|
Hutchinson
County Biographies
Source: The Handbook of
Texas Online
SANFORD, JAMES
MCEUIN
DIXON, WILLIAM
DIXON, OLIVE KING
COBLE, WILLIAM THOMAS
WHITTENBURG, JAMES ANDREW
STINNETT, ALBERT SIDNEY
BORGER, ASA PHILLIP
HERRING, CORNELIUS TAYLOR
SANFORD, JAMES MCEUIN
(1864-1933)
James McEuin (Mack) Sanford, rancher and Hutchinson
County pioneer, one of ten children of John Thompson and
Nancy Theodocia (Hay) Sanford, was born on September 26,
1864, in Burnet County, Texas. His parents had moved to
Texas from Williamson County, Tennessee, a few years
before. At the age of eighteen Sanford began working as a
cowboy on a trail drive from South Texas to the Canadian
border; then he worked at the old Bar X Ranch in the
disputed Greer County. In 1883 he went to the Panhandle
and worked two years for Frank Latchman's DBL ranch,
twelve miles west of Adobe Walls. Afterward, he worked
for the Hansford Land and Cattle Company and for the
Turkey Track Ranch for ten years. During that time
Sanford hunted wolves for bounty and earned ten dollars
for each pelt taken. By 1895 he had built up his own
cattle herd of 100 head.
He was the first to file under the provisions of the
Four-Section Act, which allowed settlers living in
semiarid regions to acquire large parcels of land to make
stock ranching possible. He claimed land in Carson and
Hutchinson counties. He built a dugout home and ranch
headquarters on the first four sections in northern
Carson County. Then he expanded his operations, often on
borrowed money, and purchased several tracts of former
Turkey Track land after that ranch broke up. By keeping
his home herd intact and shipping steers to the Kansas
markets, Sanford was able to net as much as $12,000 in
profits. Eventually he owned over 2,000 head and expanded
his Panhandle ranch holdings to some thirty sections.
Sanford helped organize Hutchinson County in 1901. The
same year he married Garland S. Whiteside, daughter of
Judge J. A. Whiteside. W. H. Ingerton, the first county
judge issued their marriage license, the first in the
county. Sanford formed a partnership with Lee Bivins the
following year and handled steers until 1906. The
Sanfords had a son and a daughter.
Sanford was among the Panhandle cattlemen who profited
greatly from the oil boom of the 1920s. The region's
third well, the Whittington-Sanford No. 1, was spudded on
his land. As a result the town of Sanford was
established, in 1927. On numerous occasions Sanford led
Panhandle oil operators in battles both in Austin and
Washington, D.C., for improved conditions. The drought of
1930 compelled him to seek additional pasturage, and he
bought 25,000 acres near Wagon Mound, New Mexico. He died
on August 24, 1933, and was buried in Llano Cemetery,
Amarillo. His son, Harrison, took over management of the
New Mexico ranch, while the properties in Carson and
Hutchinson counties fell to his daughter, Effie, and her
husband, Richard P. Coon. Sanford Dam, which forms Lake
Meredith on the Canadian River, bears his name.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Hutchinson County Historical Commission,
History of Hutchinson County, Texas (Dallas: Taylor,
1980). Jo Stewart Randel, ed., A Time to Purpose: A
Chronicle of Carson County (4 vols., Hereford, Texas:
Pioneer, 1966-72).
H. Allen Anderson
DIXON, WILLIAM
(1850-1913)
William (Billy) Dixon, scout, plainsman, buffalo hunter,
and Indian fighter, was born in Ohio County, West
Virginia, on September 25, 1850. He was orphaned at
twelve and lived with his uncle Thomas Dixon in Ray
County, Missouri, until the fall of 1864, when he worked
in woodcutters' camps along the Missouri River until he
secured employment from government freight contractors in
Kansas as a bullwhacker and muleskinner. Except for a
year (1866) spent working on the McCall family's farm
near Leavenworth, when he obtained some formal schooling,
Dixon followed this occupation until the fall of 1869.
