Joshua Houston (1822-1902)

January 30, 2007 
/ Contributed By: Bernadette Pruitt

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Joshua Houston|

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The trusted slave of legendary Texas independence leader and later governor, Sam Houston, Joshua Houston, after Emancipation, succeeded in business and politics, founded numerous institutions, and became a symbol of racial autonomy and progress. Born a slave in 1822 and later willed to Margaret Lea of Marion, Alabama, Joshua was brought to Texas in 1840 with Lea to unite with her new husband, President Sam Houston of the Republic of Texas. Unlike many slaveholders of the time, President Houston encouraged his slaves to read and write.  Joshua Houston became literate and was soon known in the region as intelligent and industrious. Joshua Houston, as servant to President Houston, became a well-known coachman of public dignitaries.  He was also the blacksmith and wheelwrignt.

In 1862, an infirmed Sam Houston, who as governor opposed secession, freed Joshua and his entire slave staff.  Months later, a grateful Joshua Houston offered penniless Sam Houston’s widow Margaret Lea Houston $2,000 in gold, his life savings.  She refused the gesture, and encouraged him instead to use the money for his family.  Houston married three women in his lifetime and had eight children, including Atlanta University graduate and celebrated educator Samuel Walker Houston.

Freedman Houston bought property, built a home, and opened a prosperous blacksmith shop.  Houston and other freedmen then in 1867 founded the Union Church, Huntsville, Texas’s first black institution.  He also led the effort to establish a small school for African American children in the same community.  Joshua Houston entered local politics, serving as a Republican alderman in Huntsville and county commissioner in Walker County.  A lifelong advocate of education, he secured funding for the building in 1883 of another school, Bishop Ward Normal and Collegiate Institute. His son, Samuel Walker Houston, in turn, founded the first high school for black students. Joshua Houston died in 1902 in Huntsville, Texas.  He was 80.

Author Profile

Detroit, Michigan, native Bernadette Pruitt is an associate professor of history at Sam Houston State University in Huntsville, Texas. She teaches classes on race and ethnicity, internal migrations, slavery, long civil rights, Recent United States history, and the African Diaspora. A 2010 Distinguished Alumna of The Graduate School at Texas Southern University (BA, Journalism, 1989; and MA, History, 1991), she earned her PhD in History from The University of Houston in 2001. Pruitt is the author of one book, The Other Great Migration: The Movement of Rural African Americans to Houston, 1900-1941 (College Station: Texas A. & M. University Press, 2013); and she has written numerous scholarly articles, book chapters, reference essays, and book reviews about Black urban life, Black Texas, and the history of Houston. She is currently studying African American women historians in the Texas academy, as well as examining World War II Black Texas and the Second Great Migration. The scholar has won several awards including the Ottis Lock Book Award with the East Texas Historical Association; two postdoctoral fellowships with the University of Illinois at Chicago African American Studies Department, and Center for Africanameican Urban Studies and the Economy (CAUSE) and Department of History at Carnegie-Mellon University; a dissertation fellowship from the Department of African American Studies at the University of Houston; and numerous other research and travel awards from the Texas State Historical Association, Dolph Briscoe Research Center at the University of Texas at Austin, and the Huggins-Quarles Award committee with the Organization of American Historians. Pruitt currently serves as a board member for the East Texas Historical Association and Texas state Historical Association. Pruitt also co-advises two student organizations, Phi Alpha Theta National History Honor Society and Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Pruitt, B. (2007, January 30). Joshua Houston (1822-1902). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/houston-joshua-1822-1902/

Source of the Author's Information:

Patricia Smith Prather and Jane Clements Monday, From Slave to Statesman: The Legacy of Joshua Houston, Servant to Sam Houston (Denton: University of North Texas Press, 1993); Thomas H. Kreneck, “Samuel Houston,” in The New  Handbook of Texas, V. 3 (Austin: Texas State Historical Association, 1996), 717-20.

Further Reading