Vinson Allen Collins | |
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Member of the Texas Senate from the 4th district | |
In office September 4, 1917 –January 14, 1919 | |
Preceded by | Stephen Marion King |
Succeeded by | Wilfred Roy Cousins,Sr. |
In office January 10,1911 –January 12,1915 | |
Preceded by | Edward Irwin Kellie |
Succeeded by | Stephen Marion King |
Personal details | |
Born | Hardin County,Texas,U.S. | March 1,1867
Died | July 5,1966 99) Dallas,Texas,U.S. | (aged
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse(s) |
|
Children | 6,including Carr Collins Sr. |
Parent(s) |
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Alma mater | Sam Houston State Normal College |
Occupation | Schoolteacher,lawyer,politician |
Vinson Allen Collins [1] [2] [3] (March 1,1867 - July 5,1966) was a Texas politician.
Vinson Allen Collins was born in Hardin County,Texas near Honey Island on March 1,1867. He was the seventh child of Warren Collins and Eboline Valentine Collins. The Collins family had moved to Texas from Mississippi in 1854.
He graduated from Sam Houston State Normal College (now part of Sam Houston State University) in 1893.
He started his career as a schoolteacher in Big Sandy Independent School District in Polk County,Texas while studying the Law. He was admitted to the State Bar of Texas in 1901 and opened a law practice in Beaumont,Texas.
He served three terms in the Texas Senate as a Democrat. He sponsored the law that established a workers' compensation system in Texas and established the Texas Industrial Accident Board,and the law restricting work to eight hours a day. In a race for the United States House of Representatives,he was defeated by Martin Dies,Sr. In 1924,his campaign for Governor of Texas against Felix D. Robertson and Miriam A. "Ma" Ferguson was unsuccessful and Ferguson was elected.
He was a supporter of prohibition and of women’s suffrage.
He was married twice,first to Elizabeth (Lizzie) Hopkins and later to Nannie Kuykendall. He had six children. Carr Collins,Sr.,son of V.A. Collins and Lizzie Hopkins,was an insurance executive and philanthropist.
He died in Dallas,Texas on July 5,1966 [4] and is buried in Livingston,Texas.
Marion Price Daniel Sr.,was an American jurist and politician who served as a Democratic U.S. Senator and the 38th Governor of the state of Texas. He was appointed by President Lyndon B. Johnson to be a member of the National Security Council,Director of the Office of Emergency Preparedness,and Assistant to the President for Federal-State Relations. Daniel also served as Associate Justice of the Texas Supreme Court.
Vinson &Elkins LLP is an international law firm with approximately 700 lawyers worldwide headquartered in Downtown Houston,Texas.
Margaret Lea Houston was First Lady of the Republic of Texas during her husband Sam Houston's second term as President of the Republic of Texas. They met following the first of his two non-consecutive terms as the Republic's president,and married when he was a representative in the Congress of the Republic of Texas. She was his third wife,remaining with him until his death.
James Mitchell Collins was an American businessman and a Republican who represented the Third Congressional District of Texas from 1968-1983. The district was based at the time around Irving in Dallas County.
James Anderson Elkins Sr. was a lawyer and banker in Houston,Texas. He co-founded the law firm,Vinson &Elkins.
Texas has over 1,000 public school districts—all but one of the school districts in Texas are independent,separate from any form of municipal government. School districts may cross city and county boundaries. Independent school districts have the power to tax their residents and to assert eminent domain over privately owned property. The Texas Education Agency (TEA) oversees these districts,providing supplemental funding,but its jurisdiction is limited mostly to intervening in poorly performing districts.
Joseph Franklin Wilson was a U.S. Representative from Texas.
Lindley Garrison Beckworth Sr. was a United States Representative from Texas and a Judge of the United States Customs Court.
Rufus Columbus Burleson was the president of Baylor University in Waco,Texas,from 1851 to 1861 and again from 1886 to 1897.
Robert Lee Bobbitt,Sr.,was an attorney and Democratic politician from San Antonio,Texas,who served in the first half of the 20th century as Speaker of the Texas House of Representatives,Attorney General of Texas,and chairman of the Texas Highway Department.
George William Guess was mayor of Dallas,Texas (1866–1868).
Barry Miller was a Texas state legislator and Lieutenant Governor from 1925 to 1931 serving under Governors Miriam A. Ferguson and Dan Moody.
Carr P. Collins Sr. was an American insurance magnate and philanthropist.
Maliek Collins Sr. is an American football defensive tackle for the Houston Texans of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football at the University of Nebraska.
Eugene Campbell Barker was an American historian at the University of Texas,the managing director of the Texas State Historical Association,and the editor of the Southwestern Historical Quarterly. He chaired the history department while soliciting gifts to the university,which he used to build a collection of archives and artifacts. In 1950,the university dedicated the Eugene C. Barker History Center as a repository for his collections. These collections are an important part of the Dolph Briscoe Center for American History at the University of Texas.
George Peddy was an American attorney,military officer,and political figure from Texas. A 1920 graduate of the University of Texas School of Law,he practiced law in Houston with the prominent firm of Vinson,Elkins,Weems,and Francis. A Democrat,He served in the Texas House of Representatives in 1917 and ran two high-profile but unsuccessful campaigns for the United States Senate. A United States Army veteran of World War I and World War II,he attained the rank of lieutenant colonel while serving with the 5th Infantry Division in France during the Second World War,and received the Bronze Star Medal and Croix de Guerre.
Sam Houston Jr. (1843–1894) was the oldest of eight children born to Sam Houston and Margaret Lea Houston,and was the only Houston child born in the Republic of Texas,before its December 29,1845 annexation to the United States. He was home-schooled by his mother,and later attended both Bastrop Military Institute and Baylor University. After Texas seceded from the Union in 1861,he enlisted in the Confederate States Army 2nd Texas Infantry Regiment,Company C Bayland Guards. Wounded at the April 1862 Battle of Shiloh,he served time as a prisoner of war at Camp Douglas in Illinois. Following his release,he received a medical discharge from the Confederate States Army. He attended the Philadelphia University of Medicine and Surgery. Upon graduation,he returned to a private life,and it is unknown if he ever practiced medicine. At some point,he became a writer. Houston married Lucy Anderson in 1875. Their daughter Margaret Bell Houston (1877–1966) was also a writer,as well as a suffragist who became the first president of the Dallas Equal Suffrage Association. Upon his death,Sam Jr. was buried on private property near his mother.