He was a skilled marksman and occasionally scouted for
eastern excursionists brought out by the railroads for
buffalo hunting. In November 1869 he joined a venture in
hunting and trapping on the Saline River northwest of
Fort Hays. In 1870 buyers offered a dollar each for
buffalo cow hides and two dollars for bull hides, and
Dixon's marksmanship made hide hunting highly profitable.
He invested in a road-ranch or supply store, a
merchandising venture that was successful until 1871,
when, during Dixon's absence, the store manager, Billy
Reynolds, sold out and departed with the proceeds.
At one time Dixon probably had as many as four or five
skinners in his employ. He had scouted Texas as far south
as the Salt Fork of the Red River when the buffalo
hunters moved into the Texas Panhandle in 1874. He and
his group hunted along the Canadian River and its
tributaries in the vicinity of the new Adobe Walls, the
supply post established by businessmen and buffalo
hunters near the South Canadian about a mile and a half
from the remains of the old Adobe Walls trading post,
built about 1843 by William Bent.
It was said that after the spring migrations occurred,
Dixon could shoot enough buffalo to keep ten skinners
busy, and he found Adobe Walls a convenient place to
store his wagonloads of hides hauled in from the field.
He was one of the twenty-eight men who with one woman
participated in the second battle of Adobe Walls in 1874,
fighting from inside James Hanrahan's saloon. The story
of how he became a hero two days into the battle, when a
bullet from his Sharps buffalo rifle knocked an Indian
off his horse nearly a mile away, is perhaps exaggerated.
Dixon himself never claimed credit for his "long
shot."
Despite a partnership proposal from Hanrahan, Dixon did
no more hide hunting after the battle. While he was in
Dodge City early in August 1874, Gen. Nelson A. Miles
enlisted his services as a scout in the detachment
commanded by Lt. Frank D. Baldwin. In September the
command was on McClellan Creek when Miles sent Dixon,
Amos Chapman, and four enlisted men with dispatches to
carry to Camp Supply. Near Gageby Creek on the second day
out they encountered a large war party of Comanches and
Kiowas, who surrounded them in the Buffalo Wallow Fight.
Dixon was among the five survivors awarded the Medal of
Honor for heroism in that engagement.
He was present at the rescue of the German sisters from
the Cheyennes on McClellan Creek on November 8, 1874. He
was with the party that selected the site of Fort Elliott
in the spring of 1875 and was attached to that post for
duty when he guided the Nolan expedition in pursuit of
the Comanches in August 1877. His knowledge of the
country saved the command when he led the men to water at
Double Lakes on the Llano Estacado.
Dixon returned to civilian life in 1883, worked on the
Turkey Track Ranch, built a home near the site of the
original Adobe Walls, planted an orchard and thirty acres
of alfalfa that he irrigated from Bent's Creek, and
became postmaster at Adobe Walls, a position he held for
twenty years. In 1901 he was elected the first sheriff of
the newly formed Hutchinson County but resigned in
disgust at the political strife aroused in connection
with the organization of the county. In addition, he
served as a state land commissioner and justice of the
peace for the area around Hutchinson, Gray, and Roberts
counties. He and S. G. Carter operated a ranch-supply
store at the house. On October 18, 1894, he married Olive
King Dixon of Virginia, who for three years thereafter
was the only woman living in Hutchinson County. They had
seven children.
The family moved to Plemons in 1902 to provide schooling
for their children. Small-town life proved irksome to the
former scout, and in 1906 he went to homestead in the
open spaces of Oklahoma. During his last years Dixon
reportedly lived near poverty, and friends tried to
obtain a pension for him. On March 9, 1913, he died of
pneumonia at his Cimarron County homestead; he was buried
in the cemetery at Texline by members of his Masonic
lodge. On June 27, 1929, his remains were reinterred at
the Adobe Walls site. Dixon Creek in southern Hutchinson
County is named for him, as is the Billy Dixon Masonic
Lodge in Fritch. Personal artifacts from his scouting
days are housed in both the Hutchinson County Museum in
Borger and the Panhandle-Plains Historical Museum in
Canyon.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: T. Lindsay Baker and Billy R. Harrison,
Adobe Walls: The History and Archaeology of the 1874
Trading Post (College Station: Texas A&M University
Press, 1986). Olive K. Dixon, Life of "Billy"
Dixon (1914; rev. ed., Dallas: P. L. Turner Company,
1927; facsimile of original ed., Austin: State House,
1987). Hutchinson County Historical Commission, History
of Hutchinson County, Texas (Dallas: Taylor, 1980). Mrs.
