My Brief Foray into Texas Politics
My recent trip to Texas brought back lots of memories from over thirty years ago concerning my involvement with the Governor of Texas and some of the issues and celebrities of that day. Recalling some of that may not be of interest to anyone but me. But here goes.
In the late 1960's Edna Mae and I were living in De Soto, Texas, a suburb of Dallas in the far south of Dallas County. I preached for the Church of Christ there and later went to work for the Herald of Truth radio and television ministry. By God's grace, the church grew significantly. For almost three of our years there I chose to rely on my Herald of Truth salary for my income, so the church did not pay me. That was by my choice. During that time the church doubled in size and then doubled again. It was a wonderful time.
Within the membership of the De Soto church there were several high ranking leaders of the Democratic Party of Texas. Through them I met and became rather close to Texas Governor Preston Smith. I led the prayer at his inauguration on the capitol steps in Austin, was appointed by him to be a member of the Governor's Commission on Human Relations, and was also given the honor of being an Admiral in the Texas Navy.
Preston Smith was a very fine man. Born in Williamson Co., he grew up in Lamesa and went to college at Texas Tech. He was prominent in the business and political arenas of West Texas and was elected to the Texas legislature. Later he was Lt. Governor, and then Governor for two terms. He was the first Lt. Governor to become Governor by election since the War Between the States. He was also the first truly "West Texan" to serve as Governor, and in his second term was so popular that he ran unopposed.
I'll never forget all the festivities that were associated with his inauguration. I was a privileged guest at the banquet and the ball that took place the night before the inauguration. I not only got to meet some of the top political leaders in the country, like former President Lyndon Johnson, Senator John Tower, Senator Ralph Yarborough, and former Governor John Connally (under whom Smith had served as Lt. Governor), but also entertainers like Charlie Pride, Buck Owens, and Jeanie C. Riley (Harper Valley P.T.A.). Governor Smith's assistant had asked Robert Goulet who was starring on Broadway in Camelot to sing at the ball, but Governor Smith had never heard of him and opted for Buck Owens instead.
Smith told the story of just having run into his old high school English teacher. He had seen her at a school re-union and she didn't recognize him at first. She looked at him, squinted, and said, "Weren't you Preston Smith?" He answered, "Yes, I was." She said, "Where are you now?" He replied, "I live down in Austin, they've elected me Governor." According to Smith she replied, "Well, I heard they had sent you off somewhere but didn't know for sure where it was."
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In West Texas, Buck Owens was certainly better known than Robert Goulet.
I led the invocation on the capitol steps at Smith's inauguration on January 21, 1969. That's actually my shoulder in the picture beside Gov. Smith and his sweet wife Ima Mae. (They were married 67 years.) That prayer is one of two quotations that I have in the official Texas Records. I'll mention the second one later. Smith was also responsible for that.
During Smith's two terms as Texas Governor, he was responsible for great improvements in higher education in Texas. He was also concerned about minorities and working people, so he established the Governor's Commission on Human Relations. I was one of 50 that he appointed to that commission.
There were some fascinating people on the commission. Henry Cisneros that would later become Mayor of San Antonio and be involved in a scandal that kept him out of national office. Dr. Abner McCall, President of Baylor University and one of the most impressive men I ever met. State Senator Barbara Jordan, who was one of the most impressive women I ever met. Within two years of her appointment to the Commission she would be elected to Congress and would be the first Black woman from the South ever elected to Congress. She would play a vital role in the Watergate investigation. Rabbi Hyman Schachtel from Houston, one of the most prominent and articulate rabbis in America, and my brother from the Churches of Christ, John Allen Chalk who is an attorney as gifted in real life as Perry Mason, Matlock, and Shark on television.
The chairman of the commission was Secretary of State Martin Dies, Jr. He had served over 20 years in the U. S. Congress as a Conservative Democrat who did not support the New Deal and who helped to found the famous (or infamous) House Un-American Activities Committee.
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That's Senator Dies in the middle, with the cane, Senator Barbara Jordan to the right of him, and Governor Smith on the far right. I was in the next room when this picture was taken. The occasion was our Commission's presenting the Medal of Valor to the Apollo 11 crew who had been the first to land on the moon. You'll recognize Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldren, and Michael Collins. This was three months after Armstrong had taken, "One small step for man. . ." Texas felt a lot of ownership to Apollo 11 because of NASA.
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Our monthly Commission meetings were held in the Senate Chamber. My desk was on the aisle, in the middle. Sitting in that room, surrounded by original paintings of the surrender of Santa Anna at San Jacinto, bigger than life portraits of Davey Crockett, Stephen F. Austin, and Sam Houston, and the flag that had been retrieved from the Goliad massacre was a downright religious experience for a Texan.
We spent countless hours in that room arguing about race relations, minimum wage, and political districting. Our only capacity was advisory, but the Governor was concerned about what we thought, and so was the Texas Senate and Legislature.
Our real work was done in the sub-committees. Somehow I was put on the Medical Ethics Committee and was elected Chairman. The significance of that was that Dr. Christian Bernard in South Africa had begun to do the first heart transplants. Dr. Denton Cooley in Houston was about ready to begin doing them also. And Texas had a fuzzy definition in its state statutes about what constituted death! It therefore became a human relations issue, because the legislature wanted to be sure people who were heart donors were actually dead before their organs were removed! So our subcommittee was asked to interview doctors, human rights advocates, and the families of patients. We had many hearings and actually ended up writing the definition of death that became law in Texas. That's my second entry in the Texas Record. It all seems so basic now, but it was a very big issue then. Before our definition, death was usually declared when a person's heart stopped beating.
A decision to move to Albuquerque, New Mexico caused me to give Governor Smith my resignation from the Commission. Little did we know that within a very short time Secretary Dies would die, the Sharpstown Stock Scandal would sweep half the Texas legislature and Senate out of office, and Governor Smith would not be re-elected. But the time we spent together made some significant contributions to the Lone Star State, and particularly to minorities and to education
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To the left in this picture is Texas House Speaker Gus Mutscher, Governor Smith, former President Lyndon Johnson, and Lt. Governor Ben Barnes. The Sharpstown Stock scandal essentially did them all in politically, except President Johnson who had weathered far greater political scandals. Ever read "A Texan Looks at Lyndon?""
I'll always have great appreciation for Governor Smith. After he left Austin he returned to Lubbock and continued his earlier work to build the community and the whole West Texas area. He died in 2003 at the age of 91.
Thanks for indulging my walk down memory lane.

