Posted on 05/01/2018 7:20:08 AM PDT by Rebeleye
Robert E. Lee Road and Jeff Davis Avenue are no more after the Austin City Council on Thursday voted to remove the names of the Confederate leaders from the two Austin streets that bear their names.
...most of the residents who responded to surveys from the city objected to the proposed name changes....
Instead the road that ambles along Barton Creek into the Zilker neighborhood will be named for Azie Taylor Morton, the countrys first and only black U.S. treasurer, who grew up and went to college in Austin. Its official designation will be Azie Morton Road.
In the Brentwood neighborhood in North Austin, the street that was presumably named for the president of the Confederacy will now be named for William Holland, an African-American Travis County commissioner who served in the state Legislature and founded the Deaf, Dumb and Blind Institute for Colored Youth in Austin in 1887, a precursor to the Texas School for the Blind.
(Excerpt) Read more at statesman.com ...
Instead the road that ambles along Barton Creek into the Zilker neighborhood will be named for Azie Taylor Morton, the countrys first and only black U.S. treasurer, who grew up and went to college in Austin. Its official designation will be Azie Morton Road. In the Brentwood neighborhood in North Austin, the street that was presumably named for the president of the Confederacy will now be named for William Holland, an African-American Travis County commissioner who served in the state Legislature and founded the Deaf, Dumb and Blind Institute for Colored Youth in Austin in 1887, a precursor to the Texas School for the Blind. The vote was 10-0 with City Council Member Ellen Troxclair absent from the meeting.
While most of the residents who responded to surveys from the city objected to the proposed name changes, the lions share of speakers at City Hall on Thursday were in favor of the revisions.
There’s Texas, and then there’s Austin.
At least someone will make a buck changing the signs.
Minority-fronted contractor no doubt.
Black Treasurer Road
Ha ha ha lol lmao ha ha hee ha Ha ha ha ha!
Austin’s embarrassment of the Texas keeps rolling on.
They reallly wanted to name them Poncho Villa Street and General Santa Anna Street.
Doesn’t seem quite right that EVERY street named after a Confederate hero now must to be changed to that of a Negro, or some Civil Rights pablum like Emancipation Boulevard. If they (the people) want to change the names, which they don’t, name them after someone or something of note, but qualifications should be broader than “the first black ....”.
Liberal politicians never listen to what the little people want.
Even the ones who wear R jerseys.
I still remember when Austin changed 19th Street to MLK and 1st Street to Cesar Chavez. So Austin now has a 2nd Street but no 1st Street and 18th and 20th Streets but no 19th.
If they are determined to change one of the numbered streets, I could never figure out why they didn’t change 38 & 1/2 Street.
Attendance by blacks is about 20-40% daily with black employment there over 50%.
Life is horrible.
Let’s just pretend the Civil War never happened.
Like in NYC when they changed Sixth Avenue to Avenue of the Americas.
Austin is Texas’ Detroit.
Not to worry. When Jorge P. Bush becomes Texas Governor thanks to his family's power and connections, that's exactly what will happen.
Why dont they like those famous civil war democrats?
The south was ALL democrats. A republican didnt have a chance of being elected in the old south, and that didnt change much until the 1970s!
Even if the council had listened to the residents, the pressure to denigrate history wouldn’t have let up. They would have gone to federal courts to ‘make’ the city change the names.
Typical screw the peon liberal attitude. Jes keepin’ ‘em on the plantation. Like lbj said a little somethin’ here a little somethin’ there.....................
The Alamo will be re-dedicated as a Hispanic victory.
They changed the main street that runs through our black part of town to Martin Luther King Blvd 30 years ago or so. People from here still call it Cottonwood, the original name. lol
An American history book I used neglected the Wright brothers, but did have space for the woman who started the first black kindergarten in Los Angeles. Have no idea who started the first kindergarten in L.A. or the first school for that matter. Google “American Inventors” or “American Scientists” and see what you get.
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