82R6861 JH-D
 
  By: Dukes, McClendon, Johnson, et al. H.C.R. No. 46
 
 
 
HOUSE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
         
  WHEREAS, The legacy that the Honorable Barbara Jordan
 
  established in her service to the citizens of Texas and the United
 
  States of America remains a source of inspiration to countless
 
  people, and time cannot diminish the contributions of this
 
  admirable patriot, politician, teacher, mentor, friend, icon, and
 
  hero; and
         
         WHEREAS, Born on February 21, 1936, to Benjamin and Arlyne
 
  Jordan, Barbara Jordan was raised in Houston's Fifth Ward and
 
  graduated with honors from Phillis Wheatley High School in the
 
  Houston Independent School District; and
         
         WHEREAS, Ms. Jordan attended Texas Southern University,
 
  where she majored in government and history and was a member of the
 
  debate team, winning numerous honors for her oratory skills; after
 
  graduating magna cum laude from TSU, she enrolled at the Boston
 
  University School of Law and received her law degree in 1959; and
         
         WHEREAS, In 1966, Ms. Jordan became the first black woman
 
  ever elected to the Texas Senate as well as the first African
 
  American to be elected as a state senator in the United States since
 
  1883; and
         
         WHEREAS, Following her successful run for a seat in the U.S.
 
  Congress in 1972, Ms. Jordan served in the House of Representatives
 
  from 1973 until 1979, during which time she enhanced her reputation
 
  as an evocative public speaker and arose as a leader on issues
 
  relating to voting rights, consumer protection, energy, and the
 
  environment; and
         
         WHEREAS, In her role as a member of the House Committee on the
 
  Judiciary, she gained national prominence during the Watergate
 
  impeachment proceedings against President Nixon in 1974; speaking
 
  before the committee, she movingly portrayed the intention of the
 
  framers of the U.S. Constitution and eloquently expressed her faith
 
  in that document, even as she noted that "We the People," the first
 
  words of the preamble to the Constitution, were not originally
 
  intended to apply to African Americans; and
         
         WHEREAS, In 1976, Congresswoman Jordan became the first
 
  female and the first African American to serve as the keynote
 
  speaker at the Democratic National Convention, and her speech
 
  reiterated her faith in the Constitution and the desire to form a
 
  national community that would fulfill the country's purpose of
 
  creating and sustaining a society in which all are equal; and
         
         WHEREAS, Ms. Jordan retired from elective office in 1979 and
 
  became a distinguished professor at the Lyndon B. Johnson School of
 
  Public Affairs at The University of Texas at Austin; for the
 
  remainder of her life, she focused on mentoring a new generation of
 
  aspiring leaders, encouraging them to excel and to commit
 
  themselves to public service; and
         
         WHEREAS, At the request of President Bill Clinton, she became
 
  chair of the U.S. Commission on Immigration Reform in the mid-1990s
 
  and held that office until her death; in 1994, President Clinton
 
  honored her for her patriotism and outstanding service by awarding
 
  her the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the country's highest
 
  civilian honor; and
         
         WHEREAS, Barbara Jordan passed away in January 1996, but her
 
  lifelong commitment to freedom, integrity, equality, and justice
 
  resonates as powerfully today as it did in years past, and she is
 
  indeed deserving of special recognition, on the anniversary of her
 
  birth, in the state that she served so well; now, therefore, be it
         
         RESOLVED, That the 82nd Legislature of the State of Texas
 
  hereby designate February 21 through 27 of each year from 2011
 
  through 2020 as Barbara Jordan Freedom Week.