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Anson Jones History

History of Anson Jones Middle School

Anson Jones Middle School is part of the growing Northside Independent School District of San Antonio, Texas. Built in 1971 as Anson Jones Junior High, the first students chose black and gold as their school colors and the cougar as the mascot. In 1973, the sixth grade was added and the school was renamed Anson Jones Middle School. Today, it numbers approximately 1300 students with a faculty and staff of over 100.

Anson Jones has always been one of the more progressive schools in the Northside district. In the mid-eighties, Jones was the first school to implement the concepts of teaming and "schools within schools", a system in which a group of teachers are given about 100 students on a team. This creates a smaller school atmosphere as the teachers are more familiar with their students and work with them in all their classes. After the successful implementation of this system, many other schools in Northside followed the example set by Jones.

Our school was named in honor of the last president of the Republic of Texas, Dr. Anson Jones. In an impressive ceremony, President Jones passed the reins of government over to the United States when Texas became the twenty-eighth state in 1846.

 

Posted August 7, 2008


Anson Jones - Our Namesake

Anson Jones

Jones was born on January 20, 1798 in Great Barrington, Massachusetts. In 1820, Jones was licensed as a doctor by the Oneida, New York, Medical Society, and began medical practice in 1826. He moved to Philadelphia to teach and practicing medicine, until in 1824 he decided to go to Venezuela.

In 1833 Jones headed to Texas, settling eventually in Brazoria. Here, he met with success, establishing a medical practice that prospered quickly. In 1835 he attended The Consultation, a meeting held at Columbia by Texas patriots to discuss independence from Mexico. Jones himself presented a resolution at the Consultation calling for a convention to be held to declare independence, but he himself refused to be nominated to the convention.

During the Texas Revolution, Jones served as a judge advocate and surgeon to the Texas army, though he insisted on holding the rank of private throughout the conflict. After the war, Jones returned to Brazoria and resumed his medical practice.

Jones was elected to the Second Texas Congress. His most significant act in Congress was to call for the withdrawal of the Texas proposal for annexation by the United States. He also helped draw up legislation to regulate medical practice, and called for the establishment of an endowment for a university.

Jones expected to return to his practice at Brazoria after his term in Congress, but Texas President Sam Houston instead appointed him Minister to the United States, where Jones was to formally withdraw the annexation proposal.

During this time, while many Texans hoped to encourage eventual annexation by the United States, there were some who supported waiting for annexation or even remaining independent. The United States, in the late 1830s, was hesitant to annex Texas for fear of provoking a war with Mexico. Jones and others felt it was important that Texas gain recognition from European states and begin to set up trade relations with them, to make annexation of Texas more attractive to the United States or, failing that, to give Texas the strength to remain independent.

Jones was recalled to Texas by new president Mirabeau Lamar in 1839. Back at home, he found himself elected to a partial term in the Senate, where he quickly became a critic of Lamar's administration. He retired from the Senate in 1841, declining the opportunity to serve as Vice President in favor of returning to his medical practice. However, late in 1841 he was named Texas Secretary of State by president Sam Houston, who had been recently been elected president again by opponents of Lamar.

Jones served as Secretary of State until 1844. During his term, the main goal of Texas foreign policy was to get either an offer of annexation from the United States, or a recognition of Texas independence from Mexico, or, preferably, both at the same time.

In September 1844, Jones was elected president of the Republic of Texas, despite running a virtually silent campaign. That November, James K. Polk was elected president of the United States on a promise of Texas annexation. However, Jones held his silence on the subject, preferring to wait for the ideal outcome of simultaneous annexation and independence offers. This proved unpopular. Late in 1844, the Texas Congress declared for joining the United States, and popular sentiment in the republic for annexation grew.

Finally, in June 1845, Jones's emissary to Mexico returned with a treaty recognizing the republic's independence. At last he put the question before the people — accept the offer of annexation from the United States, or sign the independence treaty from Mexico and remain an independent state. The Congress and the people went for annexation.

Preparations began for annexation, and Jones's role as president was greatly diminished. On February 19, 1846, a formal ceremony was held to bring Texas into the United States. Jones, in his last official act, declared that, "The Republic of Texas is no more." Then he retired to Brazoria.

Anson Jones. (2008, July 11). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 01:28, August 8, 2008, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Anson_Jones&oldid=224969165

Posted August 7, 2008



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