he Governor's
Mansion, the most historic house in Texas, sits on a beautifully
landscaped city block in Austin near the Capitol building. Built
in 1856, it is the oldest continuously occupied executive residence
west of the Mississippi. The building has been designated a National
Historic Landmark.
After independence from Mexico in 1836, the location of Texas'
capital changed frequently in the early years, making it difficult
to provide permanent housing for its chief executive. The best attempt
came in 1842 during the Republic, when a large "President's House"
was constructed in Austin. Like other early wooden buildings in
Austin, it soon fell into ruin and was torn down. However, some
of the furnishings were saved and placed in the Governor's Mansion
after that building was completed.
Texas became a state in 1845, but not until 1854 did the Legislature
appropriate $14,500 for construction of a "suitable residence" for
the Governor of Texas. The contract was awarded to Austin master
builder Abner Cook, who adapted the popular Greek Revival style
of architecture to the frontier. Cook was a diversified businessman.
He owned a clay pit on the Colorado River which produced the buff-colored
bricks used in the Mansion and had an interest in the Bastrop sawmill
which supplied the lumber.
The design for the house included a deep veranda, floor-length
windows and wide hallways to provide cooling ventilation in summer,
features that Cook used in many houses he constructed for prominent
Austinites. The "X-and-Stick" balustrades on the porch were his
trademark. The square plan of the structure placed four main rooms
on each floor, two on either side of a broad central hall. A rear
wing held a kitchen and servant's quarters. This simple two story
design was impressively proportioned; twenty-nine foot Ionic columns
across the front spanned ceiling heights of sixteen feet downstairs
and thirteen feet upstairs.
The house was completed on June 14, 1856--six months later than
specified in the contract. During that time, the builder had to
pay the Governor's rent in a boarding house. Texas's fifth Governor,
Elisha Marshall Pease, his wife, Lucadia, and their daughters became
the Mansion's first residents. Obtaining appropriate furnishings
in the remote capital was very difficult, and Mrs. Pease was appalled
by the cost of furniture. The Legislature's $2,500 appropriation
didn't go very far, so the Peases made the house more comfortable
by using their own furniture. Even then, some of the bedrooms remained
unfurnished, and difficulty in maintaining the great house plagued
every Governor for more than a century.
Sam Houston, frontier legend and hero of the Texas Revolution,
was elected Governor in 1859. Because of the Mansion's sparse furnishings,
Houston ordered the massive mahogany four-poster bed which is now
located in the southeast bedroom. Temple Lea Houston, Sam and Margaret's
eighth child, became the first baby born in that bed and in the
Mansion. He was the final addition to a mischievous troupe of siblings.
Five year old Andrew Jackson Houston once locked members of the
Legislature in their chamber and hid the key. Threats of a whipping
had no effect, and only when Governor Houston threatened to have
him arrested was the key produced. (Houston admitted, however, that
his son had done a better job of controlling the Legislature than
the Governor himself!)
Other first families were equally rambunctious. James Stephen Hogg,
the first native born Texas governor, took office in 1891. Hogg's
four children, when not occupied by their collection of dogs, cats,
squirrels, raccoons and exotic birds, could be found indoors sliding
down the sweeping stair rail. After his youngest son fell off, an
exasperated Governor Hogg hammered tacks down the banister and ended
the fun. Visitors may still inspect the filled nail holes.
In 1901, Texas First Lady Orline Sayers redecorated the Mansion
in late Victorian style--fancy parlor furniture set amid a forest
of potted plants-- to receive Texas' first Presidential visitor,
William McKinley and members of his cabinet. Anger over the Civil
War still ran high in Texas, and Governor Joseph D. Sayers, a Confederate
veteran, and President McKinley, a former Union officer, set an
example of reconciliation during an elegant state dinner in the
Mansion dining room.
By 1914 the Mansion stood in dire need of repair. During the term
of Governor Oscar Colquitt, the original kitchen wing was demolished
to make room for an addition to the back of the main house. This
included a new family dining room on the main floor and additional
living space upstairs. A new enlarged kitchen wing was then built;
this completed the Mansion's basic floor plan which remains today.
The grounds went through many changes until the l960s when First
Lady Nellie Connally guided the landscaping of the formal gardens
still in use.
By 1979 the Mansion had served Texas' governors for more than 120
years. With the support of Governor and Mrs. William P. Clements,
the Legislature appropriated $1 million for a complete structural
restoration. The Friends of the Governor's Mansion, a non-profit
organization, raised an additional $3 million in private donations
to refurbish the interiors. By 1982 the house was thoroughly repaired
and furnished with an outstanding collection of 19th century American
antiques. Today, visitors to the Mansion may view an important collection
of portraits and furniture including Stephen F. Austin's writing
desk and the sofa donated to the Mansion by descendants of Governor
Pease. Also on display is the Governor's Memento Collection developed
in the l960s by First Lady Jean Houston Daniel, a descendent of
Sam Houston and the wife of Governor Price Daniel. These heirlooms
were presented to the Texas Governor's Mansion on behalf of every
First Family to have lived in the house.