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Hutchinson
County Biographies
Source: The Handbook of
Texas Online
HUTCHINSON,
ANDERSON
BUGBEE, THOMAS SHERMAN
ABERT, JAMES WILLIAM
COBURN, JAMES M.
PLEMONS, WILLIAM BUFORD
MCILROY, SHERMAN D.
HALEY, JAMES EVETTS, SR.
HUTCHINSON, ANDERSON
(1798-1853)
Anderson Hutchinson, judge and Perote prisoner, was born
in Greenbrier County, Virginia, on April 7, 1798. He
studied law while helping his father who was clerk of the
county court. After he was admitted to the bar, he
practiced at Knoxville, Tennessee, Huntsville, Alabama,
and in 1835 at Raymond, Hinds County, Mississippi. In
1840 he and Volney E. Howard published A Digest of the
Laws of Mississippi.
On June 23, 1840, Hutchinson and his wife Mariana
(Graves?), arrived in Austin. He opened a law office with
immediate success. In 1841 he was appointed judge of the
Fourth, or Western, District. He presided at the
proceedings against Richard Bullock, the Austin innkeeper
who thrashed the servant of the French minister Dubois de
Saligny for killing the innkeeper's trespassing pig. This
incident provoked an international situation, and
Hutchinson wrote an official report concerning the
prosecution.
Authorities are in accord that Hutchinson was one of the
most scholarly lawyers and legal writers who ever sat on
a Texas bench. Although a Code of Texas prepared by
Hutchinson was never published under his name, it may
have been used by Oliver C. Hartley in his compilation.
Judge Hutchinson was holding court in San Antonio when
the town was captured by Adrián Woll's force on
September 10, 1842. When the Mexican Army withdrew, it
took along the judge, jurors, court attachés, attending
witnesses, and attorneys. Most of them, including Judge
Hutchinson, were forwarded to Perote Prison. Hutchinson
was released on March 29, 1843, through efforts of Waddy
Thompson, United States minister.
Upon his release Hutchinson was taken aboard the U.S.S.
Vincennes at Vera Cruz and landed at Pensacola. He then
returned to his former home at Raymond. On June 10, 1843,
from Jackson, Mississippi, he wrote to President Sam
Houston tendering his resignation as district judge.
Later Hutchinson came to Texas and closed his business
affairs. In Raymond he formed a partnership with Henry S.
Foote, author of Texas and Texans. In 1848 Hutchinson
published the Mississippi Code. He died in 1853. In 1854
his widow received the 640-acre bounty due him as a
Perote prisoner. Another relief act was passed in her
behalf in 1856. Hutchinson County, Texas, was named in
his honor.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Hobart Huson, District Judges of Refugio
County (Refugio, Texas: Refugio Timely Remarks, 1941).
James D. Lynch, The Bench and Bar of Texas (St. Louis,
1885).
Hobart Huson
BUGBEE, THOMAS SHERMAN
(1842-1925)
Thomas Sherman Bugbee, cattleman, the third of the five
children of John Brewer and Hannah (Sherman) Bugbee, was
born on January 18, 1842, in Washington County, Maine.
After limited schooling he left home at the age of
fourteen to work on a farm and later at a sawmill. In
1860 he secured an eighty-acre homestead in western
Maine, but service in the Tenth Maine Infantry during the
Civil War kept him away from home from 1861 through 1864.
Since their home state was heavily affected by the
postwar recession, Thomas Bugbee and his brother George
made their way west, working as teamsters. Hearing of the
money to be made in the cattle market, Bugbee visited
Fort Worth and formed a partnership with George Miller
and M. M. Shea. In 1869 they purchased 1,200 cattle from
John A. Knight for $11 a head and sold them in Idaho for
$45 a head. The following year Bugbee and Shea bought
1,500 head and drove them to Colorado. In 1871 Bugbee
drove 750 steers to Rice County, Kansas, west of Abilene,
where he wintered them in order to get a better price.
