^Loughery, E. H. (1885). "Biographical Sketches of Members of the 19th Legislature"(PDF). Personnel of the Texas State Government for 1885; Containing Biographical Sketches of the Governor, Heads of Departments and Members and Officers of the 19th Legislature. Austin, Texas: J. M. Snyder, Book and Job Printer. p. 70. Retrieved August 1, 2023 – via Legislative Reference Library of Texas. Joseph W. Baines was born January 24, 1846, came to Texas when a boy, was educated at Independence, Washington county, served in the Confederate army until peace was declared, and then moved to Collin county where he taught school and studied law whenever his duties left him an hour at his disposal. In 1870, he began the practice of law at Plano, moved to McKinney, and up to the time of appointment as Secretary of State by Governor Ireland in 1883, edited, with great ability, the McKinney Advocate. He was re–appointed to the Secretaryship after the Governor's second inauguration.
^"Joseph Wilson Baines". Texas Legislators: Past & Present. Legislative Reference Library of Texas.
Sources
Goodwin, Doris Kearns (1991). Lyndon Johnson and the American Dream: The Most Revealing Portrait of a President and Presidential Power Ever Written. New York: St. Martin's Press. ISBN0312060270. OCLC975962635.
Conrad, David Eugene; Craddock, Emmie; Pool, William Clayton (1965). Lyndon Baines Johnson: The Formative Years. Austin: Southwest Texas State College Press. OCLC475217.