Texas
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Capital: Austin

Governor: Rick Perry, R (to Jan. 2003)

Lieut. Governor: Bill Ratliff, R (to Jan. 2003)Senators: Phil Gramm, R (to Jan. 2003); Kay Bailey Hutchison, R (to Jan. 2007)

Secy. of State: Henry Cuellar (apptd. by gov.)

Comptroller: Carole Keeton Rylander, R (to Jan. 2003)Atty.

General: John Cornyn, R (to Jan. 2003)

Entered Union (rank): Dec. 29, 1845 (28)

Present constitution adopted: 1876

Motto: Friendship

State Symbols:

flower
bluebonnet (1901)
tree
pecan (1919)
bird
mockingbird (1927)
song
"Texas, Our Texas" (1929)
fish
guadalupe bass (1989)
seashell
lightning whelk (1987)
dish
chili (1977)
folk dance
square dance (1991)
fruit
Texas red grapefruit (1993)
gem
Texas blue topaz (1969)
gemstone
cut Lone Star cut (1977)
grass
sideoats grass (1971)
reptile
horned lizard (1993)
stone
petrified palmwood (1969)
plant
prickly pear cactus
insect
monarch butterfly
pepper
jalapeño pepper
mammal
longhorn
small mammal
armadillo
flying mammal
Mexican free-tailed bat

 

Why Study in Texas

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Americans, led by Stephen F. Austin, began to settle along the Brazos River in 1821 when Texas was controlled by Mexico, recently independent from Spain. In 1836, following a brief war between the American settlers in Texas and the Mexican government, the Independent Republic of Texas was proclaimed with Sam Houston as president. This war was famous for the battles of the Alamo and San Jacinto. After Texas became the 28th U.S. state in 1845, border disputes led to the Mexican War of 1846-48.

Possessing enormous natural resources, Texas is a major agricultural state and an industrial giant. Second only to Alaska in land area, it leads all other states in such categories as oil, cattle, sheep, and cotton. Texas ranches and farms also produce poultry, rice, pecans, peanuts, sorghum, and an extensive variety of fruits and vegetables.

Sulfur, salt, helium, asphalt, graphite, bromine, natural gas, cement, and clays are among the state's valuable resources. Chemicals, oil refining, food processing, machinery, and transportation equipment are among the major Texas manufacturing industries.

Millions of tourists spend well over $20.6 billion annually visiting 123 state parks, recreation areas, and points of interest such as the Gulf Coast resort area, the Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center in Houston, the Alamo in San Antonio, the state capital in Austin, and the Big Bend and Guadalupe Mountains National Park.

Nickname: Lone Star State

Origin of name: From an Indian word meaning "friends"

10 largest cities (1999 est.):
Houston, 1,845,967; San Antonio, 1,147,213; Dallas, 1,076,214; El Paso, 612,770; Austin, 587,873; Fort Worth, 502,369; Arlington, 311,962; Corpus Christi, 281,791; Plano, 232,904; Garland, 193,272

Land area: 261,914 sq mi. (678,358 sq km)

Geographic center: In McCulloch Co., 15 mi. NE of Brady

Number of counties: 254Largest county by

population and area: Harris, 3,250,404 (1999 est.); Brewster, 6,193 sq mi.State forests: 5 (7,609 ac.)

State parks: 123

Residents: Texan

1999 resident population est.: 20,044,141

1990 resident census
population (rank): 16,986,510 (3). Male: 8,365,963; Female: 8,620,547. White: 12,774,762 (75.2%); Black: 2,021,632 (11.9%); American Indian: 65,877 (0.4%); Asian: 319,459 (1.9%); Other race: 1,804,780 (10.6%); Hispanic: 4,339,905 (25.5%). 1990 percent population under 18: 28.5; 65 and over: 10.1; median age: 30.6.