There he met Mary Catherine (Molly) Dunn, whom he married
on August 13, 1872. The newlyweds then loaded their wagon
and drove the steers farther west. Near Lakin, Kansas,
they built their first dugout home and spent four years
building up the herd.
In the fall of 1876 the family departed for Texas. After
losing half of their herd and possessions to the raging
Cimarron River, the Bugbees arrived with their trail
hands and 1,800 cattle at the Canadian River breaks in
Hutchinson County. There they established the Quarter
Circle T Ranch, the second oldest in the Panhandle, with
headquarters on Bugbee Creek. In 1882 Bugbee sold his
land and cattle and moved his family, which eventually
included eight children, to Kansas City, where they could
live more comfortably. During the next fifteen years,
operating out of Kansas City, he established cattle
ranches in Texas, Kansas, and Indian Territory.
In 1883, in partnership with Orville Howell Nelson, he
established the Shoe Bar Ranch in Briscoe, Hall, and
Donley counties, Texas. At the same time, he formed the
Word-Bugbee Cattle Company with Charles W. Word of
Wichita Falls. They grazed 26,000 steers on 250,000 acres
of fenced range in the Cheyenne country of Indian
Territory. Word and Bugbee were forced to sell out at a
loss after President Grover Cleveland evicted all white
cattlemen from the reservation grasslands in 1885.
In addition, Bugbee owned an 800-acre farm near Bonner
Springs, Kansas, and, with William States, operated a
6,000-acre ranch near Dodge City. In 1886 he bought out
Nelson's interest in the Shoe Bar and with another
partner, L. C. Coleman, formed the Bugbee-Coleman Cattle
Company. They remained partners until Coleman's death in
1894, at which time Bugbee sold out his own interest to
A. J. Snyder. Afterwards he started the 69 Ranch in Knox
County with 3,500 cattle for breeding purposes.
In 1897 Bugbee moved his family from Kansas City to
Clarendon, Texas, where he continued with his ranching
interests and served as president of the Panhandle and
Southwestern Stockmen's Association from 1900 to 1908. He
introduced maize, kafir, and many other grains and
grasses to the Panhandle and also brought in some of the
first harvesters and tractors. As a civic leader, Bugbee
led in the founding and supporting of schools and other
civilizing institutions. He died at his home in Clarendon
on October 18, 1925.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: James Cox, Historical and Biographical
Record of the Cattle Industry (2 vols., St. Louis:
Woodward and Tiernan Printing, 1894, 1895; rpt., with an
introduction by J. Frank Dobie, New York: Antiquarian,
1959). John Thomas Duncan, "The Settlement of Hall
County," West Texas Historical Association Yearbook
18 (1942). Helen Bugbee Officer, "A Sketch of the
Life of Thomas Sherman Bugbee, 1841-1925,"
Panhandle-Plains Historical Review 5 (1932). Pauline D.
and R. L. Robertson, Cowman's Country: Fifty Frontier
Ranches in the Texas Panhandle, 1876-1887 (Amarillo:
Paramount, 1981). Lester Fields Sheffy, "Thomas
Sherman Bugbee," Panhandle-Plains Historical Review
2 (1929).
H. Allen Anderson
ABERT, JAMES WILLIAM
(1820-1897)
James William Abert, army officer and explorer, was born
on November 18, 1820, in Mount Holly, New Jersey, the son
of Maj. John James Abert, an officer in the Corps of
Topographical Engineers. In his teens he attended
Princeton University, where he graduated, probably from
its academy, in 1838; he entered the United States
Military Academy at West Point in September of that year.
In 1842 he was assigned to the Fifth United States
Infantry. After an uneventful year of garrison duty in
Detroit, Abert was transferred to the Corps of
Topographical Engineers in May 1843. His first assignment
in the corps was that of assistant topographical engineer
in an extensive survey of the northern lakes, 1843-44.
During that time he married Jane Stone, and they had a
son.
