1805 The Corps of Discovery reached the Pacific Ocean.
1835 Texas' Declaration of November 7, 1835 adopted by the Consultation at
San Felipe documenting Texas' reasons for taking up
arms against Mexico. Attribution: On This Day.
It stated:
November 7, 1835.
DECLARACION DEL PUEBLO DE TEJAS, Reunido en Convencion General. Por cuantoel general
Antonio Lopez de Santa Ana, asociado con otros gefes militareshan destruido por medio de
la fuerza armada las Instituciones Federalesde la Nacion Mejicana, y disuelto el pacto
social que existia entre el Pueblo de Tejas y las demas partes de la confederacion
Mejicana, el buen Pueblo de Tejas, usando de sus derechos naturales, DECLARA SOLEMNEMENTE,
Primero. Que ha tomado las armas en defensa de sus derechos y libertad
esamenezados por los ataques del despotismo militar; y en defensa de losprincipios
republicanos de la Constitucion Federal de Mejico, sancionadaen 1824.
Segundo. Que aunque Tejas no esta ya ni politica ni moralmenteligado
por los lazos de la Union Federal, movido por la simpatia y generosidadnaturales a los
pueblos libres, ofrece ayuda y asistencia a aquellos miembrosde la confederacion que
tomasen las armas contra el despotismo militar.
Tercero. Que no reconoce en las actuales autoridades de la nominal
Republica Mejicana ningun derecho para gobernar en el territorio de Tejas.
Cuarto.Que no cesara de hacer la guerra contra las mencionadas
autoridades mientrasmantengan tropas en los terminos de Tejas.
Quinto. Que se considera conderecho de separarse de la Union a Mejico
durante la desorganizacion delSistema Federal y el regimen del despotismo, y para
organizar un gobiernoindependiente o adoptar aquellas medidas que sean adecuadas para
protegersus derechos y libertades; pero continuara fiel al gobierno Mejicano enel caso de
que la nacion sea gobernada por la Constitucion y las leyesque fueron formadas para el
regimen de su asociacion politica.
Sesto. Que Tejas se obliga a pagar los gastos de sus tropas en
actividad actualmenteen la campana.
Septimo. Que Tejas empena su credito y fe publica para elpago de las
deudas que contrageren sus agentes.
Octavo. Que recompensaracon donaciones de tierra y los derechos de
ciudadania a los voluntariosque prestasen servicios en la presente lucha. Esta es la
declaracion queprofesamos delante del mundo, llamando a Dios por testigo de la
sinceridadde nuestras intenciones, invocando su maldicion sobre nuestras cabezasen el caso
de faltar a ella por doblez o intencion danada.
B.T. ARCHER, Presidente.
Municipalidad de Gonzales-- J. D. Clemens
Municipalidad de Austin --Benjamin Fuqua, Thomas Barnett, James Hodges, Wyly Martin,
William Arrington, Randall Jones, William S. Fisher, Wm. Menifee, G.W. Davis. Jesse
Burnam.
Municipalidad de Viesca.
Municipalidad de Matagorda.-- S.T. Allen, R.R. Royall, A.G. Perry, Charles Wilson, J.G.W.
Pierson
Municipalidad de Washington-- Alexander Thompson, Asa Mitchell, J.W.Parker. Philip Coe
Municipalidad de Nacogdoches-- Elijah Collard, Samuel Houston, Jesse Grimes, Daniel
Parker, A. Hoxie, James W. Robertson
Municipalidad de Mina-- William Whitaker, J.S. Lester
Municipalidad of Bevil-- D.C. Barrett, John Bevil, R.M. Williamson. S.H. Everett
Municipalidad de Columbia-- Wyatt Hanks, Henry Smith
Municipalidad de San Augustin --Edwin Waller, A. Houston, J.S.D. Byrom, Wm. N. Sigler,
John A. Wharton, A.E.C. Johnson, W.D.C. Hall, Martin Palmer, A. Horton
Municipalidad de Harrisburgh --Henry Augustin, Lorenzo de Zavala, A.G.Kellog. Wm. P.
Harris
Municipalidad de Liberty -- C.C. Dyer, J.B. WoodsMeriwether W. Smith, A.B. Hardin, John W.
Moore, Henry Millard, D.B.Macomb, C. West.
Sala de la Convencion en San Felipe de Austin, 7 deNoviembre de 1825. P.B. Dexter,
Secretario.
1848 Zachary Taylor was elected president of US.
1871 The second session of Wyoming's Territorial Legislative Assembly began. It continued until December 16.
1876 Rutherford B. Hayes was elected 19th president of the US.
1877 The fifth session of Wyoming's Territorial Legislative Assembly began.
1885 Donald A. Smith, later Lord Strathcona drives in the last spike of the Canadian Pacific Railway at Craigellachie, in the Eagle Pass, British Columbia.
1893 Colorado grants women the franchise.
1913 The school house in Guernsey was destroyed by fire. Attribution: Wyoming State Historical Society.
1916 President Woodrow Wilson was re-elected over Charles Evans Hughes, but the race was so close that the results were not known until November 11.Wyoming's electorate gave 55% of the vote to Wilson.
1916 John B. Kendrick elected to the Senate from Wyoming.
1916 Republican Jeannette Rankin of Montana became the first woman elected to Congress. She would boldly cast "no" votes on the measures to declare war in World War One and World War Two.
The Laramie Daily Boomerang for November 7, 1916. Wars and highways.
