Texas Cowboys

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Texas Cowboys
Motto"Give the best you have to Texas and the best will come back to you"
TypeService Organization
Established1922
FoundersArno Nowotny & Bill McGill
DirectorAlumni President Eddie Lopez
Location
Websitewww.texascowboys.org

The Texas Cowboys is an honorary student organization at the University of Texas that is currently suspended due to hazing violations. The organization was founded in 1922 by Arno Nowotny and Bill McGill, with the purpose of serving the University of Texas, as well as the surrounding area, with the motto: "Give the best you have to Texas, and the best will come back to you."[1][2] Prior to its suspension in 2019, it was considered one of the "oldest and most elite student organizations" at the university, according to the Dallas Morning News. The Texas Cowboys served as ambassadors of the University of Texas and were present at numerous significant university-sponsored events.

The Texas Cowboys firing Smokey the Cannon.

The Texas Cowboys are most well-known for their responsibility keeping and maintaining Smokey the Cannon, which is present at all Texas Longhorns home football games.[3] Smokey is fired off after "The Eyes of Texas", at the end of every quarter, and after all Texas touchdowns, field goals, kickoffs, and two-point conversions.

History[]

In 1922, two students at the University of Texas at Austin decided to form a club. These two men were head cheerleader Arno Nowotny and Longhorn Band president Bill McGill. In 1922, forty men from all aspects of campus life were chosen by McGill and Nowotny to be the first Texas Cowboys. Throughout its nearly 100 years of existence, becoming a Texas Cowboy became a high honor to its members.

The Texas Cowboys quickly adopted a set of rituals, including using a branding iron to brand themselves on their chests with the organization's logo, paddling, and chasing each other around town to kidnap and then abandon the captured member in the woods, distant roadside, or Town Lake.[4]

In 1953 Smokey the Cannon was created by The University of Texas at Austin's mechanical engineering lab in response to the shotgun blasts often heard at the Red River Rivalry and was then presented in 1954 to the University of Texas by the Texas Cowboys. That same year, the Cowboys began their involvement with and support of The Arc of the Capital Area.

In 1955 Smokey was modified to shoot twin 10-gauge shotgun shells and the revision was renamed "Smokey II" which you can fine a replica at the Texas Cowboys Pavilion and the original in the Denius Hall of Fame at the North Endzone of the DKR Memorial Stadium. Smokey II served the University well until 1988.

On the Monday following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy in 1963, Smokey fired a 21-gun salute to the fallen President during the climactic moment in a public ceremony in front of the state Capitol building.

In 1988, Smokey III, a civil war replica cannon standing six feet tall, weighing 1,200 pounds, and fires four 10-gauge shotgun shells was constructed by Lupton Machine and remains in service to this day.

In 1995, the Texas Cowboys were suspended from the UT campus for five years after one of their New Men, Gabe Higgins, died during a retreat.[5] Independent investigators determined that the Texas Cowboys engaged in eight hazing violations.[5] The organization was already on probation for hazing at the time, and this was the third penalty for hazing in as many years.[6][7] The death of Gabe Higgins, and the ritualized abuse forced on him by the Texas Cowboys, was documented by the young man's mother in a story of his young life cut short by being a Texas Cowboy.[8]

Through the efforts of the Texas Cowboys Alumni Association, the Texas Cowboys were reestablished in 2000 to represent and serve the University of Texas at Austin with spirit, character and leadership.[9]

In 2019, the Texas Cowboys were suspended from the UT campus for six years after one of their New Men, Nicholas Cumberland, died in a car crash returning from a retreat held at a ranch outside of Austin. Nicholas's death prompted a university investigation into the retreat, which discovered multiple forms of hazing and led to the group's suspension. [10] The Texas Cowboys have accepted the terms of their suspension and are committed along with the university to ending hazing.[11]

Additionally, the President of The University of Texas at Austin agrees to hold a meeting in January and August of each year, beginning in 2022, to evaluate whether the Texas Cowboys student organization may be reinstated at a point in time prior to the completion of the sanctioned suspension. The President will consider the Texas Cowboys alumni efforts to help the university eliminate hazing, the proposed future benefits to the university's efforts to eliminate hazing arising from a newly constituted Texas Cowboys student organization, and the merits of proposed reforms to the Texas Cowboys student organization and alumni association.[11]

Distinguished alumni[]

Political and judicial figures

University figures

Athletes and coaches

Others

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Directory of Alumni
  2. ^ of Active Members[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ Smokey the Cannon "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2004-10-22. Retrieved 2010-08-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. ^ "The Rise, Fall, and Return of the Texas Cowboys". Issuu.
  5. ^ a b Communications, Emmis (March 1995). The Alcalde. Emmis Communications. p. 31 – via Internet Archive. texas cowboys disbanded 1995.
  6. ^ Holmes, Michael. "U of Texas Student Group Banned After Student Drowning". AP NEWS.
  7. ^ "Hazing Death Punishment Reinstated - The Spokesman-Review". www.spokesman.com.
  8. ^ Harten, Ruth (29 March 2019). The Cowboy's Secret: A Story about Hazing: Gabe Higgins, 1975-1995. Trafford Publishing. ISBN 9781412085687 – via Google Books.
  9. ^ When the Smoke Cleared: The Rise, Fall, and Return of the Texas Cowboys "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-09-20. Retrieved 2010-08-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  10. ^ "UT suspends Texas Cowboys for 6 years for hazing".
  11. ^ a b Allen, Rebekah (7 June 2019). "Texas Cowboys accept 6-year suspension for hazing, but UT-Austin leaves door open for faster return". Dallas Morning News.
  12. ^ "TU EX-Student Leader Jailed In Slaying; Malcolm E. Wallace Charged in Death of Golf Professional". Valley Morning Star. Harlingen, Texas. October 24, 1951. p. 1.
  13. ^ Jones, Garth (August 14, 1985). "Federal Official's Death Certificate Ordered Changed". The Victoria Advocate. Victoria, Texas. AP. p. 8A. Retrieved June 16, 2014.
  14. ^ Dalton, Kyle. "Butler Pitch and Putt in Austin: Murder in the clubhouse, fun on the golf course". www.golftexas.com. Retrieved June 16, 2014.

External links[]

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