In the summer of 1845 Abert was attached to the third
expedition of John Charles Frémont, whose assignment was
"to make reconnaissance southward and eastward along
the Canadian River through the country of Kiowa and
Comanche." Frémont, however, chose to take his main
party on to California, and gave command of the Canadian
River mission to Abert, with an assistant, Lt. William G.
Peck. The legendary mountain man Thomas Fitzpatrick was
employed as a guide, and Bent employees John L. Hatcher
and Caleb Greenwood were hired temporarily as hunters.
Except for the two young officers, the entire party of
thirty-three was composed of civilians.
The expedition struck the headwaters of the Canadian and
followed it through the breaks in eastern New Mexico and
into the Texas Panhandle. Continuing along the north bank
of the Canadian, Abert noted many Panhandle landmarks,
including Atascosa Creek and the Alibates Flint Quarries
(see ALIBATES FLINT QUARRIES NATIONAL MONUMENT), which he
labeled Agate Bluffs. The expedition arrived at Bent's
trading house in what is now Hutchinson County on
September 14, rested there for a day, and exchanged gifts
with a party of Kiowas and Comancheros. Three Kiowas had
briefly joined the expedition to help keep the peace.
On September 16, after Hatcher and Greenwood had left to
return to Bent's Fort, the remainder of Abert's party
crossed the Canadian and turned toward the southeast.
Near the site of present Laketon, in Gray County, the
party struck the North Fork of the Red River, which they
mistook for the Washita and followed for a while, then
turned back northeast toward the Canadian. They crossed
the present Oklahoma boundary before reaching the
Canadian, which they followed to its confluence with the
Arkansas. At Fort Gibson, in eastern Indian Territory,
the expedition was disbanded, and Abert and Peck went on
to St. Louis.
In his report Abert described in detail the geology,
flora, and fauna of the Canadian valley. His maps of the
region were the most accurate of the time, and later
explorers found them quite useful, especially for finding
campsites and watering places. The abundance of wild game
in the valley had kept the expedition well supplied with
food. Abert's description of the habits and customs of
the Kiowa and Comanche Indians proved valuable to the
federal government later. Along with his maps and written
accounts, Abert made several sketches and watercolors of
activities at Bent's Fort, native animals, and
outstanding Indian personalities, including the Kiowa
chief Dohäsan, whose village the expedition had visited
on September 17.
In the summer of 1846 Abert and Peck accompanied Gen.
Stephen W. Kearny's Army of the West to New Mexico. Abert
came down with a fever in July and had to remain behind
at Bent's Fort to recuperate. While he was sick he
continued his studies in natural science and ethnology
and compiled a tribal dictionary. Afterward he joined
Peck in Santa Fe, and the two lieutenants conducted a
thorough survey of New Mexico as far south as Socorro.
They visited each of the Rio Grande pueblos and, as
before, took note of the geology and wildlife of the new
American territory, as well as of the habits and customs
of its native residents. Abert then went to Washington to
submit his report to Congress.
From 1848 to 1850 he served on the faculty at West Point,
where he taught drawing. He was promoted to first
lieutenant in 1853 and to captain in 1856. After the
death of his first wife he married Lucy Taylor, with whom
he had several children. In 1860, after serving two years
in Florida, he traveled in Europe to study military
affairs and visit various forts and arsenals. When the
Civil War broke out Abert served in the Shenandoah valley
from June 1861 to September 1862. On March 3, 1863, he
was promoted to major and assigned to the United States
Army Corps of Engineers. He was later severely injured by
a fall from his horse, and in 1864 he resigned from the
army.
He had been brevetted lieutenant colonel for his
"faithful and meritorious service." During the
next five years, Abert and his family engaged in the
mercantile business in Cincinnati, Ohio. From 1869 to
1871 he served as examiner of patents in Washington. He
taught English literature at the University of Missouri
from 1877 to 1879 and afterward was president of the
Examining Board of Teachers of Public Schools in
Kentucky. Abert was reappointed a major in the United
States Army on January 14, 1895, and retired almost
immediately. He died at his home in Newport, Kentucky, on
August 10, 1897.
