my newest publication: "The Affinity of Lawyers & History: The Dallas Bar Association’s Legal History Discussion Group as a Case in Point"

First: —from the website of the Journal of the Texas Supreme Court Historical Society, click on this: www.texascourthistory.org/Content/Newsletters//May%20TSCHS%20Spring%202026.pdf —then on page one click on the hotlinked title of my article: "The Affinity of Lawyers & History: The Dallas Bar Association’s Legal History Discussion Group as a Case in Point"   Second —also available on SSRN: https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=6881519

I agree with this historian

https://newrepublic.com/article/198354/history-died-sanctioned-ignorance

My C.V. (updated June 9, 2026)


Josiah M. Daniel, III

Historian and 
Bankruptcy and Legal Scholar
E: josiah.daniel@austin.utexas.edu 
B: blog-josiahmdaniel3.blogspot.com/

Bio 

       Biographer and Historian

• After almost forty years of law practice, today I am a legal historian with several projects underway. See American Historical Ass’n, Perspectives, https://www.historians.org/publications-and-directories/perspectives-on-history/november-2018/aha-member-spotlight-josiah-m-daniel-iii. I am a Visiting Scholar, Department of History, The University of Texas at Austin, where I did my graduate work and earned the M.A. in history. My J.D. is from UT Austin's law school.
• My primary project is to complete the biography of Dallas congressman Hatton W. Sumners (1875-1962), a complex figure who served in Congress 1913-1947 and chaired the House Judiciary Committee 1931-1947, overlapping the presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt. His "official" papers as House Judiciary chair are in the National Archives, but all the rest of his papers reside in the Dallas Historical Society's archives where I have been reviewing them over the past eight years. 
     One chapter of my biography, formatted as a law-journal article, is just now posted on SSRN. It explains Sumners’s key involvement in the extensive revisions and additions to bankruptcy law enacted during the financial distress of the 1930s, specifically his responsibility for the birth of municipal bankruptcy law:  "The Historiographical Problem of Municipal Bankruptcy Law," papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=5253527
     Another chapter of my book, focusing on Sumners’s role in resolving the 1937 court-packing crisis, was published in 2021 under the title "'What I Said Was "Here Is Where I Cash In"': the Instrumental Role of Congressman Hatton Sumners in the Resolution of the 1937 Court-Packing Crisis," 54 UIC L. Rev. 379 (2021) (available: papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm? abstract_id=3867823 or repository.law.uic.edu/ lawreview/ vol54/iss2/1/). 
     A portion of chapter about Sumners in the late 1920s is posted, under the title “Congressman Hatton W. Sumners’s 1928 Amendment to the Electoral Count Act,” on SSRN at papers.ssrn. com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4086905. 
• One of my longest running projects was recently completed and published in Northern Kentucky Law Review and (unfortunately the article was botched in its editing and so I corrected and revised it immediately thereafter for SSRN. Culminating forty years of research in archives and titled “Cooptation of the Carmack Amendment by the Railroads, 1906-1917: A Study in Associational Lawyering,” this article is now available : papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_ id=4559518. This article demonstrates my conviction that archival research is the key to writing both biography and legal history.
• Nearly completed but on the back burner with this tentative title is “‘Our Very Useful And Honorable Profession’: the Texas Bar Association’s Long and Winding Pathway Toward the Professionalization of Texas Lawyers, 1882-1940."

