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Texans are indebted to the strong, determined women who challenged
society's structure and gave us role models to follow. This book
profiles notable women in Texas who challenged the structure of
society to succeed in a male-dominated world. The women include
pioneers in all walks of life, including women's suffrage, civil
rights, education, politics, and much more. Women profiled include
Christia V. Daniels Adair, Annie Blanton, Mary Brackenridge, Linda
Chavez-Thompson, Maggie Cousins, Olive Ann Fairchild, Sissy
Farenthold, Bette Graham, Oveta Culp Hobby, Mary Austin Holley,
Lizzie Johnson, Margo Jones, Lucy Ann Kidd-Key, Jane McCallum,
Patricia McCormick, Irma Rangel, Elizabeth Watson and Judith
Zaffirini.
Anson Jones was a doctor, farmer and politician, who served as the
last president of the Republic of Texas. In this exciting
biography, Jean Flynn tells how Jones helped bring this young,
struggling Republic into the United States of America as the 28th
state.
William Barrett Travis was born in South Carolina, but his name
will forever be linked to Texas and honored by Texans. He was only
twenty-six and a lieutenant colonel in the Texas Army when he found
himself in command of the Alamo. Faced with overwhelming numbers,
Travis penned a letter seeking reinforcements. That letter
addressed "To the People of Texas and All Americans in the World,"
has become one of the most often quoted and important documents in
Texas history. Travis died with his men at the Alamo, but his
legacy will live forever in the history of Texas. Jean Flynn is one
of the most prolific authors profiling famous Texans for younger
readers. In addition to William Barrett Travis: "Victory of Death,"
she has also written about Jim Bowie, Stephen F. Austin, James
Butler Bonham, James W. Fannin, Anson Jones and Lady Bird Johnson.
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