Despite the value of Abert's western frontier journals,
they lay almost forgotten in government files until 1941,
when H. Bailey Carroll first published the 1845 report in
the Panhandle-Plains Historical Review. William A.
Keleher published Abert's New Mexico report in 1962. In
1967 and 1970 special publications of the Abert journals
were edited under the title Through the Country of the
Comanche Indians in the Fall of the Year 1845 by John
Galvin, a California historian. They featured
illustrations of Abert's watercolors, many of which were
obtained from his descendants. A species of finch that
Abert discovered was named Pipilo aberti in his honor.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: W. H. Goetzmann, Army Exploration in the
American West, 1803-1863 (New Haven: Yale University
Press, 1959; 2d ed., Lincoln: University of Nebraska
Press, 1979; rpt., Austin: Texas State Historical
Association, 1991). Frederick W. Rathjen, The Texas
Panhandle Frontier (Austin: University of Texas Press,
1973).
H. Allen Anderson
COBURN, JAMES M.
(?-?)
James M. Coburn was the founder of the Hansford Land and
Cattle Company, the Scottish syndicate that purchased the
Turkey Track Ranch from C. S. Word and Jack Snider in
1882 and added to it the holdings of W. E. Anderson and
T. S. Bugbee in Hutchinson County. After emigrating from
his native Scotland, he had established himself as a
banker in Kansas City. He returned briefly to Scotland
and organized the Hansford company to profit from the
"Beef Bonanza." On acquiring the Turkey Track
lands, company officials elected Coburn secretary and
appointed A. H. Johnson general manager. In 1883, after
Johnson was killed by lightning, Coburn appointed Thomas
Logan Coffee range foreman and assumed the general
managerial duties himself.
Friction between the two men developed after Coffee
apparently accumulated several head of cattle of his own,
which he had allowed to run on the Turkey Track range.
When Coburn tried to discharge Coffee, several cowhands
stood by the foreman and sought to intimidate the
Scotsman. Such lack of respect on the part of ranch
employees led Coburn to hire Caleb B. (Cape) Willingham
as supervisor and maintain Kansas City as his home base.
One Panhandle settler later recalled that Coburn was
"a nervous, fractious man...scared of his own
shadow." Apparently Willingham also served as
Coburn's bodyguard and hired gun.
Coburn continued to make occasional visits to the
Panhandle. He encouraged William (Billy) Dixon to take up
a claim on three sections of Turkey Track land on Bent's
Creek near the Adobe Walls site and operate the ranch
store and post office. During the summers Coburn brought
his wife and children, including several from a previous
marriage, to the ranch. One summer one of the Coburn
children was taken ill and died almost immediately. Since
the Canadian River was up and the local minister could
not get across, Coburn himself conducted the Episcopal
burial service at the Turkey Track headquarters, with
only the ranchhands and the Dixon family in attendance.
When the river subsided, the body was shipped to Kansas
City for interment in the family burial plot.
After Willingham moved to the Hansford company's ranch in
New Mexico in 1893, Coburn began experiencing more
troubles with the Panhandle spread. Company officials
were concerned about increasing cattle thefts, and Coburn
lacked the loyalty he needed from his employees to
control them. His problems increased in 1897 after the
Texas legislature passed the Four-Section Act, which he
opposed. Coburn's quarrels with incoming nesters led to
several lawsuits in Hutchinson County. He soon sold his
Panhandle interests. After Willingham's resignation from
the Hansford company in 1903, Coburn ran the New Mexico
ranch himself for a few years, with J. M. Sanford and Cal
Merchant assisting him. By 1915 the company had closed
out its holdings altogether, and Coburn subsequently
disappeared from the Texas ranching scene.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Laura V. Hamner, Short Grass and Longhorns
(Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1943). John L.
McCarty, Adobe Walls Bride (San Antonio: Naylor, 1955).
