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    • The Texas Cowboys is an honorary student service organization at the University of Texas at Austin. The organization was founded in 1922 with the purpose of serving the University of Texas and maintaining Smokey the Cannon. It is considered one of the "oldest and most elite student organizations" at the university. Among its alumni are national politicians, two Texas Governors, prominent businessmen, and professional athletes.


      Purpose



      The Texas Cowboys serve as ambassadors of the University of Texas and are present at numerous significant university-sponsored events. They are most well-known for their responsibility keeping and maintaining Smokey the Cannon, which is present at all Texas Longhorns home football games.


      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.
      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 find 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 2019, the University of Texas at Austin suspended the Texas Cowboys spirit group from campus for six years following an investigation into alleged hazing during a retreat in 2018, where new members were subjected to physical brutality, forced ingestion of unwanted substances, and coerced consumption of alcohol.


      Distinguished alumni


      Political and judicial figures

      Dolph Briscoe - 41st Governor of Texas
      Allan Shivers - 37th Governor of Texas
      Lloyd Bentsen - Former United States Secretary of the Treasury, United States Senator from Texas, 1988 Vice Presidential Nominee
      Donald Evans - Former United States Secretary of Commerce, chairman of the George W. Bush presidential campaign, chairman of the Board of Regents of the University of Texas System
      Jack Brooks - Former member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Texas' 9th and 2nd districts
      Frank N. Ikard - Former member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Texas' 13th district
      Bob Armstrong - Former U.S. Under Secretary of the Interior, Texas Land Commissioner, and Texas state representative
      George Bayoud - Former Secretary of State of Texas, real estate investor
      Lloyd Hand - Former Chief of Protocol of the United States
      Keith L. Brown - Former president of the Council of American Ambassadors, United States Ambassador to Denmark and Lesotho
      Robert Strauss - Former United States Ambassador to the Soviet Union, chairman of the Democratic National Committee, chairman of the Jimmy Carter presidential campaign
      Peter R. Coneway - Former United States Ambassador to Switzerland and Liechtenstein, prominent investment banker
      John Hill - Former Chief Justice, Supreme Court of Texas, Texas Attorney General, Secretary of State of Texas
      Barefoot Sanders - Retired Chief Judge, United States District Court
      John Singleton - Retired Chief Judge, United States District Court
      Sam Sparks - Federal Judge, United States District Court
      Joe Greenhill - Former Chief Justice, Supreme Court of Texas
      Four Price - Current member, Texas House of Representatives
      University figures

      Jack Blanton - Former regent of the University of Texas System, chairman and CEO of Scurlock Oil Company
      Larry Faulkner - Former president of the University of Texas, former president of Houston Endowment Inc.
      Ricardo Romo - President of the University of Texas at San Antonio
      H. Scott Caven, Jr. - Former chairman of the Board of Regents of the University of Texas System
      Wales Madden - Former regent of the University of Texas System
      Patrick Oxford - Former regent of the University of Texas System
      Howard N. Richards - Former regent of the University of Texas System
      W. Page Keeton - Former attorney, dean of the University of Texas School of Law
      Mike Perrin - Former Men's Athletics Director
      Athletes and coaches

      Tom Landry - Former head coach, Dallas Cowboys, member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame
      David McWilliams - Former head football coach, University of Texas
      Earl Campbell - Former running back, Heisman Trophy winner, member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame
      Tommy Nobis - Former linebacker, Maxwell Award winner, member of the College Football Hall of Fame
      Doug English - Former defensive tackle, 4-time Pro Bowl selection, member of the College Football Hall of Fame
      Colt McCoy - Quarterback, New York Giants, Maxwell Award winner
      Scottie Scheffler - Golfer, 2022 Masters Tournament champion
      Beau Hossler - Golfer, led the 2012 U.S. Open at 17-years-old
      Will Licon - Swimmer, 11-time NCAA Champion, American Record-holder, 2017 Big 12 Athlete of the Year
      Cullen Loeffler - Long snapper, Minnesota Vikings
      Daron Roberts - Former assistant coach, Cleveland Browns
      Kramer Hickok - Golfer, PGA Tour Canada's player of the year in 2017
      Major Applewhite - Head Coach, University of Houston
      James Saxton - College Football Hall of Fame
      Others

      James T. Willerson - President and medical director of The Texas Heart Institute
      Denton Cooley - Renowned heart surgeon, founder of The Texas Heart Institute
      Harley Clark - Former judge, attorney, and UT student body president; creator of the "Hook 'em Horns" hand sign
      Benno C. Schmidt, Sr. - Former attorney and venture capitalist
      Thomas Lumpkin - Former president of Gulf Oil
      Ronald Steinhart - Retired chairman and CEO of the Commercial Banking Group of Bank One Corporation
      Malcolm Wallace, former UT student body president, economist for the United States Department of Agriculture, and press secretary to then-United States Senator Lyndon B. Johnson.


      Suspension and Return


      The Cowboys have been suspended and returned after two incidents on campus.
      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. Independent investigators determined that the Texas Cowboys engaged in eight hazing violations. The organization was already on probation for hazing at the time, and this was the third penalty for hazing in as many years. The Texas Cowboys were reestablished in 2000.
      In 2019, the Texas Cowboys were suspended from the UT campus for six years for hazing violations. 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 that led to the group's suspension, including forced ingestion of unwanted substances (including cat food), coerced animal cruelty (namely biting a hamster's head off), and physical brutality. The Texas Cowboys accepted the terms of their suspension.
      In 2023, The University of Texas granted the Texas Cowboys provisional permission to return to campus. This decision is part of the university's Nine Dimensions of Successful Student Organizations program, which aims to foster accountability and address hazing within student groups. As part of their return, the Texas Cowboys are now required to follow the Nine Dimensions program, which includes self-reflection, value definition, behavior expectations, governance establishment, and the promotion of an anti-hazing culture. Oversight for these requirements is provided by the Office of the Dean of Students. As of 2023, the Texas Cowboys are officially back on campus, operating under these revised guidelines.


      See also


      Texas Silver Spurs


      References




      External links


      Texas Panhellenic Fraternities http://www.texaspanhellenic.org/
      Texas Cowboys Alumni Association http://www.texascowboys.org/

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