William Roy Cousins Explained

William Roy "W. R." Cousins
State Senate:Texas
District:4th
Term Start:January 28, 1929
Term End:January 8, 1935
Predecessor:Henry F. Triplett
Successor:Allan Shivers
State Senate1:Texas
District1:14th
Term Start1:January 14, 1919
Term End1:January 13, 1925
Predecessor1:Vinson Allen Collins
Successor1:Richard Saffarrans Bowers
Birth Date:26 January 1881
Birth Place:Beaumont, Texas, U.S.
Party:Democratic
Children:2
Profession:Attorney, judge

William Roy Cousins was a Texas Democratic politician and a member of the Texas Senate from 1913 and 1934. He also served as a school superintendent before becoming a county magistrate judge. He left the bench and entered into private practice in 1934 and worked as an attorney until his death in 1976.[1]

Family

Cousins had two sons, Wilfred Roy Cousins, who would eventually succeed him as a state senator,[2] and Weldon Cousins, who served the state of Louisiana as an assistant attorney general.[1]

Political career

Texas Senate

Cousins served in the Senate of Texas for 24 years, representing Beaumont and Jefferson Counties.[1]

Among his numerous legislative achievements included the first medical practice act passed in the state of Texas, as well as the creation of the Stephen F. Austin State University in Nacogdoches, Texas, one of four independent public universities in Texas. He also authored and sponsored the bill which authorized the building of the Rainbow Bridge (originally named the Port Arthur-Orange Bridge) between Orange County and Port Arthur.

Notes and References

  1. January 13, 1977 . In Memory of W. R. Cousins, Sr. . Senate Journal . 79.
  2. 1987 . In Memory of Wilfred Roy Cousins . Journal of the Senate of the State of Texas, First and Second Called Sessions of the Seventieth Legislature, Volume 4, Legislative Document, 1987 . 310.