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(February 1, 1825 - April 21, 1894)
Trained as a physician, Throckmorton disliked medicine and in 1851 entered law and politics. He served 1851-57 in the Texas Legislature, where he promoted railroad building. Later he became attorney for Texas and Pacific Railroad. He was State Senator, 1857-61 and 1863-65.
Although he upheld the right of secession, he was one of seven men who voted against Texas leaving the Union at the Feb. 1861 Secession Convention. During the Civil War (1861-65), he fought in the Confederate Army. Elected Governor in the summer of 1866, he grappled with postwar problems of frontier defense and Federal military occupation. In July 1867 Gen. Philip H. Sheridan, Commander of the 5th Military District to which Texas was assigned, removed Throckmorton from office as "an impediment to Reconstruction" and named E.M. Pease provisional governor. Throckmorton continued his political career in the U.S. Congress, serving his North Texas district in 1875-79 and 1883-87.
US-75, E. side service rd., @ Throckmorton Rd. exit, 7¾ miles N. of McKinney,
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