Inscription
The only new agency created by legislature to deal with wartime emergencies. Original members were the Governor, Comptroller and Treasurer. The last two in 1864 were replaced by appointees of the Governor. Purpose was to establish industry and purchase essential military and civilian supplies. Texas was largely dependent on imports for factory goods, so the Board had to sustain foreign trade, despite a Federal coastal blockade.
This was done through neutral Mexico and by use of swift blockade runners. The Board sold and exchanged state bonds, U.S. indemnity bonds and cotton--which had a ready cash and exchange value abroad--for guns, powder, copper, lead, hats, boots, shoes, clothing, cloth, rope, blankets, cotton cards and machinery to start local industry.
Agents of the Board operated in Mexico and Europe. A percussion cap factory and a state foundry for cannon were built. By contracts, land grants and cash, private enterprise was aided and encouraged to manufacture rifles, pistols and gunpowders. Lack of funds, poor transportation, competition for cotton and other wartime difficulties hampered effectiveness, but the Board did much to make Texas "the Storehouse of the Confederacy".
(1965)
Location
Sources
More markers in Travis
George W. Sampson Home
Austin, TX
Former confederate Army Captain and leading Austin merchant George W.Sampson (1825-88), Married Mary Goodwin Hall (b.1845), niece of Gov....
State Bar of Texas
Austin, TX
On July 15, 1882, a volunteer organization of Texas attorneys known as the Texas Bar Association, was established in Galveston, with...
Third Site for Travis County Government
Austin, TX
Courthouse built here in 1939, 91st year of Travis County, which in early Texas was in municipality of Mina (later Bastrop), or Travis...
Ira Hobart Evans
Austin, TX
(April 11, 1844 - April 19, 1922) Born in New Hampshire, Ira H.Evans grew up in Vermont.
Hirshfeld Cottage
Austin, TX
German native Henry Hirshfeld (1834-1911) migrated to the United States at the age of fifteen.
