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Texas Gulf Coast – Bishop Destry C. Bell; Texas Lone Star Jurisdiction – Bishop Don Venson Nobles Sr. Texas Metropolitan – Bishop Prince E. W. Bryant, Sr. (Interim) Texas North Central – Bishop Robert L. Sample; Texas Northeast First – Bishop James E. Hornsby; Texas Northeast Second – Bishop David R. Houston
Gulf Coast: 34 Cass: 3 0 Upper East: 35 Castro 0 0 Gulf Coast: 36 Chambers: 6 0 Gulf Coast: 37 Cherokee: 5 0 Upper East: 38 Childress: 1 0 Gulf Coast: 39 Clay: 2 0 Northwest: 40 Cochran 0 0 Gulf Coast: 41 Coke: 2 0 West Texas: 42 Coleman: 1 0 Northwest: 43 Collin: 69 0 Metroplex: 44 Collingsworth: 2 0 Gulf Coast: 45 Colorado: 7 0 Gulf Coast: 46 ...
Location of Cameron County in Texas. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Cameron County, Texas.. This is intended to be a complete list of properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Cameron County, Texas, United States.
Location of Galveston County in Texas This is intended to be a complete list of properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Galveston County, Texas . There are 10 districts, 73 individual properties, and four former properties listed on the National Register in the county.
The Gulf Coast region is an area of 13 counties defined by the Texas Comptroller for economic reporting, as mapped here. It includes the city of Houston and all of the Texas Panhandle by most definitions of that term. The region included 2020 population of about 7.3 million, or 25 percent of Texas' population, with Harris County having 65 ...
Fort Crockett is a government reservation on Galveston Island overlooking the Gulf of Mexico originally built as a defense installation to protect the city and harbor of Galveston and to secure the entrance to Galveston Bay, thus protecting the commercial and industrial ports of Galveston and Houston and the extensive oil refineries in the bay area.
The ownership of ecclesiastical property in the United States was often an issue of controversy in the early years of the United States, particularly in regard to the Catholic Church. [1] In the United States the employment of lay trustees was customary in some parts of the country from a very early period. Dissensions sometimes arose with the ...
Also the ecclesiastical court had jurisdiction over the affairs of ecclesiastics, monks and nuns, the poor, widows and orphans (personae miserabiles, the needy) and those persons to whom the civil judge refused legal redress. This far-reaching civil jurisdiction of the Church eventually overlapped the natural boundaries of Church and State.