80R15927 MMS-D
 
  By: Bohac H.C.R. No. 151
 
HOUSE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
       WHEREAS, The State of Texas boasts a richly diverse cultural
heritage, and through the years it has adopted a number of tangible
representations of that heritage as official symbols; and
       WHEREAS, For nearly a century, the cowboy boot has enjoyed a
special status as one of the most treasured of Texas icons; and
       WHEREAS, Although riding boots date back for centuries, and
although ranches first appeared in Texas during the Spanish
colonial era, the basic pattern of the cowboy boot was forged in the
crucible of the post-Civil War trail drives; between 1866 and 1890,
mounted cowboys drove millions of head of Texas cattle to northern
and western markets along such famous trails as the Chisholm,
Western, and Goodnight-Loving; and
       WHEREAS, Boot makers in Texas and Kansas responded to
suggestions from those cowboys regarding the design of their
footwear, and a slimmer boot with a higher heel, more rounded toe,
and rounded, reinforced instep began to be developed; and
       WHEREAS, During the course of the 20th century, cowboy boots
gained a mass appeal that ultimately extended to foreign lands;
this popularity was driven by an enthusiasm for the West that was
fostered in the 1920s and 1930s by radio shows and movie serials and
in the post-World War II decades by rodeos and dude ranches; the
public's fascination with cowboys and their apparel has also been
fired by movie screen idols such as Tom Mix, by entertainers such as
Gene Autry, Roy Rogers, and Dale Evans, and, in recent years, by
movies such as Urban Cowboy and Silverado; and
       WHEREAS, The lore of the cowboy boot is replete with the names
of Texas boot makers who have contributed to the emergence of that
boot as a distinct type, as well as to the continuing development of
their craft; one of the most influential of the early boot makers
was H. J. "Big Daddy Joe" Justin, who set up a boot repair shop in
Spanish Fort, just off the Chisholm Trail in Montague County, in
1879; within a decade, Mr. Justin became one of the first to offer
cowboy boots by mail order; and
       WHEREAS, Other Texas boot makers whose businesses gained
national prominence were Mr. Justin's daughter, Enid Justin
Steltzer, who established the Nocona Boot Company in Nocona in
1925, Sam Lucchese, who founded the Lucchese Boot and Shoe Factory
in San Antonio in 1883, and Tony Lama, who began with a shoe repair
shop in El Paso in 1912; and
       WHEREAS, Smaller establishments also hold an honored place in
the annals of the cowboy boot; in 2002, more than 100 cowboy-boot
makers were plying their trade in this state, many of them revered
by connoisseurs who were willing to wait for periods of a year or
more for a custom pair; these artisans were making boots for
everyone from working cowboys to sports and entertainment
celebrities and heads of state; and
       WHEREAS, While they hew to a basic form, cowboy boots have
evolved into an amazingly versatile article; fashioned with a
variety of toe and heel styles, types of leather, and
embellishment, they can be worn today on virtually any occasion; so
remarkable has been their diversity that they have been the subject
of several coffee-table books and at least two exhibitions: "These
Boots Are Made for Gawking," at the Grace Museum in Abilene, and
"Heels and Toes and Everything Goes: Cowboy Boots As Art," at the
Panhandle-Plains Historical Museum in Canyon; and
       WHEREAS, An integral part of cowboy gear, cowboy boots played
a valued role in one of the defining chapters in Texas history and
continue to figure in the mythic romance of the Lone Star State;
now, therefore, be it
       RESOLVED, That the 80th Legislature of the State of Texas
hereby designate the cowboy boot as the official State Footwear of
Texas.