Sam Isaacs, "Billy Dixon: Pioneer Plainsman,"
Frontier Times, June 1939. John L. McCarty, Adobe Walls
Bride (San Antonio: Naylor, 1955). Vertical Files, Barker
Texas History Center, University of Texas at Austin.
T. C. Richardson
DIXON, OLIVE KING
(1873-1956)
Olive King Dixon was born on January 30, 1873, on Bent
Mountain, eighteen miles southwest of Roanoke, Virginia,
the eighth of ten children of Robert Woods and Mary Jane
(Blankenship) King. The family estate had been given by
the king of England to Gen. Andrew Lewis, Olive's
great-grandfather, for his role in Lord Dunmore's War
(1774) and was thus known as the Lewis grant. When Olive
was seven her father, a Civil War veteran, succumbed to
an outbreak of smallpox. Olive and her sister Margaret
were sent to Decatur, Alabama, to live with a cousin,
Dora King Wade, and her husband Miles, who had two sons
of their own. Olive remained at the Wade home and
attended school in Decatur until she was sixteen, when
she returned to Virginia.
In the meantime two of her brothers, Albert Richard and
John Archie, had gone to the Texas Panhandle in the 1880s
to work for the Seven K and Cresswell ranches.q Albert
subsequently married and settled in Lipscomb County, and
Archie settled in Roberts County; both were doing well as
ranchers on their own. In 1893 Olive visited her brothers
and spent most of her time at the home of Archie, who had
married Sena Walstad on Christmas Eve, 1890, and now had
an infant son, Woods. While Olive was there, James A.
Whittenburg offered her the job of teaching at Garden
Creek School, between Tallahone and Reynolds creeks,
organized for the children of the Whittenburg and Newby
families. She accepted, and soon afterward Olive met and
was courted by the veteran plainsman William (Billy)
Dixon.
Billy and Olive were married on October 18, 1894, at his
Adobe Walls homestead on the Turkey Track Ranch. Rev. C.
V. Bailey, a Methodist minister, came a hundred miles
from Mobeetie to perform the ceremony. Later Olive stated
that for three years after her marriage she was the only
woman living in Hutchinson County. The Dixons lived at
Adobe Walls until 1902, when they moved to Plemons. By
then they had four children; three more were added after
their move to Cimarron County, Oklahoma, in 1906. Before
her husband's death on March 9, 1913, Olive carefully
recorded his recollections of his younger years as a
buffalo hunter and army scout. These she compiled and
published as the Life of Billy Dixon, an important source
of Panhandle history, in 1914. Frederick S. Barde, an
Oklahoma western writer, helped her edit the manuscript.
Mrs. Dixon and her children moved briefly to Texline,
then in 1915 to Canyon. They continued to farm the
Cimarron County homestead until 1917, when they sold it
and moved to Miami, in Roberts County. There she wrote
sketches of Panhandle history for area newspapers, and
several of her pieces also appeared in various magazines.
In 1923 she made a memorable trip east to visit relatives
and interview Gen. Nelson A. Miles and others who had
known her husband and who attested to the truth of his
exploits. As a charter member of the Panhandle-Plains
Historical Society, Mrs. Dixon led the successful effort
in 1924 to place historical markers at the Adobe Walls
and Buffalo Wallow battle sites. In 1929 she moved to
Amarillo and was hired as a part-time staff writer by the
Amarillo Globe-News. She was made a salaried reporter in
1937 and was in charge of preparing the Globe-News Golden
Anniversary Edition of August 14, 1938. She remained with
the Amarillo newspapers until her death, on March 17,
1956. She was interred in Llano Cemetery, Amarillo. Dixon
heirs live throughout much of West Texas, Eastern New
Mexico, and the Pacific Northwest.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Amarillo Daily News, March 19, 1956.
Hutchinson County Historical Commission, History of
Hutchinson County, Texas (Dallas: Taylor, 1980). John L.