       Retired Lawyer

• During 39 years of law practice, I represented debtors, lenders, asset purchasers, creditors’ committees, landlords, trustees, and unsecured creditors in corporate and financial restructurings, in cases under Chapters 7, 9, 11, and 13 of the Bankruptcy Code, and in advisory work regarding all aspects of restructuring and insolvency law. 
• I retain my law license, but I am retired from that! In retirement I have written and published analyses and commentaries about bankruptcy as a subject matter, primarily viewed from historical perspective. See, e.g., my Aug. 2024 working paper "Early Ruminations on the Supreme Court's Purdue Pharma Decision," papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4915343; and my essay "AI Chatbots Are Useless for Bankruptcy Lawyering," papers. ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4538847. 
• Also I am pleased to note that my bankruptcy-law article on the topic of executory contracts (listed below) was cited with approval by the First Circuit Court of Appeals in the "reorganization" case of Puerto Rico's governmental entities under the bankruptcy-manqué statute called PROMESA. See In re Fin. Oversight & Mgmt. Bd. for Puerto Rico, 9 F.4th 1, 10 (1st Cir. 2021).

Professional Background 

• Vinson & Elkins LLP, Partner, 1999-2016, Of Counsel, 2017, Retired Partner in Residence, 2018-present 
• Prior law firms: Winstead, Sechrest & Minick, 1986-1999; Underwood, Wilson, Berry, Stein & Johnson, 1978-1986 
• Admitted to practice: Supreme Court of Texas, 1978-present; also: United States Supreme Court; U.S. Courts of Appeal for the Fourth, Fifth, Seventh, and Tenth Circuits; U.S. District Courts for the Northern, Southern (to 2018), Eastern, and Western Districts of Texas 

Education 

• The University of Texas at Austin, M.A., history, 1986 
• The University of Texas School of Law, J.D., 1978 (Member, Texas Law Review)
• Sewanee: The University of the South, B.A., history, 1973 (Phi Beta Kappa) 
 
Publications 

       Legal History and Other Historical articles 

• “Cooptation of the Carmack Amendment by the Railroads, 1906-1917: A Study in Associational Lawyering,” 50 No.Ky. L. Rev. 51 (20-23), corrected and available at: papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4559518.
• “Congressman Hatton W. Sumners's 1929 Amendment to the Electoral Count Act,” 26 LSN Legal History eJournal No. 40 (Apr. 29, 2022).
• “What Can the Past Teach Today’s Bankruptcy Law Students, Lawyers, Judges, and Restructuring Professionals?: An Annotated Bibliography of Histories of Debt and Bankruptcy,” available at SSRN: papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3954504 (Nov. 2021) [see: www.creditslips.org/creditslips/2022/02/
annotated-bibliography-of-histories-of-debt-and-bankruptcy.html]
• "Governor Dan Moody, the Texas Bar, and the Cause of Judicial Reform in Texas During the Late 1920s . . . and to McDonald v. Longley Today," available at SSRN: papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3929505 (Sept. 23, 2021), revising and updating the original version published in 2 Journal of the Texas Supreme Court Historical Society No. 2, 1 (Winter 2012)  
• "The Number Nine: Why the Texas Supreme Court Has the Same Number of Justices as the United States Supreme Court," available at SSRN: papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_ id=3929777 (Sept. 23, 2021), revising and updating the original version published in In Chambers (Summer 2018)  
• "'What I Said was 'Here is Where I Cash In"': the Instrumental Role of Congressman Hatton Sumners in the Resolution of the 1937 Court-Packing Crisis," 54 John Marshall Law Review 379 (June 2021), available here: repository.law.uic.edu/lawreview/vol54/iss2/1/
• “Our Very Useful and Honorable Profession”: The Texas Bar Association’s Work Toward the Professionalization of Texas Lawyers, 1882-1940, forthcoming 
• "LBJ v. Coke Stevenson: Lawyering for Control of the Disputed Texas Democratic Senatorial Primary Election of 1948," 31 Review of Litigation 1 (2012) (Best Law Review Article of the Year, awarded by the Texas Bar Fdn., 2013) 
• "The Lost Law Schools of Texas," 10 Journal of the Texas Supreme Court Historical Society No. 2 at 46 (Winter 2021) (co-author)
• "What’s in a Name?: The History, and Proper Usage, of the Names 'Texas Bar Association' and 'State Bar of Texas,'" In Chambers (Fall 2019) 
• "Dean Page Keeton and Academic Freedom at UT Austin: Three Archival Letters," Not Even Past, notevenpast.org/dean-page-keeton-and-academic-freedom-at-ut-austin-three-archival-letters/ (Oct. 2019); also available at law.utexas.edu/news/2019/
11/06/dean-page-keeton-and-academic-freedom-at-ut-austin-three-archival-letters/ 
• "A Practicing Lawyer’s Tribute to Professor Joseph W. McKnight" (1925-2015), 7 Journal of the Texas Supreme Court Historical Society No. 2 at 18 (2018)
• "Toward the Legal History of Texas: An Evaluation of Death on the Lonely Llano Estacado by Bill Neal," In Chambers at 5 (Fall 2017) 
• "Hatton Sumners and the Retirement of Supreme Court Justices," Not Even Past, http://notevenpast.org/hatton-sumners-and-the-retirement-of-supreme-court-justices/ (Apr. 2017) 
• "LBJ v. Coke Stevenson: Case Changed History and Defined “Lawyering,” Texas Lawbook (July 2012) 
• "Creating the State Bar of Texas, 1927-1941," 45 Texas Bar Journal 455 (1982) 
• “'Chief Justice of the United States':  History and Historiography of the Title," 1983 Supreme Court Historical Yearbook [now, Journal of Supreme Court History] 109 
• "Governor Dan Moody and Business Progressivism in Texas," 1927-1931, M.A. thesis, Univ. of Texas at Austin, 1986  

       The “lawyering” series (in chronological order)

• "A Proposed Definition of the Term 'Lawyering',” 101 Law Library Journal 207 (2009)
• "Lawyering on Behalf of The Nondebtor Party in Anticipation, and During the Course, of an Executory Contract Counterparty's Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Case,"14 Houston Business & Tax Law Journal 230 (2013) 
• "The Landlord’s Rejection-Damage Claim Under Bankruptcy Code § 502(b)(6): Lawyering the Allowed Claim Amount with Graphic and Mathematical Expressions, "31 American Bankruptcy Institute Journal No. 11 (2013) 
• "Am I a 'Licensed Liar'?: An Exploration into the Ethic of Honesty in Lawyering . . . and a Reply of 'No!' to the Stranger in the La Fiesta Lounge, "7 St. Mary’s Journal on Malpractice and Legal Ethics 32 (2016) 
• "Rx for Ailing Rural Public Hospitals: Chapter 9 Bankruptcy and Pro Bono Lawyering, "18 Houston Journal of Health Law & Policy 205 (2018) 
• "'Listserv Lawyering': Definition and Exploration of Its Utility in Representation of Consumer Debtors in Bankruptcy and in Law Practice Generally," 11 St. Mary’s Journal on Malpractice and Legal Ethics (2021) 

       Legal articles 

• "Early Ruminations on the Supreme Court's Purdue Pharma Decision," papers.ssrn.com/sol3/ papers.cfm?abstract_id=4915343 (2024)
• "AI Chatbots Are Useless for Bankruptcy Lawyering," papers. ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4538847 (2023)
• "'Even if a Party Has a Change of Heart': A Framework for Enforcement of Courthouse-Steps Settlements Against Defaulting Parties in Cases and Proceedings in the Texas Bankruptcy Courts," 52 Texas Tech Law Review 199 (2020) 
• "Enforcing a Pipeline Carrier’s Liens," Oil & Gas Financial Journal 34 (May 2017) (Co-author)
• "Chapter 11: Entering a New Generation," Texas Lawbook (Nov. 29, 2011) 
• "The Fraudulent-Transfer Risk In Asset Acquisitions and Investments With Financially Distressed Parties in the United States," 4 Law & Financial Markets Review 32 (2010) 
• "Arbitration in Bankruptcy Cases Under the Jurisprudence of the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals and the District and Bankruptcy Courts in Texas," 43 Texas Journal of Business Law 447 (2009) 
• "Recovering on Unsecured Loans in Chapter 13 Cases of Higher Income Borrowers," 63 Consumer Finance Law Quarterly Report 68 (2009) 
• "Does the Fifth Circuit Need A BAP?," 5 State Bar of Texas, Bankruptcy Law Section, Newsletter No. 3 (2007)  
• "The Oversecured Lender's Entitlement to Postpetition Interest, Fees, Costs, and Charges Pursuant to Section 506(b) of the Bankruptcy Code," 22 Texas Bank Lawyer No. 2, July 1998 
• "The Texas Rule of Estoppel in Zoning Cases," 33 Baylor Law Review 241 (1981) (co-author) 
       Op-eds and Book Reviews

• "Reform the Electoral Count Act," Dallas Morning News, July 1, 2022, dallasnews.com/opinion/ commentary/2022/07/03/reform-the-electoral-count-act/
• ‘Individual right to decide’ fails with virus: Abbott is politicizing health, safety of Texans,” Austin American-Statesman, Aug. 22, 2021
• "Bill Would Impair Ch. 11 Mass Tort Resolution," Law360, July 30, 2021
• “Packing the Supreme Court Would Fail: Take a Lesson from Franklin Roosevelt’s Failed Attempt to Add Justices,” Dallas Morning News, www.dallasnews.com/opinion/commentary/ 2020/09/30/if-democrats-try-to-pack-the-supreme-court-they-will-fail-at-significant-cost/ (Sept. 30, 2020)
• “The Right to a Gun is Not Absolute,” Austin American-Statesman (June 20, 2019) https://www.statesman.com/opinion/20190620/opinion-right-to-gun-is-not-absolute 
• Another View: New Plan to Save U.S. Auto Industry and Another View: How to Save General Motors, New York Times' DealBook (Mar. 23 & April 3, 2009) (co-author)
• Review of: Gangster Tour of Texas by T. Lindsey Baker,” 24 Legacies: A History Journal for Dallas and North Central Texas, No. 2, 56 (2012) 
• Review of: Sands and Quicksands from the Red River—and North by William N. Stokes, Jr.,” 96 Southwest Historical Quarterly 147 (1992) 

Selected Speeches and Oral Presentations

• "A Step Too Far: FDR’s Court-Packing Plan," State Bar of Texas, The Independence of the 
Judicial Branch – Its Past and Future, Aug. 31, 2017
• “Adaptive Use: Acquiring, Moving, & Restoring a Log House in East Texas” by Susan Smith Daniel and Josiah M. Daniel, III, Log Building Summit, Preservation Texas, Nacogdoches, Oct. 2024
• "Charles Goodnight, the Client, and Hatton Sumners, the Lawer: A Legal Ethics Issue in 1913
Texas," Dallas Bar Ass'n, April 7, 2026

Historical and Scholarly Affiliations and Activities 

• Trustee and Fellow, Dallas Historical Society, and Chair of its Collections Committee
• Charter Member, Alliance for Texas History, 2024
• Founder and Chair, Legal History Committee (fka Legal History Discussion Group), Dallas Bar Ass'n, 2007-present (conceived, recruited the speakers, organized, obtained MCLE accreditation for, and emceed 87 legal-historical programs to date, all presented at the Dallas Bar headquarters) 
• Member, 2006-present, Chair 2006-2014 & 2018-present, Visiting Committee, Department of History, The University of Texas at Austin
• Life Member, American Society for Legal History ("ASLH"); Member, ASLH Annual Meetings and Conferences Committee, 2009-2017; Member, Editorial Board, H-LAW (blog of the ASLH), 1998-2017 
• Member, American Historical Ass'n  
• Member, Organization of American Historians
• Sustaining Life Member, Texas Law Review Ass'n 
• Life Member, Texas Supreme Court Historical Society
• Member Dallas Bar Ass'n 
• Fellow, Dallas Bar Foundation

Representative Legal Practice Experience and Recognitions (1978-2017) 

• Individual debtors in Ch. 11 cases, public hospital district in Ch. 9 case, oil and gas and other industrial and commercial transactions in times of financial stress and insolvency, 225-store retail grocery chain, owner of home-loan originator and servicer, secured equipment lender, parent and affiliates in mass-tort Ch. 11 case, Unsecured Creditors Committee in Hawaiian/Japanese hotel Ch. 11 case,  noteholder group in mortgage company Ch. 11; secured lender in acute care hospital Ch. 11 case; secured lender in restaurant companies’ Ch. 11 cases; ILEC in Ch. 11 cases of CLECs; secured lenders in broadcasting restructurings and Ch. 11 cases; and lenders and debtors in other restructurings and Ch. 11 cases concerning: commercial real estate; finance companies; oil and gas production, refining, processing, and transmission; convenience store chains; manufacturing; retailing; transportation; agricultural warehousing, livestock auctions, and feedlots
• Litigation of receiver’s and trustees’ suits for fraudulent and preferential transfers (both sides of the docket)
• Recognitions
• Chambers USA, Bankruptcy/Restructuring Law (Texas), 2006–2017 
• Legal 500 U.S., Bankruptcy: Southwest, 2009; Corporate Restructuring: Including Bankruptcy, 2015 
• The Best Lawyers in America (Woodward/White, Inc.), Bankruptcy and Creditor Debtor Rights/Insolvency and Reorganization Law, 2005−2017; Litigation–Bankruptcy, 2011−2017 
• The Best Lawyers in America (Woodward/White, Inc.), "Lawyer of the Year" in Bankruptcy and Creditor Debtor Rights / Insolvency and Reorganization Law (Dallas/Fort Worth), 2016 & 2017 
• Who’s Who Legal: Texas (Law Business Research Ltd.), Insolvency & Restructuring Law, 2007−2008 
• Legal Media Group’s (Euromoney’s) Guide to the World’s Leading Insolvency & Restructuring Lawyers, 2009−2010 and 2012 

Legal-Profession Affiliations and Recognitions 

• Member, American Law Institute, 2012-present 
• Fellow, American College of Bankruptcy, 2016-present 
• Life Fellow, Texas Bar Foundation and Dallas Bar Foundation 



In his last days, the great essayist and observer Oliver Sacks wrote these words in an essay titled "My Own Life":

I have been increasingly conscious, for the last 10 years or so, of deaths among my contemporaries. My generation is on the way out, and each death I have felt as an abruption, a tearing away of part of myself. There will be no one like us when we are gone, but then there is no one like anyone else, ever. When people die, they cannot be replaced. They leave holes that cannot be filled, for it is the fate — the genetic and neural fate — of every human being to be a unique individual, to find his own path, to live his own life, to die his own death.

I'm in mid-seventies, experiencing the same thing. Recently a friend and colleague from the days of business bankruptcy practice, Pat Neligan, died. Two months earlier his wfe emailed me a request for a memory I had of him for compilation into a book she was compiling for his 70th birthday. I sent her this: 

Pat! I send felicitations on the occasion of your seventieth birthday!


It was a privilege and a pleasure for me to have practiced bankruptcy law with you as we and other fine lawyers of the bankruptcy bar represented our respective and sometimes adversarial clients in our beloved Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Texas over all the years of the Golden Age of Bankruptcy, the late 1980s to the first decade of the twenty-first century. (I retired in 2017, after the Golden Age had ended.)


What I remember most is that you were always the calm at the center of the hurricane. Contentions, arguments, raised voices, and a general cacophony swirled around us, the lawyers, in the hallways outside Bob’s, Harold’s, Steve’s and later Cooter’s, Barbara’s, and the younger judges’ courtrooms—but you were always seemingly unaffected, unpeturbed by sharp words, obivious to the pandemonium, and just always pleasantly talking, conferring, and seeking for any common denominators in the angular positions of the parties that would, thanks to you, become the basis of deals, compromises, and settlements, which are what make bankruptcy practice both rewarding for the practitioners and effective as a legal dispute-resolving and restructuring process for the clients. I smile when I think of you in those hallways!


Now it is time to celebrate! It is your birthday, No. 70!


All the best,

Josiah


He left, to quote Sacks, "a hole that cannot be filled."


from legal historian and biographer to owner of a franchised business? . . . . I don't think so . . . .

 Today I received this email:

_____________________________________

"Hi Josiah - your work on the history of lawyering and Hatton Sumners could lead to business ownership.

There are franchise businesses that often fit well with your background in legal history and research.

Would you be interested in exploring this with a consultant? 

Warm Regards,
Lauren

P.S. There’s no fee for what I do – I’m just here to guide folks exploring business ownership."
_____________________________________

My commencement address to the history majors of UT Austin in June 2015

Ten years ago, in June 2015, I was privileged to give the commencement address to the graduating history majors of The University of Texas at Austin. I love its History Department, and it was an honor and a pleasure to speak to those brilliant recipients of the B.A. in history (plus a few advanced degree recipients as well)! Here is my address:

I.

When you look at the professors on this stage, what do you see?  Teachers of classes you have taken, people you have come to know over the past four years?  Yes, and more.  You know this, but for the benefit of your guests, I will also observe that the assembled professors on this small stage are representatives of what is one of the preeminent history faculties in our nation.

This is a faculty that includes the finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in History and the Bancroft Prize in American History, probably the most published historian in the nation, the winners of many excellence-in-teaching awards, and many other widely recognized and highly awarded professors.

These outstanding individuals were your teachers.  You have learned from the best!

II.
Those of us fortunate enough to hold degrees from the University of Texas at Austin will always have fond memories of our years here.  I spent two memorable years in Garrison Hall pursuing my master’s degree in history, way back in 1973-1975.

And my happiest memory of Garrison is meeting my wife in a history seminar titled “The Great Powers of Europe” in August of 1974!

III.
Today, based on my experiences since I was in Garrison Hall, I want to focus on this question:  

What is the REAL VALUE of your history degree?

As you know, there are those who do question its value.  Some of them may be seated in this audience right now!
I submit that you made a superb choice when you decided to major in history.

A.
To begin, we all acknowledge that the study of history is intrinsically important and valuable to the development and life of the intellect.  We study the past for a host of significant reasons.  We seek to learn and to understand what humans have done in the past and how and why they did those things.

Because we cannot go back in time, we read what has been written about it, we see the artifacts and fruits of prior times, and then we search for new and additional evidence to inform our understanding of those past events.  And yet, in William Faulkner’s words, which furnish the excellent name for the Department’s internet outreach to the world, the past is “Not Even Past.”

In a work I ran across recently titled “Race and Commemoration in a Southern City,” historian Katherine Walker harkens back to Faulkner’s words when she wrote:

The past is not even past. It lives on in the historical narratives we inherit, in the ways we use places, in the assumptions we make about art, in the shape of our political processes. The past lives on in our individual or collective identities; we garb ourselves in identities created in the past, perhaps accessorizing them, but rarely making them over out of new cloth.

You have learned these things of which the author speaks.  

Regardless whether your particular interest lies in cultural, political, social, economic, religious, environmental, presidential, or even legal history, and regardless the century or the place, from your studies in Garrison Hall you know these things.

So continue always to read history because it is our best guide to the future, really our only guide.

B.
But how can your study of history help you, after today, as you enter upon a career and in your daily work?

Your career will likely be a succession of jobs.  Your first job will not be your last job, and each of your jobs will become a stepping stone to the next one.  You likely will change careers more than once in the years ahead.  So how will your study and training in the methods of history help you?

The first of my answers to that question is that your research skills, analytical abilities, and the capability to write clear, explanatory sentences, paragraphs, and reports will serve you quite well.  These are skills that are, and will always be, in demand.  This is, in fact, a big advantage you have over the bachelor’s degree recipients in the Business School, who can no doubt ably insert numbers into Excel spreadsheets, but have not had the benefit of the opportunity to learn, from this faculty seated behind me, the art of writing clearly.

I understand that there are jobs out there for which you will not be qualified or hired.  Examples probably include highly specialized positions such as chemist, or electrical engineer or any kind of engineer, or computer scientist.  But I cannotthink of many more jobs for which you would not be qualified.

Some of you are going to be teachers of history, a very commendable choice of career. You will continue to spend a lot of time with history in the education of our youth.  There is nothing more valuable.

Others of you are headed to law school.  The study of history is good preparation for the legal profession because lawyers must find and then apply relevant statutes and the rules set forth in judicial opinions.  Researching and analyzing those statutes, their legislative histories, and the progression of the case law is an inherently historical exercise.

Still others of you will find employment in government and public service. Research, analysis, the evaluation of policies, and writing are key skills in these jobs.

Finally, there are those of you who will find employment in the sales of goods, properties, and services; in the creation and production of products and services of all types; in companies of all kinds, large and small; in bricks-and-mortar facilities, and over the Internet.

By earning a B.A. in history, you have proven that you can find and master primary sources of all types and can synthesize divergent interpretations and explanations.  So if in your first, or a subsequent, job, you need to do so, you can and will be able to learn tools of the marketplace such as how to read a balance sheet and an income statement, how buying and selling are conducted in the world of commerce, how a logistics business works, what a “back office” is, and many other forms and types of business activities, functions, and processes.  Your history degree will serve you well in these jobs.

In fact, in almost any job today, you will be asked to find and gather all manner of information, to try to make sense of it, and to write up your analysis and explanation for your employers and for your colleagues. These are qualitatively the same projects in which you have been engaged as a history major.

If you go to work for a company, its product or its service will inevitably be challenged and frequently superseded by a competitor’s newer, better, and cheaper product or service.  That is the nature of the market economy.  Your company will encounter these and other changes of all types.

How does the enterprise make sense of such changes?  That is again where historical training is a real asset.  You understand, as a history major, that nothing happens in a vacuum.  There is a context for each new development.  There is a history that can and does help to make sense of what is happening, even if it seems that the situation is new or totally unprecedented.

By finding the context, understanding the history, and formulating a path forward based on what can be learned and known, you will be using what you have learned as a history major and the skills you have obtained in earning a B.A. in Garrison Hall here at the University of Texas at Austin.

IV.
So I congratulate you on your accomplishments and your receipt of your degrees . . . . and I assure you that you have what it takes to be a success!



Jayne Mansfield Channeling Dr. Samuel Johnson

Recently on HBO+ Susan and I saw the documentary "My Mom Jayne," A Film by Mariska Hargitary." It covered the life of Jayne Mansfield, who was born and raised in Dallas. A highlight is from 35:54 to 38:40, a clip from her 1957 Ed Sullivan Show appearance. These photos are from that film, showing her playing the violin and then the piano. In between she addressed her audience:

"My playing the violin and now the piano reminds me of a famous story about Dr. Samuel Johnson. Once when he saw a little puppy walking on its hind legs, he said, "It's not that you expect him to do it perfectly; it's just that you're surprised the puppy does it all! Which just goes to prove that I not only play the violin and the piano, but I know who Dr. Samuel Johnson is!"
[She mangled the Dr. Johnson quotation a bit. Actually Johnson's quip was: "a woman's preaching is like a dog's walking on his hind legs. It is not done well but you are surprised to find it done at all." Boswell, Life of Samuel Johnson, LLD, 31 July 1763, at 327 (1960).]
Jayne Mansfield died in a tragic car crash. She was a substantial person, despite her popular persona.....