Chapter 5 - Early Years and Race.

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CHAPTER ONE -- EARLY YEARS AND RACE AND IMMIGRATION – Ed Sebesta 10/10/2020 As the years passed by Hatton W. Sumners became more careful on how he discussed racial issues to be compatible with his projected image as a constitutional sage. The early years reveal more candidly Sumners’ views regarding race and immigration. In a 1906 speech delivered before the District and County Attorney’s Association of Texas titled, “The Protection of the State Against the Criminal,” Sumners’ states that it is the duty of the government to protect “against the vicious,” but complains that, “A great many good people are coming to the conclusion that the criminal is the only one whose rights the law is bound to regard.” Sumner asserts that this has led to a state of “quasi anarchy,” in Texas. Sumners refers to a “namby-pamby sort of sympathy” for criminals in the juries. He also complains of “defendants with money” to escape punishment for crimes. He states, “Upon the brutal negro rapist and the poor, friendless white man the keen sword of the law falls with quick vengeance, for which I make no complaint.”1 The stereotype of the African American being some type of beast as opposed to the supposedly unbrutal white rapist is present in Sumners’ thinking. In 1907 Sumners gave a speech on Tennessee Day at the Texas State Fair. In discussing Tennesseans settling Texas he states, “Here they built their homes and planted side by side the standards of Christianity and Anglo-Saxon civilization,” thus giving a very specific racial and ethnic identity to Texas. One of the hazards Tennessee settlers were supposed to have faced traveling to Texas were, “hostile savages,” presumably in reference to Native Americans. The ethnic cleansing of Texas of Native Americans is erased. The Confederacy is referenced as something Tennesseans supported heroically implying that the Confederacy was a great good worthy of heroic defense. White supremacist Confederate John H. Reagan is praised as a hero.2 The idea of the pioneer as bring Anglo-Saxon civilization seems to have been a recurring theme with Sumners. At the Veterans and Settlers Reunion at Hillsboro, Texas in 1915 he is the principal speaker and says, “It was a sturdy, virile folk who in the early days turned their faces westward," and when they arrived in Texas, “Here they established Anglo-Saxon civilization, and under the shadow of Mexican oppression laid the foundation of a great republic.”3 Sumners spoke at the McKinney, Texas ex-Confederate and old settler’s reunion in 1912.4 That Sumners would have a positive view of the Confederacy is not surprising in

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No author, “Mr. Sumners’ Views,” DMN, Oct. 26, 1906, page 11. No author, “Meet at the Fair,” DMN, Nov. 3, 1907, page 6. 3 No author, “Veterans and Settlers Reunite at Hillsboro,” DMN, July 28, 1915, page 15. 4 No author, “100 In McKinney Baby Show,” DMN, Aug. 30, 1912, page 3. 2


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Chapter 5 - Early Years and Race. by Edward H. Sebesta - Issuu