Compare Texas BBQ to anywhere else in the world.
Ask if we ride horses everywhere.
Invite us to a restaurant that doesn't serve sweet tea.
Assume all of Texas looks the same.
Doubt how big Texas really is.
Compare Mexican Food Anywhere Else to Tex-Mex
Think We’re Wimps for Shutting Down When it Snows
Suggest That Mr. Pibb is the Same as our original Dr Pepper
Visit Only Austin and Claim You’ve Been to Texas
Confuse Cowboys and Rednecks
Ask What A Rodeo Is
Doubt the Intensity of Football in Texas
Continuously Laugh at Our Version of the English Language
Assume All Boots are the Same
*****
Yep! Us Texans are rather set in our ways and very blunt and patriotic to our stomping grounds.
Texas Facts and Trivia
Texas
is popularly known as The Lone Star State.
The
Alamo is located in San Antonio. It is where Texas defenders fell to Mexican
General Santa Anna and the phrase Remember the Alamo originated. The Alamo is
considered the cradle of Texas liberty and the state's most popular historic
site.
Texas
is the only state to have the flags of 6 different nations fly over it. They
are: Spain, France, Mexico, Republic of Texas, Confederate States, and the
United States.
Although
six flags have flown over Texas, there have been eight changes of government:
Spanish 1519-1685, French 1685-1690, Spanish 1690-1821, Mexican 1821-1836,
Republic of Texas 1836-1845, United States 1845-1861, Confederate States
1861-1865, United States 1865-present
The
King Ranch in Texas is bigger than the state of Rhode Island.
During
the period of July 24-26, 1979, the Tropical Storm Claudette brought 45 inches
of rain to an area near Alvin, Texas, contributing to more than $600 million in
damages. Claudette produced the United States 24 hour rainfall record of 43
inches.
More
wool comes from the state of Texas than any other state in the United States.
Edwards
Plateau in west central Texas is the top sheep growing area in the country.
Texas
is the only state to enter the United States by treaty instead of territorial
annexation.
The
state was an independent nation from 1836 to 1845.
Texas
boasts the nation's largest herd of whitetail deer.
A
coastal live oak located near Fulton is the oldest tree in the state. The tree
has an estimated age of more than 1,500 years.
Sam
Houston, arguably the most famous Texan, was actually born in Virginia. Houston
served as governor of Tennessee before coming to Texas.
The
first offensive action of the Texas Revolution occurred in Goliad on October 9,
1835 when local colonists captured the fort and town.
On
December 20, 1835 the first Declaration of Texas Independence was signed in
Goliad and the first flag of Texas Independence was hoisted.
The
Hertzberg Circus Museum in San Antonio contains one of the largest assortments
of circusana in the world.
The
capital city of Austin is located on the Colorado River in south-central Texas.
The capitol building is made from Texas pink granite. It served as the capital
of the Republic of Texas in 1840-1842.
Austin
is considered the live music capital of the world.
Texas
is home to Dell and Compaq computers and central Texas is often referred to as
the Silicon Valley of the south.
Professional
sports teams include the Dallas Cowboys, Dallas Mavericks, Dallas Stars,
Houston Astros, Houston Comets, Houston Rockets, San Antonio Spurs, and Texas
Rangers.
Dr
Pepper was invented in Waco in 1885. The Dublin Dr Pepper, 85 miles west of
Waco, still uses pure imperial cane sugar in its product. There is no period
after the Dr in Dr Pepper.
The
first suspension bridge in the United States was the Waco Bridge. Built in 1870
and still in use today as a pedestrian crossing of the Brazos River.
In
1836 five sites served as temporary capitals of Texas:
Washington-on-the-Brazos: Harrisburg: Galveston: Velasco: and Columbia. Sam
Houston moved the capital to Houston in 1837. In 1839 the capital was moved to
the new town of Austin.
The
capitol in Austin opened May 16, 1888. The dome of the building stands seven
feet higher than that of the nation's Capitol in Washington, D.C.
Texas
comes from the Hasinai Indian word tejas meaning friends or allies.
The
armadillo is the official state mammal.
Texas
has the first domed stadium in the country. The structure was built in Houston
and opened in April 1965.
The
worst natural disaster in United States history was caused by a hurricane that
hit Galveston in 1900. Over 8000 deaths were recorded.
The
first word spoken from the moon on July 20, 1969 was Houston.
Texas'
largest county is Brewster with 6,208 square miles.
Texas
possesses three of the top ten most populous cities in the United States. These
towns are Houston, Dallas, and San Antonio.
El
Paso is closer to Needles, California than it is to Dallas.
Texas
includes 267,339 square miles, or 7.4% of the nation's total area.
The
state's cattle population is estimated to be near 16 million.
More
land is farmed in Texas than in any other state.
More
species of bats live in Texas than in any other part of the United States.
Laredo
is the world's largest inland port.
Port
Lavaca has the world's longest fishing pier. Originally part of the causeway
connecting the two sides of Lavaca Bay, the center span of was destroyed by
Hurricane Carla in 1961.
The
Tyler Municipal Rose Garden is the world's largest rose garden. It contains
38,000 rose bushes representing 500 varieties of roses set in a 22-acre garden.
Amarillo
has the world's largest helium well.
The
world's first rodeo was held in Pecos on July 4, 1883.
The
Flagship Hotel on Seawall Boulevard in Galveston is the only hotel in North
America built entirely over the water.
The
Heisman trophy is named for John William Heisman the first full-time coach and
athletic director at Rice University in Houston.
Brazoria
County has more species of birds than any other comparable area in North
America.
The Spring is a great time to visit Texas
6 comments:
Great post! I learned a lot about Texas. I have always been amazed by its size on a map- so I imagine in person it is even more impressive. I especially like the map that shows the different terrain. I would love to try some food in Texas- as I have heard it is out of this world. Hope one day I get to visit your beautiful state. :)
~Jess
I live in Nashville, so I can relate to a lot of this. I hate country music and I've lived in "Music City" all my life! I dislike the taste of tea of any kind, sweet or otherwise, and can't stand grits. My entire ancestry is from Missouri so maybe living in the South your whole life isn't enough to have it in your blood!
I hope you get to visit also Jess...our Southwest cuisine is unique and delicious, I think. Our area is more populated but out West one can drive for hours without seeing much of anything except scenery.
Stephanie...I've never been to Tennessee to see what it has to offer but that may change soon. My oldest grandson and his wife are moving to Memphis in June, they are both doctors and she is going to do a fellowship in blood cancers there. John is a pediatrician and already has a job lined up there also...but they will eventually move back to Dallas...they love it.
Love to Texas, from NYC.
Jon
Jon!...So good to hear from you and NYC! Hope everything is well with you. HUGS!
Post a Comment