In the legal discussions of municipalities in the United States, a flagpole annexation is a type annexation by a city, town or other municipality entity in which the entity acquires new territory that is not broadly contiguous to the existing territory, but connected to it by a thin right-of-way along a street or road. The annexation thus resembles a "flagpole", in which the connecting right-of-way is the "pole" and the annexed territory is the "flag". Flagpole annexations are commonly used in cases where a municipality is not contiguous with any other municipalities and where it acts to acquire developed land, such as a newly built subdivision that is separated from the town by open land. Under some state and local laws, municipalities are prohibited from annexing land not directly connected to the existing land, and the "flagpole" allows the annexation of such new territories where it would not otherwise be possible. Law (a loanword from Old Norse lag), in politics and jurisprudence, is a set of rules or norms of conduct which mandate, proscribe or permit specified relationships among people and organizations, provide methods for ensuring the impartial treatment of such people, and provide punishments for those who do not follow... Annexation is the legal merging of some territory into another body. ... A city is an urban area, differentiated from a town, village, or hamlet by size, population density, importance, or legal status. ... A street in Ynysybwl, Wales, relatively stereotypical of a small town A town is usually an urban area which is not considered to rank as a city. ... Right-of-way is a legal term which may have any of several meanings: priority at a crossing, or in traffic. ...
Another scenario in which flagpole annexations may arise is where a municipality desires to annex a commercial development area without annexing intervening residential areas, a process that could increase sales tax revenues without requiring the muncipality to provide services (such as electricity and garbage collection) to the unannexed residents. A sales tax is a tax on consumption. ... The article on electrical energy is located elsewhere. ... Garbage is an international rock group formed in Madison, Wisconsin in 1993 by Shirley Manson, Butch Vig, Steve Marker, and Duke Erikson. ...
While they cherished their free-wheeling independence, ties of culture and commerce and family to their mother country were strong, and in a referendum held as part of Texas first national election, they voted overwhelmingly in favor of joining their destiny to that of the United States.
Thus the annexation of Texas not only added the Lone Star to the American galaxy, but the war with Mexico, which resulted from it, established the United States as a continental power stretching from the Atlantic to the Pacific.
To commemorate the 150th anniversary of the annexation to the United States, the Capitol Complex Visitors Center, Austin organized an exhibition of original documents and historical artifacts, "Celebrating 150 Years of Texas Statehood, 18451995," for free public viewing in Austin from July 1 through December 30, 1995.