H. Allen Anderson
PLEMONS, WILLIAM BUFORD
(1844-1901)
William Buford Plemons, judge, was born on June 2, 1844,
in Macon County, North Carolina, and spent his early
years on his father's farm. When the Civil War broke out
he enlisted in the Sixteenth North Carolina Regiment and
served as color-bearer. He was later promoted to sergeant
and assigned to line duty; he saw action in almost all of
the major campaigns of the Army of Northern Virginia. He
was wounded three times and was present at Robert E.
Lee's surrender at Appomattox in April 1865.
After the war Plemons returned home and in 1867 married
Mary Elle Kelly of Mesic County, North Carolina. She died
the following year after giving birth to a son. Soon
afterward Plemons decided to move to Texas, where he
planned to establish a colony of settlers from his home
state. On the way he met a group of people from Alabama
also journeying to Texas. Among them was Mary Elizabeth
"Mittie" Martin, whom Plemons married soon
after their arrival in Wood County, Texas. Their first
home was at Winnsboro. The couple had four children.
Plemons exchanged his colonization scheme for the study
of law and began a lifelong friendship with James Stephen
Hogg, later governor of Texas. After his admission to the
bar in 1872 he moved to Henrietta, in Clay County, where
he established his practice. He was elected judge of Clay
County in 1876 and served two terms before moving to the
Panhandle in 1886 and settling on the section which
became the Plemons Addition in Amarillo.
His oldest son, Barney, filed on land in Hutchinson
County that became the site of the town of Plemons, the
first county seat, and also bought a section in Potter
County. W. B. Plemons was elected the first Potter county
judge in 1887, and two years later he purchased from John
Merchant a section of former Frying Pan Ranch pasture on
Amarillo Creek northwest of the townsite. The marriage of
his daughter Belle Helen to James R. Gober, first sheriff
of Potter County, is said to have been the first wedding
in Amarillo.
As a pugnacious criminal attorney who worked zealously on
behalf of his clients, Plemons became judge of the
Forty-seventh District in 1890. He was elected to the
Texas legislature in 1894 and served on the judiciary
committee, where he was an advocate of land legislation
to benefit the Panhandle area. He was instrumental in the
passage of the Four-Section Act, which was designed to
allow settlers sufficient land for stock raising in a
semiarid environment. Plemons declined reelection to the
legislature and formed a law partnership with John W.
Veale in Amarillo, an association continued until
Plemons's death. He died of apoplexy on the morning of
December 14, 1901, and was buried in Amarillo.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: John Crudgington, "Old Time
Amarillo," Panhandle-Plains Historical Review 30
(1957), 79-113. J. Evetts Haley, Charles Goodnight
(Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1949). Della Tyler
Key, In the Cattle Country: History of Potter County,
1887-1966 (Amarillo: Tyler-Berkley, 1961; 2d ed., Wichita
Falls: Nortex, 1972). Millie Jones Porter, Memory Cups of
Panhandle Pioneers (Clarendon, Texas: Clarendon Press,
1945). H. C. Randolph, Panhandle Lawyers (Amarillo:
Russell Stationery, 1931). F. Stanley [Stanley F. L.
Crocchiola], The Plemons Story (Nazareth, Texas, 1973).
Thomas F. Turner, "Prairie Dog Lawyers,"
Panhandle-Plains Historical Review 2 (1929).
H. Allen Anderson
MCILROY, SHERMAN D.
(1871-1945)
Sherman D. (Tex) McIlroy, pioneer oilman, was born in
Randolph County, Arkansas, in 1871, the third of the
eleven children of William and Mary C. McIlroy. In 1886,
when he was fifteen, the family moved to Hood County,
Texas, and settled on a farm near Tolar, ten miles west
of Granbury. There he remained until 1889, when he left
for Fresno, California. By 1897 McIlroy had followed the
lure of the gold rush to the Klondike and gone to Dawson
City, Yukon Territory, where he spent several exciting
years.
