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Lyndon B. Johnson

197 bytes added, 00:14, June 14, 2011
/* Early years */ Copyediting and citing
==Early years==
Johnson was maternally descended from a pioneer Baptist clergyman, George Washington Baines, who pastored nymerous numerous small rural churches in Texas, Arkansas, and Louisiana. Baines was also the president of [[Baylor University]], during the [[American Civil War]]. George Baines was the grandfather of Johnson's mother, Rebekah Baines Johnson.
Johnson was born in Stonewall, Texas , in a small farmhouse in a poor farming area along the Pedernales River. His parents, Samuel Ealy Johnson, Jr. and the former Rebekah Baines, had three girls and two boys. The nearby village of Johnson City, Texas, was named after a relative who came from Georgia. In school, Johnson was an awkward, talkative youth with a tendency to lie <sup>(Citation needed.)</sup> and was elected president of his eleventh-grade class. <ref>www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/presidents/36_l_johnson/tguide/l_johnson_dk.html</ref> He graduated from Johnson City High School in 1924.<ref>http://www.lbjlib.utexas.edu/johnson/archives.hom/biographys.hom/lbj_bio.asp</ref>
In 1926, Johnson enrolled in Southwest Texas State Teachers' College (now called Texas State University-San Marcos). He worked his way through school, participated in debate and campus politics, edited the school newspaper, and graduated in 1931. The college years refined his remarkable skills of persuasion and political organization. One year Johnson taught mostly Mexican American children at the Welhausen School in Cotulla, Texas. When he returned to San Marcos in 1965, after having signed the [[Higher Education Act]], Johnson looked back:
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