Congress approved the recommendations made to it by the Navy, and in one single appropriation bill the hull strength of the Texas Navy nearly doubled
yet again.
The two battleships were contracted to yards in the United States, and two new Light Cruisers were authorized to replace the Guadalupe Class, which could not be economically rebuilt for oil-fired powerplants and maintain expected demands for increased speed. The Light Cruisers were awarded to Gray's Iron Works, the only shipyard in Texas big enough to construct vessels with the deeper drafts allowed by the Galveston Ship Channel.
Four of the 12 planned destroyers went to Levingston on the Sabine River, which put all four of its slipways to work on the contract. Another four were awarded to an upstart yard in Orange called National Shipyard. These were the Dallas class destroyers, the first class of ship ever built in such a great quantity for the Texas Navy:
They were unique in that they were powered by British Parsons turbines, which made them very efficient at high speed but widened their turning radius. They could make a respectable 24 knots, though there were rumors they were faster (if the turbines were allowed to run at capacity - someone was worried that the new powerplant wasn't as reliable as the expansion engines).
The remaining four destroyers were evenly split between Levingston and National the following year, while Gray's remaining slips were used to build two fleet oilers.
Two submarines were contracted to Electric Boat in the Unites States, and in two years all the authorized vessels would fly a Lone Star Flag except the battleships. They would be delivered much later, since their size required more time to construct them.