In 1900 he married Katharyn Byrd, a native of San
Antonio, at Hot Springs, Arkansas, and took her back to
Dawson City. They had two daughters, the elder said to be
the first white child born in the Yukon. Later the
McIlroys moved to Fairbanks, Alaska, where they remained
in the gold fields until 1914. McIlroy, who acquired his
nickname in Alaska, then brought his family back to
Texas. They settled in Amarillo, where McIlroy joined his
brother, White W. McIlroy, in the meat and grocery
business.
In December 1918 excitement over the Masterson oil
discovery well swept the Panhandle, and early in 1919 the
McIlroy brothers formed the Dixon Creek Oil Company as a
joint-stock firm and set out to take advantage of the
prospects, despite their total lack of experience in the
oil business. After securing some prospective leases on
the Smith Ranch in southern Hutchinson County, they
drilled their first well, Smith-Capers No. 1, which came
in during June 1922 at only thirty barrels a day.
Nevertheless, the McIlroys incorporated the company in
1924 to raise funds and continued to drill. Henry A. and
Millard C. Nobles were among the principal stockholders.
In March 1925 the Dixon Creek, or Smith No. 1, was
brought in and produced 400 barrels a day. In December of
that year the No. 2 well on the same lease came in at
3,000 barrels a day. Tex McIlroy then decided to try to
increase production by deepening Smith No. 1. On January
11, 1926, after being drilled only an additional two
feet, the well blew in at 10,000 barrels a day, an
unprecedented success that touched off a boom and led to
the founding of Borger.
After completing Smith No. 1, the Dixon Creek Oil Company
brought in a number of successful producers, most of them
on the Smith Ranch leases. This made McIlroy one of the
dominant independent operators during the boom's early
days. To use the large volume of casinghead gas produced
from company wells, he also erected one of the
Panhandle's first natural gas plants. Later, McIlroy
expanded his operations to the West Pampa Field in
western Gray County, where he drilled the second
producer. There the company eventually brought in
eighty-seven producing wells on leases totalling 1,800
acres; at one time the wells were producing more than
20,000 barrels of oil a day.
In all, the McIlroy brothers organized three successful
independent regional oil companies between 1919 and 1932.
During that time, Tex McIlroy handled most of the oil
properties. In an era of shady stock deals and
questionable business practices, he became known for his
honesty, his determination to keep his word, and his
charities. The Amarillo Community Chest, the Maverick
Club, and several small churches were among the
organizations the McIlroys supported. In 1930 the
McIlroys merged their Dixon Creek and Cockrell-McIlroy
companies as the Dixon Creek Oil and Refining Company.
They purchased a small refinery at Kingsmill and operated
it mostly on company production.
In 1932 the McIlroy brothers sold the company to the King
Royalty (later King Oil) Company of Wichita Falls. At
that sale, the corporation returned over 700 percent to
investors. The McIlroy Oil Company, managed several years
longer by White McIlroy, paid dividends of well over 600
percent. Although he was one of the largest stockholders
in the King Oil firm, Tex retired from active oil
development after the 1932 sale. He bought a large cattle
ranch in the vicinity of his old Hood County home and
developed it into a game preserve, to which he devoted
the remainder of his life. He suffered a severe heart
attack on July 16, 1945. He died in a San Antonio
hospital on August 27 and was buried in the family plot
at the Tolar Cemetery. His game ranch was subsequently
sold by his heirs to the Black ranching interests.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Amarillo Globe, August 27, 1945. Amarillo
Sunday News-Globe, August 14, 1938. Canyon News, Special
Supplement, February 20, 1986. C. L. Hightower, ed., Hood
County in Picture and Story (Fort Worth: Historical
Publishers, 1970; rpt. 1978).
H. Allen Anderson
HALEY, JAMES EVETTS, SR.
