Details for James Stephen Hogg

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5499008961

Data

Marker Number 8961
Atlas Number 5499008961
Marker Title James Stephen Hogg
Index Entry Hogg, James Stephen
Address Main & Goode streets (Courthouse Square)
City Quitman
County Wood
UTM Zone 15
UTM Easting 271713
UTM Northing 3628441
Subject Codes governors; state official
Marker Year 1971
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Main & Goode streets (Courthouse Square)
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text (March 24, 1851-March 3, 1906) Texas statesman whose nationally-acclaimed public career began at this site. The third son of Gen. Joseph L. and Lucanda (McMath) Hogg was born near Rusk. Orphaned during troubled Civil War era, he began at age 14 to earn his own way as a farmhand, clerk, printer's devil, typesetter, country editor. At 22, he was elected Justice of the Peace, Precinct 1, and headed Commissioners Court of Wood County, 1874-75. He was admitted to the bar in 1875 and soon held higher offices: county attorney (1879-81), district attorney (1881-85), Texas Attorney General, (1887-90). Inaugurated on Jan. 20, 1891, he was the first native Texan to become Governor of the state. He championed the common people. An intellectual and physical giant, personally fearless, he saw Texas as victim of Wall Street greed, and corrected many injustices. To equalize business opportunities among great and small, he led in creating Texas Railroad Commission, hailed as a model throughout the world. Public office left him financially insecure. Later came wealth, which has been invested by his heirs in Texas mental health and culture. His wife was Sallie Stinson of Wood County. Their children -- Will, Ima, Mike and Tom -- were all philanthropists. (1971)

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