By: Shofner (Senate Sponsor - Nichols) H.C.R. No. 93
         (In the Senate - Received from the House May 5, 2025;
  May 5, 2025, read first time and referred to Committee on
  Administration; May 12, 2025, reported favorably by the following
  vote:  Yeas 7, Nays 0; May 12, 2025, sent to printer.)
Click here to see the committee vote
 
 
HOUSE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
 
  WHEREAS, The Lone Star State is renowned for the beauty and
  diversity of its many public gardens and parks and for the
  dedication its residents have demonstrated to preserving and
  sustaining these oases of greenery; and
         WHEREAS, While outstanding gardens can be found in many
  communities throughout the state, the city of Nacogdoches has
  distinguished itself for the number and variety of its green and
  flowering public spaces; and
         WHEREAS, Nacogdoches is located on a site once occupied by
  members of the Nacogdoche tribe, a group of the Caddo people whose
  culture was based on farming; a Spanish mission was established
  there in 1716, and the town has been a civil settlement since 1779;
  as early as 1853, the city's gardens were noted in the diary of a
  famous visitor, Frederick Law Olmsted, the landscape architect who
  later designed New York's Central Park and numerous other iconic
  public spaces around the nation; and
         WHEREAS, Today, Nacogdoches helps to preserve the state's
  horticultural heritage through re-creations of traditional gardens
  at the Durst-Taylor Historic House and Gardens, the Sterne-Hoya
  House Museum and Library, Millard's Crossing Historic Village, and
  the Old Nacogdoches University Building; and
         WHEREAS, The city's splendid green spaces also include
  Eugenia Sterne Park, Margil Park, Zion Hill Baptist Church
  Cemetery, Oak Grove Cemetery, and the Pocket Park and the Plaza
  Principal in the historic downtown; moreover, Liberty Memorial
  Garden commemorates with dignity and grace the lives lost during
  the tragic events of 9/11; and
         WHEREAS, Nacogdoches is home to Stephen F. Austin State
  University, which is landscaped with overstory and ornamental trees
  to maintain the Pineywoods ecosystem and the natural beauty of the
  campus; the university's 138 acres of gardens include the SFA Mast
  Arboretum, the Pineywoods Native Plant Center, the Gayla Mize
  Garden, the Jim and Beth Kingham Children's Garden, the Plantery,
  and Jimmy Hinds Park; in addition, the Baldcypress Collection and
  the Crape Myrtle Collection are renowned for their impressive
  display of those species; each year, SFA Gardens hosts programs
  that provide information on sustainable gardening and the
  preservation of native plants, while the Nacogdoches Independent
  School District supports initiatives that encourage students to
  maintain and study gardens on the grounds of their schools; and
         WHEREAS, Home of the annual Nacogdoches Azalea Trail each
  March, the community was the first to be recognized as part of the
  Azalea Society of America's Azalea City Program in 2004 and was
  recertified in 2012; the Ruby M. Mize Azalea Garden on the SFA
  campus is the largest such garden in the state, with more than 7,000
  evergreen and native azaleas on display; another of the city's
  notable sites is the Nacogdoches County Master Gardeners
  Demonstration Garden on the former site of Aqua Vitae Park, which
  was developed by the Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service in
  cooperation with the city and Nacogdoches County; and
         WHEREAS, The thoughtful cultivation of the splendor of nature
  is one of the most sublime expressions of the human spirit, and the
  skill and devotion with which the city of Nacogdoches has showcased
  its lovely trees and flowering plants is indeed deserving of
  special recognition; now, therefore, be it
         RESOLVED, That the 89th Legislature of the State of Texas
  hereby designate Nacogdoches as the official Garden Capital of
  Texas; and, be it further
         RESOLVED, That, in accordance with the provisions of
  Section 391.003(e), Government Code, this designation remain in
  effect until the 10th anniversary of the date this resolution is
  finally passed by the legislature.
 
  Designating Nacogdoches as the official Garden Capital of Texas for
  a 10-year period ending in 2035.
 
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