Constitution of the Republic of Texas

Constitution of the Republic of Texas
Overview
JurisdictionRepublic of Texas
CreatedMarch 16, 1836
PresentedMarch 17, 1836
RatifiedSeptember 5, 1836
Date effectiveSeptember 5, 1836
SystemPresidential republic
Government structure
Branches3
ChambersBicameral
ExecutivePresident
JudiciarySupreme, Districts
FederalismNo
Electoral collegeNo
Entrenchments0
History
First legislatureOctober 3, 1836
First executiveOctober 22, 1836
First courtJanuary 13, 1840
RepealedDecember 29, 1845
Amendments0
CitationConstitution of Republic of Texas (PDF), Tarlton Law Library, retrieved March 3, 2026
LocationUnknown (Texas State Library and Archives Commission has drafts)
Commissioned byConvention of 1836 in Washington-on-the-Brazos, Texas
Author(s)Delegates of the Convention of 1836 (principally George Childress)
Signatories52 of 59 delegates
Media typeParchment
SupersedesConstitution of Coahuila and Texas
Superseded byConstitution of Texas
Full text
Constitution of the Republic of Texas at Wikisource

The Constitution of the Republic of Texas was the supreme law of Texas from 1836 to 1845.

On March 2, 1836, Texas declared itself an independent republic because of a lack of support in the United States for the Texas Revolution. The declaration of independence was written by George Childress and modeled after the United States Constitution. Lorenzo de Zavala helped in the drafting of the Constitution of the Republic of Texas by personally designing its flag and serving as vice president.

A copy of the Constitution of the Republic of Texas was included with the declaration of independence. The constitution borrowed language from the US Constitution and the constitutions of several southern states. It formed a unitary republic, rather than the federal republic as defined in the US Constitution. The President of the Republic of Texas had a three-year term and could not serve another consecutive term, which was based on provisions in the Mexican Constitution. The Texas Constitution also protected the right to own slaves and prohibited "Indians" and "Africans" from living freely in the country or from becoming Texan citizens.