare
Texas to be an independent State.
On the following day the
Convention instructed its delegates at
Montgomery to ask for the admission of their State into the “Southern Confederacy,” and appointed a committee to inform
Governor Houston of the new political relations of the
Commonwealth.
To these communications the
Governor replied, in substance, that the
Convention had transcended its powers and that, its acts were usurpations.
He promised to lay the whole matter before the Legislature, which was to assemble on the 18th, until which time he should consider it his duty to perform the functions of his office regardless of all alleged changes.
The reply of the Governor produced great excitement in the Convention, and it was believed that he had issued orders for assembling the militia of the State to resist the action of that body.
By an ordinance passed on the 8th, it defied his authority, and then he appealed to the people in a stirring address, which strengthened the hearts of the Union men of the State.
He recounted his services and his difficulties, and complained bitterly of the usurpations of the Convention, which had “transferred the people, like sheep, from the shambles,” from the Union to an unlawful league.
He loved Texas too well, he said, to do aught that should kindle civil war on its soil, and he should not attempt, under the circumstances, to exercise his authority as Governor, nor would he take the oath of allegiance to the “Southern Confederacy.”
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