(1901-1995)
J. Evetts Haley, historian, rancher, and political
activist, was born in Belton, Texas, on July 5, 1901, to
John Alva and Julia (Evetts) Haley. The family moved in
1906 to Midland, where John Haley established a hardware
business and later a hotel. He also purchased a small
ranch near town and a larger one east of the Pecos in
Loving and Winkler counties. As a boy, Evetts worked on
area ranches and competed at local rodeos. In the fall of
1920 he entered Midland College, where he excelled in
both academics and athletics, winning a letter in
football. When that college closed the following year,
Haley transferred to West Texas Normal College at Canyon.
There he became senior class president and served as
business manager and columnist for the school newspaper,
the Prairie, and as editor-in-chief of the annual, Le
Mirage. Upon graduating in 1925, he was appointed field
secretary of the Panhandle Plains Historical Society and
began interviewing pioneers and gathering artifacts and
archival material, including the voluminous and important
XIT Ranch papers. In the fall of 1925, Haley entered
graduate school at the University of Texas, where he
studied under Eugene C. Barker. After completing a thesis
on Texas cattle trails, he received a master's degree in
history in 1926 and resumed his duties with the Panhandle
Plains Historical Society.
In 1927 officials of the former Capitol Freehold Land and
Investment Company commissioned the twenty-six-year-old
scholar to write a history of the XIT Ranch. Haley's
critically acclaimed The XIT Ranch of Texas and the Early
Days of the Llano Estacado, which appeared two years
later, established the author as a premier interpreter of
the western range cattle industry. The book, however, was
also the subject of libel suits totaling $2.2 million.
The first of these actions was tried in state district
court in Lubbock in 1931.
Although acquitted of the charges, Haley and his
co-defendants subsequently agreed to withdraw the book
from the market and paid the plaintiffs $17,500 to settle
all pending claims. By this time Haley was hard at work
on the biography of legendary Texas rancher Charles
Goodnight, whom he had first met in 1925. In the fall of
1929 the University of Texas hired Haley to establish an
archival field program. During the Great Depression, he
headed the Texas Historical Records Survey.
He published major articles in such diverse journals and
magazines as the Southwestern Historical Quarterly,
Southwest Review, Ranch Romances, Nature, and the
Panhandle-Plains Historical Review. He wrote thirteen
articles for the Cattleman alone between 1925 and 1949
and, from 1947 to 1964, a series of more than three dozen
historical sketches for the Shamrock, a publication of
the Shamrock Oil and Gas Corporation. In 1936 Houghton
Mifflin published Charles Goodnight: Cowman and
Plainsman, a masterwork that further enhanced Haley's
reputation as an writer and scholar. That same year, he
also coordinated the UT history department exhibits
commemorating the Texas Centennial.
During the early 1930s Haley became an increasingly vocal
opponent of the New Deal policies of Franklin D.
Roosevelt's administration. After being elected chairman
of the Jeffersonian Democrats of Texas, a conservative
anti-Roosevelt faction of the Democratic party, Haley
directed that organization's political activities during
the 1936 presidential campaign. In September the
University of Texas, citing budgetary constraints and a
shortage of grant funds, did not renew his contract.
Haley contended that he was fired for political reasons.
Bitter and exhausted, he returned to the Panhandle to
recuperate. Early the following year he accepted a
commission to write the biography of Texas
banker-cattleman George W. Littlefield under a grant from
the Littlefield Fund for Southern History at the
University of Texas, and to undertake the biography of
frontier lawman Jefferson Davis Milton for Houghton
Mifflin. In 1937 he also became manager of the Zeebar
Cattle Company in Arizona, owned by Texan L. L. Dent, and
purchased a small ranch of his own, the JH, in Hutchinson
County. He later managed the Atarque and Clochintoh
Ranches in New Mexico for Dent and W. A. Wrather.
