DATE: 18 August 2009
CONTACT: Stephanie Turnham
PHONE: 254.933.5243
BELL COUNTY MUSEUM TO OPEN NEW
EXHIBIT ON THE FERGUSONS
The Bell County Museum is pleased to
announce the opening of a new exhibit on Ma and Pa
Ferguson. Meet the Fergusons: Two
Governors for the Price of One will be on view
at the Bell County Museum from September 5 through March
13, 2010.
The opening will feature a tour of
the new exhibit, as well as a performance with Mary Jean
Boston in the role of Miriam Ferguson. Mrs. Boston
originally wrote the performance for the Living Room
Theatre of Salado. Punch and cookies will also be
served at this free event, which will be held from 2-4
pm.
Mrs. Ferguson (1875-1961), a Bell
County native, was the first woman to be elected
governor in Texas. She served two terms as
governor of Texas, 1925-1926 and 1933-34. Her
husband, James E. Ferguson (1871-1944), was also a Bell
County native and served as governor of Texas from 1915
to 1917.
The Bell County Museum is home to the
largest public collection of Ferguson material, donated
by the Ferguson family in 1991. Included in it is
First Lady Miriam Ferguson's inaugural ball gown, worn
at her husband's first inauguration in 1915. Jim
Ferguson's inauguration took place in the House of
Representatives Chamber at the Capitol in Austin.
In The Fergusons of Texas, eldest daughter Ouida
Ferguson Nalle described the setting: "The
Speaker's stand was a grotto for the orchestra; an
electric fountain played water over the background.
Balloons, flags, potted ferns and bunting decorated the
rest of the House, but that electric fountain was really
something!"
The Fergusons were very colorful and
controversial characters in Texas history. Jim, a
charismatic leader and speaker, is known for
improvements in the tenancy system, his anti-prohibition
stance, the creation of new schools, and of the Texas
Highway Department, which he signed into existence on
April 4, 1917. He is also known for his quarrel
with the University of Texas Board of Regents, and his
conviction on ten charges of misapplication of public
funds and embezzlement. The state Senate, as the
High Court of Impeachment, removed Jim from office and
made him unable to hold any public office in the state.
Although Jim tried to run for public
office as Texas governor as well as the presidency under
the American party ticket, he was unsuccessful.
Still very popular with Texas voters, Jim nominated his
wife for the governorship under the slogan, "two
governors for the price of one." Miriam Amanda
Wallace Ferguson won and became the first woman governor
of Texas in 1924.
While Miriam Ferguson's governorship
was marked by controversy (charges of excessive pardons
and political patronage abuses), she defeated the "Klan
man," Felix Robertson, and worked to take away its
power. Her second term (1934-35) during the height
of the Great Depression, was less controversial, but her
liberal pardoning policies continued.
The Bell County Museum is located at
201 North Main in Belton. Museum hours are noon-5
p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. Admission is free.