McCarty, Adobe Walls Bride (San Antonio: Naylor, 1955).
H. Allen Anderson
COBLE, WILLIAM THOMAS
(1875-1958)
William Thomas Coble, rancher and oilman, was born on
October 18, 1875, in Douglas County, Missouri. After his
parents died, he was brought to Texas at age twelve by
his grandfather, T. M. Johnson, who settled at Henrietta
in Clay County. Coble earned fifteen dollars a month
working as a farmhand for E. W. Grogan and over a period
of five years saved $400. With this money he purchased
twenty-five two-year-old steers in November 1896. He
grazed them with the herd of John William Dunn on the
Canadian River near Cheyenne, Oklahoma, and shipped them
for $1.50 each to the Kansas City market. That venture,
along with his earnings as a farmhand, netted him over
$1,000.
Coble decided to stay in the cattle business and moved to
the Panhandle in the spring of 1899. There he bought
forty-five cattle from Charles Goodnight and ran them on
a leased section ten miles north of Clarendon. After this
herd doubled during the winter, Coble brought four
sections of land on Moore Creek, just west of the Turkey
Track Ranch in Hutchinson County. Shortly afterward he
made further land purchases. On November 16, 1905, he
married Maud Roberts, daughter of James R. Roberts,
former foreman of S. Burk Burnett's Four Sixes Ranch.
The Cobles, the first couple to be married at Amarillo's
new white frame Baptist church, established their home on
North Julian Boulevard in Amarillo. They had a son who
died young and a daughter, Catherine Elizabeth, who later
married a grandson of James A. Whittenburg. In the
meantime Coble continued supplementing his Hutchinson
County holdings, and in 1916 he bought the original
Turkey Track headquarters after the lease on it had
expired. At that time he revived the famous Turkey Track
brand. In all, he built up a vast ranching empire
amounting to 105 sections of choice grazing land divided
into thirty-two pastures and stocked with thousands of
high-grade cattle. Later he acquired interest in several
cotton farms in Hockley County.
He was also among the Panhandle ranchers who profited
greatly from the oil boom of the 1920s. In 1918 the
geologists Scott and Alba Heywood explored the Turkey
Track lands and found that they had oil potential.
Subsequently, the Coble-Heywood Oil Company was organized
with $75,000 capital. Coble served as president and Scott
Heywood as general manager of the syndicate, which leased
10,000 acres of Turkey Track land and was among the first
to pay a dividend. Phillips Petroleum drilled thirty
consecutive producing wells on Coble's properties. Coble
later formed the Coble-Whittenburg Oil Company with his
in-laws and let out contracts for wells in the south
Hutchinson County oil pool.
Coble was a member of the First Baptist Church in
Amarillo and president of the Texas and Southwestern
Cattle Raisers Association from 1934 to 1936. He was also
a benefactor of the Panhandle-Plains Historical Society
and supported that organization's museum in Canyon. In
December 1938 Coble's wife died from injuries sustained
in an automobile accident. He married Gladys Marion
Martin on September 18, 1952, and moved into a house on
Crockett Street in Amarillo. He died on June 13, 1958,
and was buried in Llano Cemetery, Amarillo. His Turkey
Track Ranch became part of the Whittenburg family's
ranching empire.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Hutchinson County Historical Commission,
History of Hutchinson County, Texas (Dallas: Taylor,
1980). F. Stanley [Stanley F. L. Crocchiola], The Early
Days of the Oil Industry in the Texas Panhandle,
1919-1929 (Borger, Texas: Hess, 1973).
H. Allen Anderson
WHITTENBURG, JAMES ANDREW
(1857-1936)
James Andrew Whittenburg, cattleman, the son of George
and Sarah (Jarvis) Whittenburg, was born on May 7, 1857,
in Chillicothe, Missouri. After the Civil War
Whittenburg's imagination was fired by reports of the
cattle trade, and at the age of twelve he devised plans
to join his older brothers in Texas. When his mother sent
him out for wood one morning, he caught a freight train
that took him as far as the Indian Territory. After
selling various trinkets for meals, lodging, and passage
on the Red River ferry to Texas, he spent the next five
years working with his brothers on Ben Slaughter's ranch
in Parker County. In four years he had his own herd of
twenty head.