In 1939 J. M. West hired Haley to manage an extensive
ranching enterprise that stretched from Clear Lake, near
Houston, to the Chupadero on the lower Rio Grande, to the
Figure 2 in West Texas. He served in this capacity until
West's death in 1942, at which time Haley again returned
to the Panhandle. In 1943 the University of Oklahoma
Press released Haley's George W. Littlefield, Texan. The
next year the Texas State Historical Association
published Charles Schreiner, General Merchandise, a short
biography of a Kerrville businessman. This book marked
the first of many distinguished collaborations between
the author and El Paso book designer and printer J. Carl
Hertzog, Sr.
In the early 1940s Haley became embroiled in a
controversy between University of Texas president Homer
P. Rainey and the UT Board of Regents over the issues of
academic freedom and university governance. Haley sided
with the regents and produced a series of essays,
published in the San Antonio Express and subsequently
issued in a pamphlet entitled The University of Texas and
the Issue. In 1948, Haley completed his fourth major
biography, Jeff Milton, A Good Man with a Gun. An
important regional study, Fort Concho and the Texas
Frontier, won Haley a literary award from the Sons of the
Republic of Texas four years later.
During the early 1950s, Haley served as president of the
Panhandle-Plains Historical Society and became the first
director of the Institute of Americanism at Texas
Technological College. He resigned the latter position in
1955 but accepted Governor R. Allan Shivers's appointment
to the Texas Tech Board of Regents. During his tenure
Haley was instrumental in establishing a history archive
known as the Southwest Collection. He also continued to
expand his ranching operations by purchasing range near
Sallisaw, Oklahoma, in 1952.
Haley ran unsuccessfully for governor in 1956 on a
platform that endorsed segregation and states' rights and
opposed labor unions and federal price controls on
natural gas. The following year he and other conservative
Texans formed the political action group Texans for
America. Haley was elected state chairman. During this
same period the federal government charged him and his
son with violating the Agricultural Adjustment Act of
1936 by exceeding their wheat acreage allotment on their
Oklahoma ranch. The Supreme Court eventually heard the
case and overturned a lower court ruling favoring the
Haleys. Never far from the political arena, Haley was
both lionized and vilified for his best-selling polemic,
A Texan Looks at Lyndon, issued during the 1964
presidential election campaign. He continued to support
conservative candidates and causes.
In 1976 he completed his last major book, a family
chronicle entitled Rough Times-Tough Fiber: A Fragmentary
Family Chronicle. Haley's library and personal papers
became the cornerstone of the Nita Stewart Haley Memorial
Library, opened that year in Midland. Haley received many
honors, including investiture in the Knights of the Order
of San Jacinto by the Sons of the Republic of Texas in
1978, an Award of Merit from the American Association of
State and Local History in 1981, induction into the Hall
of Great Westerners at the National Cowboy Hall of Fame
and Western Heritage Center (Oklahoma City) in 1990, and
similar recognition by the Heritage Hall of Fame at the
State Fair of Texas in 1994.
He married Mary Vernita Stewart, a college drama teacher,
on August 27, 1928, in Alpine. The couple had one son,
born in 1931. After his wife died in 1958, Haley remained
unmarried until 1970, when he married Rosalind Kress
Frame in Savannah, Georgia. He died in Midland on October
9, 1995, and was buried in Moffat Cemetery, Bell County,
Texas.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Hervey E. Chesley, Adventuring with the Old
Timers, ed. B. Byron Price (Midland: Nita Stewart Haley
Memorial Library, 1979). Dallas Morning News, October 11,
1995. James Evetts Haley Papers, Barker Texas History
Center, University of Texas at Austin. B. Byron Price,
Crafting a Southwestern Masterpiece: J. Evetts Haley and
"Charles Goodnight: Cowman and Plainsman"
(Midland: Nita Stewart Haley Memorial Library, 1986). B.
Byron Price, "When a Good Man with a Gun Met a Good
Man with a Pen," Journal of Arizona History 33
(Spring 1992). Chandler A. Robinson, J. Evetts Haley,
Cowman-Historian (El Paso: Carl Hertzog, 1967). Chandler
A. Robinson, ed., J. Evetts Haley and the Passing of the
Old West (Austin: Jenkins , 1978).
B. Byron Price
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