Once Upon a Time in Texas: A Liberal in the Lone Star State

Once Upon a Time in Texas: A Liberal in the Lone Star State

by David Richards
Once Upon a Time in Texas: A Liberal in the Lone Star State

Once Upon a Time in Texas: A Liberal in the Lone Star State

by David Richards

eBook

$13.49  $17.99 Save 25% Current price is $13.49, Original price is $17.99. You Save 25%.

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

A prominent lawyer colorfully recounts a lost and lamented era in Texas politics: “Fascinating . . . Vivid, insightful commentary.” —Houston Chronicle
 
Once upon a time in Texas, there were liberal activists of various stripes who sought to make the state more tolerant (and more tolerable). David Richards was one of them.
 
In this fast-paced, often humorous memoir, he remembers the players, the strategy sessions, the legal and political battles, and the wins and losses that brought significant gains in civil rights, voter rights, labor law, and civil liberties to the people of Texas from the 1950s to the 1990s. In his work as a lawyer, Richards was involved in cases addressing the historic exclusion of minority voters; inequity in school funding; free speech violations, and more. In telling these stories, he vividly evokes the glory days of Austin liberalism, when a who’s who of Texas activists plotted strategy at watering holes such as Scholz Garden and the Armadillo World Headquarters or on raft trips down the Rio Grande and Guadalupe Rivers.
 
Likewise, he offers vivid portraits of liberal politicians from Ralph Yarborough to Ann Richards (his former wife), progressive journalists such as Molly Ivins and the Texas Observer staff, and the hippies, hellraisers, and musicians who all challenged Texas’s conservative status quo. Written with an insider’s insights, this book records “a sweeter time when a free-associating bunch of ragtag Texans took on the establishment.”
 
“An invaluable memoir of the time.” —Journal of Southern History
 
Includes photos

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780292785953
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Publication date: 02/24/2022
Series: Focus on American History Series
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 296
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

Today, David Richards lives in Mill Valley, California. An attorney in private practice since 1957, he has also served as head of litigation in the Texas Attorney General’s Office, as general counsel for the Texas AFL-CIO, and as a cooperating attorney for the Texas Civil Liberties Union.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments1. Texas, Our Texas2. Coming of Age in Waco and Austin—1950s Style3. Off to Dallas to Practice Law4. The 1960 Election: The New Frontier Beckons5. Returning to Dallas Hat in Hand6. Representing Labor Unions in Dallas, Texas7. Dallas, 1966: The Federal Courts and the Winds of Change8. The Radical Left Shows Up in Texas9. A Gleeful Return to Austin10. Changing the Face of the Texas House of Representatives11. Life and Times with U.S. District Judge Jack Roberts12. The Texas Department of Public Safety Gets Caught Snooping on "Radicals" at the Unitarian Church of Dallas13. Frank Erwin and UT Take on the Rag14. Law and the Counterculture15. Austin Politics--Come the Revolution16. Student Voting Comes of Age17. Redistricting East Texas in the 1970s18. Mad Dog Memories19. Of Time on the River20. A Decade or So of Voting Rights Wars in Texas21. "The Times They Are A-Changing"22. The 1982 Elections: Triumph of the Yarborough Democrats23. The 1990s and the Last Guffaw24. The Trail Doubles Back

What People are Saying About This

Molly Ivins

[David Richards is] one of the best civil-rights lawyers and one of the best all-purpose battlers for justice this state has ever produced. . . . One man/one vote, school desegregation, freedom of speech, the list of cases with David Richards’s name on them as attorney for those getting shafted by unfair and unconstitutional laws goes on and on. So many of them seem self-evident by now. The shame of legal segregation is so clear to us at this point, we forget when it was worth a person’s life to work to change it.

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews