The Politics of Marshall, Texas is centered on the city commission chaired by Eric Neal; 7 district commissioners, and City Manager Lisa Agnor. The current district commissioners are:
Notable former commissioners include:
Carolyn Abney, the first woman elected to the commission;
Sam Birmingham, the first African-American commissioner and mayor;
Jean Birmingham, the first African-American woman elected to the commission; and
Audrey Kariel the first woman to be mayor and the first Jewish woman elected to the commission.
Organizational leaders such as Connie Ware, President of the Marshall Chamber of Commerce and Mrs. Charles Wilson, President of the Harrison County NAACP and school board member, also play a major role in the city's politics and are as well known as the commissioners.
History
The city has historically had a greater influence on Texashistory than cities of a comparable size, in part because much of the city's growth came early, so that in the past it was relatively more important. Marshall was one of the leading centers advocating Texas' secession before the American Civil War, a major Confederate stronghold during the Civil War as the seat of the Trans-Mississippi Postal Department and Confederate capital of Missouri, and was the seat of the first county to fall to a Jim Crow regime after Reconstruction.
I see stars So far away that I'm looking up when I'm down Time man Nothing that you say Can melt me like him His words make me swim Twilight from the screen he sees Into my past
MezzaNotte Ristorante in Guilderland will close next month after 18 years, According to a Facebook post on Thursday by owner ConnieWare... Ware, who founded MezzaNotte with her husband, Mitch, in January 2007, is retiring, the note said.