Texan Edge
The Texan Edge is more than a podcast — it’s a Texas state of mind.
Hosted by Tweed Scott, author of Texas in Her Own Words, each weekday brings a short burst of inspiration, common sense, and straight talk from the Lone Star perspective. Some days we’ll visit a slice of Texas history; other days, we’ll share a story or reflection to help you face the day with grit, gratitude, and grace.
Whether you were born here, got here as fast as you could, or just wish you had — The Texan Edge reminds you why the Texas spirit still matters. It’s where optimism wears boots, humor has manners, and pride runs as deep as the oil wells.
Pull up a chair, friend. Take a listen.
On Wednesdays and Fridays, we focus on a Texas historical event to showcase our daily nugget. Ultimately, it's a Texas thing!
My why with The Texan Edge is to share the spirit of Texas—the humor, grit, wisdom, and warmth I’ve lived and loved here—with people everywhere. I want to remind folks each day that they carry the strength to face life with courage, perspective, and a smile. This podcast is my way of giving back the inspiration Texas has given me, one daily nugget at a time.
Because here at The Texan Edge, we don’t just talk Texas — we live it.
The Texan Edge is "Not just a podcast, but a Texas state of mind.”
Texan Edge
Tex-A-Tude Freedom, Memory, and Responsibility
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Episode Description
On June 19, 1865, in Galveston, Texas, the word “freedom” finally reached people who had waited far too long to hear it. It didn’t fix everything in a day, but it lit a fire that still burns every Juneteenth. In this episode of The Texan Edge, Tweed Scott unpacks what happened in Galveston, why the delay matters, and how Juneteenth calls us to remember, reflect, and live our freedom with responsibility. This is Texitude: honoring those who paid the cost for liberty by becoming softer neighbors and stronger voices for what’s right.
Show Notes
- Juneteenth context
- June 19, 1865: Union troops arrive in Galveston, Texas
- Public announcement that enslaved people in Texas are free
- Legal freedom was already on paper, but enforcement and news arrived late
- Why the delay matters
- Freedom in Texas came later than it should have
- It arrived tangled in confusion, questions, and hard realities
- The moment still sparked celebrations, prayers, songs, and hope
- Early Juneteenth traditions
- Families gathering and churchyards filling up
- Stories told and retold so children would know: “This is the day it changed for us”
- Texitude and freedom
- Texas freedom is not “do whatever you want”
- Real freedom remembers what it cost and who paid the price
- Freedom carries responsibility:
- Treat others with dignity
- Stand up when you see wrong
- Leave your corner of Texas better than you found it
- Living with the legacy today
- We didn’t stand in Galveston in 1865, but we live with the results
- Texas is still learning how to honor that history honestly, without flinching
- Juneteenth invites both celebration and reflection
- Practical ways to honor freedom
- Ask: Where am I taking freedom for granted?
- Where can I help someone else experience a little more of it?
- Possible next steps:
- Forgiving someone who’s had a hold on your heart
- Speaking up when a “joke” goes way too far
- Listening to a story that isn’t your own and letting it change you
- Texan character and memory
- Texans value independence and strength
- The strongest Texans remember who came before and what they endured
- Humility and kindness as signs of truly honoring hard-won freedom
- Your Texan Edge for the day
- Don’t just enjoy your freedom—honor it
- Let the memory of hard-won freedom make you a softer neighbor and a stronger voice for what’s right
- Closing and next episode
- Invitation to share The Texan Edge with one person and tell them why you listen
- Tease for the bonus episode on Opal Lee, “the grandmother of Juneteenth”
This isn't just a podcast, it's a Texas state of mind.
Texitude And A Day Called Freedom
SPEAKER_00Texitude. Freedom, memory, and responsibility. On June 19th, 1865, in Galveston, Texas, a whole lot of people heard the word freedom and knew life would never be the same. It didn't fix everything in a day. It didn't erase pain or injustice, but it lit a new kind of fire in Texas, one that still burns every June 19th. This is the Texan Edge, and I'm your host, Tweed Scott. We're here three days a week taking the best of Texas history and Texas character and turning it into something that you can use in your own day. Today is June 19th, and we're talking about a Texas-flavored word that deserves more than just fireworks and a long weekend. I'm talking freedom.
Juneteenth In Galveston Explained
SPEAKER_00Juneteenth marks the day Union troops arrived in Galveston and publicly announced that enslaved people in Texas were free. Now the legal order had been signed long before that, but the news and the enforcement took its sweet time getting to Texas.
The Delay That Shaped The Story
SPEAKER_00That delay is part of the story. For folks in bondage, freedom came later than it should have, and it came tangled up in confusion, questions, and hard realities. But when those words finally landed, when people heard that they were in the eyes of the law, free, it sparked celebrations, prayers, songs, and a new kind of hope. Families gathered, churchyards filled up, stories were told and retold so that the children growing up would know this is the day it changed for us.
Freedom With Memory And Responsibility
SPEAKER_00Here's where Texitude comes in. Texas freedom isn't just about doing whatever you want. It's about remembering what it cost and who paid those costs. It's about saying if I've been given freedom, I've also been handed responsibility. Responsibility to treat others with dignity, to stand up when I see wrong, and to leave this place a better place than I found it. You and I didn't live in eighteen sixty five, obviously. We didn't stand in those crowds in Galveston. But we do live with the results of that day for better and for worse. We live in a Texas that's still learning how to honor that history, honestly, without flinching and without turning away.
Celebrate Then Reflect On Your Freedom
SPEAKER_00Juneteenth invites us to do two things. First, to celebrate, to say thank God for freedom wherever it's found. Second to reflect and to ask, where am I taking freedom for granted? And where can I help someone else experience a little more of it? Maybe for you, freedom today looks like forgiving someone who's had a hold on your heart for too long. Maybe it looks like speaking up when a joke goes way too far. And maybe it looks as simple as listening to a story that isn't your own and letting it change you. Texans like to think of ourselves as independent and strong. Hey, that's fine. But the strongest Texans I know also remember. They remember who came before, what they endured, and why it matters that we walk a little more humbly and a little more kindly because of
Honor Freedom With How You Live
SPEAKER_00it. Here's your edge for the day. Don't just enjoy your freedom, honor it. Let the memory of hard won freedom make you a softer neighbor and a stronger voice for what's
Share The Show And Bonus Tease
SPEAKER_00right. If today's episode gave you something worth pondering on this Juneteenth, would you share that in the Texan Edge with one person and tell them why you listen? That personal invitation means more than any ad ever will. And I thank you for it. I'm Tweed Scott, grateful to walk this Texas road with you, right here on the Texan Edge. By the way, I want to remind you, we got a bonus episode coming up tomorrow about Opal Lee. Who's she? Well, she's the grandmother of Juneteenth. I need to explain that a little more, and we will tomorrow. See you back here then. Bye.
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