The Laramie Daily Boomerang, which is still published today, didn't
bother much with elections in its November 7, 1916 edition. It focused
on the news of other things, including the crisis in Mexico, prohibition
in Virginia, Polish independence and the Lincoln Highway eliminating
polls.
The Boomerang, perhaps, may have felt that the voters had made up their minds and focused on other things.
The newspaper for the small town of Douglas simply urged voters to
Republican party loyalty. A. R. Merritt, however, of the RCU Store,
didn't worry about whether you were a member of the "the Republican and
Progressive Party, the Democratic Party, the Socialist Party and the
Prohibition Party" (all parties that were actually fielding candidates
on a serious basis), as long as you had the right party dress.
The Wyoming Tribune, which had been solidly Republican in the 1916
campaign, looked forward to Hughes being elected and was predicting John
B. Kendrick's "Waterloo" in its 3:30 edition.
The early reports, as we'll see, may have not been right.
The Cheyenne Leader was backing Wilson and Kendrick, and it had apparently had enough of the Tribune.
Of note, the Leader was taking a "bring the boys back home" approach to
the election, in part, obviously indicating that a vote for Hughes was a
vote for prolonged entanglement in Mexico.
The Casper Record for November 7, 1916. All America Joins Shout "Wilson's The Man!"
The Casper Record confidently predicted that "all America" would shout
for Wilson. It also came out for Pat Sullivan, rising local politician,
Irish immigrant, and very successful local sheepman. He built a house
which was, up until recently, the largest house in Casper. Of interest,
at least one of the ranching families mentioned in the article is still
ranching in the same location, which is a bit comforting.
We also learn that the Midwest Hotel was about to go up, which it did. And C. H. Townsend directed our attention to rugs.
1918
Countdown on the Great War, November 7, 1918: The False Armistace, the Bavarian monarchy falls, the French and British explain the war against the Ottomans.
1. The False Armistice resulted in celebrations throughout the Allied nations as a false report that Germany had entered into an Armistice circulated and was widely reported.
A couple of Wyoming's newspapers, including the Casper Daily Tribune, did note the reports, but were hesitant about reporting them as fully accurate. They would turn out not to be.
2. The German Revolution spread to Hanover, Brunswick, Frankfurt, and Munich. King Ludwig III of Bavaria was forced to flee with his family for what he thought would be a temporary departure, but which would not see him return as king.
The Bavarian Royal Family.
There was some irony to his being the first German monarch to fall. He was already in his upper years at the time he had become king, in 1913, and therefore was not a long reigning German monarch. He was additionally a staunch supporter of the direct right to vote, thereby putting him in sympathy with democratic aims. Indeed, he'd run, unsuccessfully, as a candidate for the Reichstag and there was some belief that if the German Emperor were an elected position, he would likely have been the Emperor.
He was not in the direct line of succession for the Bavarian crown and also came to it by way of a change in the Bavarian constitution which allowed for the regent to declare himself king upon the incompetency of the rightful occupant, which he then did, thereby ending his regency for the severely mentally ill King Otto.
Ludwig was a direct descendant of both the French King Louis XIV and the Norman Duke and English King William of Normandy.
3. The UK and France issued (maybe. . .it might have been November 9) the Anglo French Declaration retroactively declaring their war aims in the fight against the Ottoman Empire to have been the "complete and final" liberation of nations that had been part of the Ottoman Empire.
4. The U.S. Third Army was established at Chaumont, France. It would not see a mission until after the Armistice.
5. The English fishing smack Conster hit a mine and sank.
1922. Democrat William B. Ross won election to the Governor's office, defeating John W. Hay, a Republican who had defeated the incumbent Republican Governor Robert D. Carey for the GOP ticket.
Ross.
The Republican Party was split due to the extremely contentious primary race and Ross was able to use this to appeal to Carey's supporters through his strong Prohibition stance. The 48 year old Carey was a lawyer by profession.
Democrat John B. Kendrick won a second term to the Senate, defeating Congressman Frank W. Mondell who was the Majority Leader of the U.S. House of Representatives at the time.
Replacing Mondell was Charles E. Winter, a lawyer from Casper who had also been a State District Court judge.
Winter.
Winter would serve in that role until 1929, as in 1928 he reprised Mondell's path and attempted unsuccessfully to move to the Senate. He was thereafter the Attorney General of Puerto Rico and then returned to Casper, where he died in 1948. One of my aunts worked for him in his later years, and his son, who lived to be nearly 100, was a lawyer who practiced in the office building which I do and still was when I first worked there.
Winter wrote the lyrics for the song Wyoming, which is one of the two state songs. He was also a novelist.
1944 President Franklin D. Roosevelt won a fourth term in office, defeating Thomas E. Dewey.
1969 Thurmon Arnold, Assistant Attorney General for Antitrust actions in the Roosevelt Administration from 1938 to 1943, and former Mayor of Laramie, born in Laramie, died on date. The Thurman Arnold Building in Washington D. C. is named after him. He was later a Justice of the D. C. Circuit.
1972 President Richard M. Nixon was re-elected in a landslide over Democrat George McGovern.
Cliff Hanson won reelection to the U.S. Senate. Teno Roncalio won reelection against Republican candidate Bill Kidd.
1972. A Sublette County straw poll shows 970
people opposed to, 279 in favor of and 105 undecided on the "Wagon Wheel
Project" which would extract natural gas in the area with five underground
nuclear explosions. Yikes! Attribution: Wyoming State Historical Society.
1976 The Johnson County Library (Carnegie Public Library) was added to the National Register for Historic Places.
2000 George W. Bush was elected president.