Decimus et Ultimus Barziza

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Decimus et Ultimus Barziza, in the 1870s

Decimus et Ultimus Barziza (also known as D.U. Barziza,[1] Decimus Barziza,[2] and Des Barziza[3] ) (September 4, 1838 in Williamsburg, Virginia – January 30, 1882 in Houston, Texas) was an American businessman, lawyer, and politician, who served two terms in the Texas Legislature.

Early life[edit]

Barziza was born in Virginia in 1838. His father, Phillip Ignatius Barziza (originally Filippo Ignazio Barziza), was a viscount who had emigrated from Venice in 1820 and been forced to cede his title of nobility and become an American citizen in order to legally qualify for a bequest;[3] he subsequently married a French-Canadian woman, with whom he had ten children.[4] The Barzizas named their tenth child "Decimus et Ultimus", Latin for "tenth and last".[5]

Barziza attended the College of William & Mary in his hometown of Williamsburg from 1854-1857. He then moved to Texas and later in 1857 enrolled in the law school at Baylor University. He graduated in 1859 and established his law practice in Owensville.[6]

In 1861, the American Civil War began, and Barziza enlisted in the Confederate Army (4th Texas Infantry), where he served under Louis Wigfall and John Bell Hood.[7] He was twice injured in combat, and fought in the Battle of Gettysburg, where he was captured at Little Round Top.[6]

After spending a year in hospital as a prisoner of war, he escaped by leaping out the window of a moving prisoner-transport train in the middle of the night, and walking to Upper Canada, where Confederate sympathizers relayed him to Nova Scotia, and then Bermuda; there, a blockade runner returned him to North Carolina.[3] From North Carolina, he was able to return to Texas, where he wrote his memoirs of captivity and of life as a fugitive, titled The Adventures of a Prisoner of War, and Life and Scenes in Federal Prisons: Johnson's Island, Fort Delaware, and Point Lookout, by an Escaped Prisoner of Hood's Texas Brigade.

Political career[edit]

Barziza represented Harris County during the Fourteenth Texas Legislature (1874–1875) and the first session of the Fifteenth Texas Legislature (1876).[2]

During the fourteenth legislature, he played a key role in the controversial transition of the Governorship from Edmund J. Davis to Richard Coke.[4]

During the fifteenth legislature he ran for Speaker of the House but lost by two votes.[6] At the end of the session, Barziza became embroiled in a procedural dispute regarding the Texas and Pacific Railway: in an effort to prevent a vote, he and 33 other representatives did not return from recess on July 31, 1876, so that there would not be a quorum.[4] In response, the speaker ordered that the absentee representatives be arrested and forcibly brought back to the legislature.[4] On August 2, 1876, Barziza resigned.[2]

Ancestry[edit]

Barziza was the great-grandson of scholar John Paradise.[4]

Legacy[edit]

Barziza Street, in the Houston neighborhood of Eastwood, is named for him.[4]

In 1964, the University of Texas Press re-published his memoirs.[3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Journal of the House of Representatives of the State of Texas (first Session of the fifteenth Legislature), published April 18, 1876 (via Google Books)
  2. ^ a b c Decimus Barziza, at the Legislative Reference Library of Texas; retrieved January 1, 2016
  3. ^ a b c d The Story Of Decimus Et Ultimus Barziza Archived 2014-01-02 at the Wayback Machine, at the Daily Press; by Parke Rouse; published May 9, 1993; retrieved January 1, 2016
  4. ^ a b c d e f Decimus et Ultimus Barziza, by R. Henderson Shuffler; in the Southwestern Historical Quarterly; vol. 66, no. 4 (July 1962 – April 1963); page 501-512
  5. ^ Italians and the American Civil War, by Valentino J. Belfiglio; in Italian Americana; Vol. 4, No. 2 (SPRING/SUMMER 1978), pp. 163-175
  6. ^ a b c BARZIZA, DECIMUS ET ULTIMUS at the Texas State Historical Association; by Jeffrey William Hunt; retrieved December 31, 2013
  7. ^ Sons of Garibaldi in Blue and Gray: Italians in the American Civil War, by Frank W. Alduino and David J. Coles; published 2007 by Cambria Press

External links[edit]