thumb|Hogg's wife, Sarah Ann Stinson

thumb|[[Ima Hogg, circa 1900]]

James Stephen Hogg (March 24, 1851March 3, 1906) was an American lawyer and statesman who served as the 20th governor of Texas from 1891 to 1895. He was born near Rusk, Texas. Hogg was a follower of the conservative New South Creed which became popular following the U.S. Civil War, and was also associated with populism. He was the first Texas Governor to have been born in the state.

Hogg is often remembered for naming his daughter Ima, an odd name which derived from a poem written by James's brother, Thomas Elisha Hogg. The story that she had a sister or sisters with odd names (proposed names including "Hoosa", "Ura" and "Wera") is an urban legend.

Hogg's time as governor was notable for the passage of a wide range of progressive reforms.

Early years

Hogg was born in Cherokee County, Texas. His parents, Joseph L. Hogg and Lucanda McMath had moved to Texas in late 1836. During the Civil War, his father served as a brigadier general in the Confederate States Army. Joseph Hogg died in 1862, and Lucanda died the following year. Hogg and his two brothers were raised by their sister, Frances. The family had little money, and Hogg received only a basic education before being asked to go to work.

In 1866, Hogg went to Tuscaloosa, Alabama, to study. Although legend states that the Hoggs also had a daughter named Ura, that allegation is false. He also put an end to pooling by the railroads and suggested that the legislature propose a constitutional amendment to create the Railroad Commission of Texas. Hogg also named an old friend, Captain Bill McDonald, to succeed Samuel A. McMurry as the captain of Texas Rangers Company B, Frontier Battalion, a position that he retained until 1907.

Hogg campaigned for a second term in 1892 on five principles: to uphold the state constitution, to support the Railroad Commission, to stop the railroads from issuing watered stocks, to regulate the issuance of county and municipal bonds, and to regulate alien land ownership. When his opponent for the Democratic nomination, George Clark, realized that Hogg would likely win the nomination, Clark's supporters left the Democratic convention and went to a new location. There they formed a new party, the Jeffersonian Democrats, and nominated Clark for governor. Hogg was easily nominated as the Democratic candidate by the remaining delegates. Hogg won a plurality of the votes to gain a second term as governor, but it was the first time in state history that the winning Democratic candidate did not receive a majority of the votes. At his urging, the legislature passed a law allowing the Railroad Commission to fix rates based on fair valuation and to stop many of the practices the railroad companies had used to manipulate stocks. When the Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the commission in Reagan v. Farmers Loan and Trust in 1894, this law helped them to be fully equipped to fight the power of the railroads.

Hogg championed the causes of individuals and presided over a series of progressive reform measures during his tenure.

In a National Geographic article in 1961, Stanley Walker wrote that Hogg was "remembered as a man of uncommon ability" and was one of Texas' greatest governors.

Later years

Hogg's term as governor ended in 1895, the same year his wife died. Although he was not wealthy when he left office, through his connections he became involved in land and oil deals and amassed a large fortune.

[[Image:Jim Hogg Road, I-20, TX IMG 6598.jpg|right|thumb|Jim Hogg Road exit in [Smith County, Texas] off Interstate 20 northwest of Tyler, Texas]]

thumb|Hogg Middle School in [[Norhill, Houston]]

Jim Hogg's popularity extended beyond Texas, particularly in New York. The "Man in the Street" column in the edition of September 6, 1903, of The New York Times related the following anecdote regarding him:

In January 1905, Hogg was injured in a railroad accident while on a business trip. He never completely recovered and died in his sleep on March 3, 1906, at the age of 54. He is buried in Oakwood Cemetery in Austin, Texas.

Jim Hogg County southeast of Laredo is named after him.

In addition James S. Hogg Middle School in Norhill, Houston, of the Houston Independent School District, is named after him.

Burial

Hogg asked that a pecan tree be planted at his grave instead of a traditional headstone, requesting that the seeds be distributed throughout the state to make Texas a "Land of Trees". His wish was carried out and this brought more attention to pecan trees. In 1919, the Legislature made the pecan tree the state tree of Texas.

The Texas town of San Saba claims to be "The Pecan Capital of the World". Several other American towns and regions host annual events celebrating the pecan harvest.

Legacy

thumb|Statue of Hogg in [[Austin, Texas, United States, 2015 ]]

Jim Hogg County, Texas is named after him.

A statue of Hogg was sculpted by Italian American sculptor Pompeo Coppini. The sculpture was commissioned in 1919 by George W. Littlefield to be included in the Littlefield Fountain on the campus of the University of Texas at Austin.

See also

  • Sid McMath, a distant cousin of Hogg who served as Governor of Arkansas (1949–1953) and has been historically compared with him
  • The Hogg Family and Houston, a book about the family
  • James S. Hogg Middle School, middle school built in 1926 on land donated by the Hogg estate

Notes

References

  • online

Further reading

  • Bernhard, Virginia, ed. The Hoggs of Texas: Letters and Memoirs of an Extraordinary Family, 1887–1906 (Texas A&M University Press, 2014), primary sources
  • Gambrell, Herbert. "James Stephen Hogg: Statesman or Demagogue?." Southwest Review 13.3 (1927): 338-366. online
  • Hart, James P. "What James Stephen Hogg Means to Texas: An Address." Southwestern Historical Quarterly 55.4 (1952): 439-447.
  • Hickey, Carroll Elvin. "A Rhetorical Analysis of Representative Gubernatorial Campaign Speeches by James Stephen Hogg (1890-1892)". (Dissertation, Louisiana State University and Agricultural & Mechanical College, 1977) online.
  • Miller, Worth Robert. "Building a Progressive Coalition in Texas: The Populist-Reform Democrat Rapproachement, 1900-1907." Journal of Southern History 52.2 (1986): 163-182. https://www.jstor.org/stable/2209666
  • Guide to the James Stephen Hogg letter transcriptions and family photographs, 1890–1903 (Woodson Research Center, Fondren Library, Rice University, Houston, TX, USA)
  • Message of Gov. J. S. Hogg to the twenty-third Legislature of Texas., hosted by the Portal to Texas History
  • Message of Governor James S. Hogg to the twenty-fourth legislature of Texas, hosted by the Portal to Texas History
  • Speeches and state papers of James Stephen Hogg, ex-governor of Texas, with a sketch of his life; ed. by C. W. Raines, hosted by the Portal to Texas History