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He was a member of the Somervell expedition in 1842 and with many others turned back at the Rio Grande and escaped the Black Bean Episode. The 1850 census indicates that he owned real estate valued at $100,000, the largest holding in Fort Bend County; by 1860 he had acquired $1,605,000 in real property, $106,050 in personal property, and forty slaves and was thus the wealthiest man in the state. Herndon at one time owned a summer house at Velasco and is believed to have owned a million acres of Texas land. He did not serve actively in the Civil War but on March 29, 1862, was elected colonel of militia of Fort Bend and Brazoria counties. From 1862 to 1865 he was president of the Buffalo Bayou, Brazos and Colorado Railway Company. War and Reconstruction destroyed most of his fortune. After the war he moved to Hempstead and later to Boerne, where he died on July 6, 1878. He was buried at Hempstead.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
History of Texas, Together with a Biographical History of the Cities of Houston and Galveston (Chicago: Lewis, 1895). Andrew Forest Muir, ed., "Diary of a Young Man in Houston, 1838," Southwestern Historical Quarterly 53 (January 1950). Abner J. Strobel, The Old Plantations and Their Owners of Brazoria County (Houston, 1926; rev. ed., Houston: Bowman and Ross, 1930; rpt., Austin: Shelby, 1980). Vertical Files, Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, University of Texas at Austin.
Wealthiest antebellum planter dies
July 06, 1878
On this day in 1878, John Hunter Herndon, formerly the wealthiest man in Texas, died in Boerne. Herndon was born in Kentucky in 1813 and came to Texas in 1838. After serving as engrossing clerk of the House of Representatives of the Republic of Texas he moved to Richmond in Fort Bend County, where he was admitted to the bar.
In 1839 he married Barbara Makall Wilkinson Calvit, the only daughter of Alexander Calvit and heir to the Calvit sugar plantation in Brazoria County. The plantation, near the site of present Clute, was noted for its Arabian horses and cattle herds, which were later sold to Abel Head (Shanghai) Pierce.
Herndon owned stock ranches in Matagorda, Guadalupe, and Medina counties, engaged in real estate, and incorporated several other entrepreneurial ventures.The 1850 census indicates that he owned real estate valued at $100,000, the largest holding in Fort Bend County; by 1860 he had acquired $1,605,000 in real property, $106,050 in personal property, and forty slaves and was thus the wealthiest man in the state.
Herndon at one time owned a summer house at Velasco and is believed to have owned a million acres of Texas land. From 1862 to 1865 he was president of the Buffalo Bayou, Brazos and Colorado Railway Company. The Civil War and Reconstruction destroyed most of his fortune.
Related Handbook Articles:
HERNDON, JOHN HUNTER
CALVIT, ALEXANDER
CALVIT-HERNDON PLANTATION
PIERCE, ABEL HEAD [SHANGHAI]
BUFFALO BAYOU, BRAZOS AND COLORADO RAILWAY
Children:
1. MARY JANE HERNDON
b. 27 Nov 1840. d. 7 Oct 1841
2. FREDERICK JOSEPH CALVIT HERNDON
b. 15 Jul 1842. d. 13 Oct 1894
3. BOSWELL HANSFORD HERNDON
b. 27 Feb 1844. d. 22 Jul 1859
4. ALEXANDER CALVIT HERNDON
b. 15 Dec 1845. d. 14 Sept 1919
5. ROBERT SCOTT HERNDON
b. 28 Jan 1848. d. 3 Apr 1863
6. CORNELIA HERNDON
b. 6 Nov 1849. d. 4 Nov 1915
7. FLORENCE HERNDON
b. 26 Oct 1851. d. 2 Oct 1925
8. TWINS HERNDON
b. and d. 1854
He was a member of the Somervell expedition in 1842 and with many others turned back at the Rio Grande and escaped the Black Bean Episode. The 1850 census indicates that he owned real estate valued at $100,000, the largest holding in Fort Bend County; by 1860 he had acquired $1,605,000 in real property, $106,050 in personal property, and forty slaves and was thus the wealthiest man in the state. Herndon at one time owned a summer house at Velasco and is believed to have owned a million acres of Texas land. He did not serve actively in the Civil War but on March 29, 1862, was elected colonel of militia of Fort Bend and Brazoria counties. From 1862 to 1865 he was president of the Buffalo Bayou, Brazos and Colorado Railway Company. War and Reconstruction destroyed most of his fortune. After the war he moved to Hempstead and later to Boerne, where he died on July 6, 1878. He was buried at Hempstead.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
History of Texas, Together with a Biographical History of the Cities of Houston and Galveston (Chicago: Lewis, 1895). Andrew Forest Muir, ed., "Diary of a Young Man in Houston, 1838," Southwestern Historical Quarterly 53 (January 1950). Abner J. Strobel, The Old Plantations and Their Owners of Brazoria County (Houston, 1926; rev. ed., Houston: Bowman and Ross, 1930; rpt., Austin: Shelby, 1980). Vertical Files, Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, University of Texas at Austin.
Wealthiest antebellum planter dies
July 06, 1878
On this day in 1878, John Hunter Herndon, formerly the wealthiest man in Texas, died in Boerne. Herndon was born in Kentucky in 1813 and came to Texas in 1838. After serving as engrossing clerk of the House of Representatives of the Republic of Texas he moved to Richmond in Fort Bend County, where he was admitted to the bar.
In 1839 he married Barbara Makall Wilkinson Calvit, the only daughter of Alexander Calvit and heir to the Calvit sugar plantation in Brazoria County. The plantation, near the site of present Clute, was noted for its Arabian horses and cattle herds, which were later sold to Abel Head (Shanghai) Pierce.
Herndon owned stock ranches in Matagorda, Guadalupe, and Medina counties, engaged in real estate, and incorporated several other entrepreneurial ventures.The 1850 census indicates that he owned real estate valued at $100,000, the largest holding in Fort Bend County; by 1860 he had acquired $1,605,000 in real property, $106,050 in personal property, and forty slaves and was thus the wealthiest man in the state.
Herndon at one time owned a summer house at Velasco and is believed to have owned a million acres of Texas land. From 1862 to 1865 he was president of the Buffalo Bayou, Brazos and Colorado Railway Company. The Civil War and Reconstruction destroyed most of his fortune.
Related Handbook Articles:
HERNDON, JOHN HUNTER
CALVIT, ALEXANDER
CALVIT-HERNDON PLANTATION
PIERCE, ABEL HEAD [SHANGHAI]
BUFFALO BAYOU, BRAZOS AND COLORADO RAILWAY
Children:
1. MARY JANE HERNDON
b. 27 Nov 1840. d. 7 Oct 1841
2. FREDERICK JOSEPH CALVIT HERNDON
b. 15 Jul 1842. d. 13 Oct 1894
3. BOSWELL HANSFORD HERNDON
b. 27 Feb 1844. d. 22 Jul 1859
4. ALEXANDER CALVIT HERNDON
b. 15 Dec 1845. d. 14 Sept 1919
5. ROBERT SCOTT HERNDON
b. 28 Jan 1848. d. 3 Apr 1863
6. CORNELIA HERNDON
b. 6 Nov 1849. d. 4 Nov 1915
7. FLORENCE HERNDON
b. 26 Oct 1851. d. 2 Oct 1925
8. TWINS HERNDON
b. and d. 1854
Family Members
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