When he arrived back at his home at age seventeen, he
walked in the door carrying a load of wood. After
attending school for a year, he returned to Texas and
went to work for John Proffitt at Fort Belknap, in Young
County. During the next four years Whittenburg made
several drives over the Western Trail to Dodge City; on
one drive he suffered from heatstroke, which affected his
eyes and left him almost blind for the rest of his life.
Nevertheless, by 1878 Whittenburg owned over 100 cattle.
At that time he filed on eighty acres of land in Young
County. There he met Tennessee Ann (Tennie) Parham, whom
he married on July 3, 1879. They had three children, one
of whom died in infancy.
The Whittenburgs lived and ran their cattle for a time in
Lamar County. However, a severe drought compelled them to
parlay their holdings into a larger spread in Wilbarger
County. After purchasing a wagon and team, the couple
peddled groceries and supplies, bought at Doan's
Crossing, to the Comanches and other tribes in western
Oklahoma. They soon won a reputation among the Indians as
shrewd traders, and husband and wife took turns standing,
shotgun in hand, on night guard over the team and
supplies. During one venture the Comanche chief Big Bow
became impressed with their son George's blond hair and
offered from seventy-five to a hundred horses for the
boy, promising to make him a chief.
In 1887 Whittenburg filed claim on land in Roberts County
near Miami. Here he carried the mail from Miami to the
Adobe Walls post office, then run by William (Billy)
Dixon. George became one of Olive King Dixon's five
pupils at Garden Creek School. Whittenburg was
instrumental in the organization of Roberts County and
served as a commissioner. When Oklahoma was opened for
settlement in 1889, he grazed cattle in Kay County and
for four years carried mail on a star route.
Whittenburg continued his operations in Oklahoma until
1898, when he filed on four sections of land in the
center of Hutchinson County. Panhandle, in Carson County,
was the family's banking and supply center until 1901,
when the townsite of Plemons was platted on land donated
from the Whittenburg homestead section. Because of his
father's failing eyesight, George took charge of the
physical labor and growing management responsibilities of
the Whittenburgs' MM Ranch, which accumulated 25,000
acres and over 3,000 cattle by 1920.
In 1924 oil was discovered on the Whittenburg holdings.
After the death of his wife in 1927, Whittenburg moved to
Amarillo and rented rooms at the Amarillo Hotel. On
October 19, 1936, Whittenburg died of injuries he
received when the car in which he was riding collided
with a freight train in Amarillo. He was buried in the
Dreamland Cemetery in Canyon. The family's MM Cattle
Company, headed by Roy Robert Whittenburg, still operated
the ranch in Hutchinson County in 1986. One of his
grandsons, S. B. Whittenburg, founded the Amarillo Times,
which he merged with the Globe-News after buying an
interest in the company in 1951.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Amarillo Daily News, October 20, 1936.
Garland H. Bell, "Willis P. Hedgecoke," in
Amarillo Genealogical Society, Texas Panhandle
Forefathers, comp. Barbara C. Spray (Dallas: National
ShareGraphics, 1983). Hutchinson County Historical
Commission, History of Hutchinson County, Texas (Dallas:
Taylor, 1980). John L. McCarty, Adobe Walls Bride (San
Antonio: Naylor, 1955). Thomas Thompson, North of Palo
Duro (Canyon, Texas: Staked Plains, 1984). Vertical
Files, Barker Texas History Center, University of Texas
at Austin.
H. Allen Anderson
STINNETT, ALBERT SIDNEY
(1863-1935)
Albert Sidney (Sid) Stinnett, West Texas developer, was
born on a farm near Belton, Texas, in 1863 and named for
Gen. Albert Sidney Johnston. He grew up in the turbulent
Reconstruction era and married Cornelia M. Cobb, daughter
of Maj. Robert Cobb, a Confederate Army officer. The
couple had three children. In 1905 Stinnett moved his
family from Fort Worth to Amarillo, where he became the
first in the Panhandle-Plains area to engage in the
cottonseed oil and cake business and later operated a
seed and grain distributing agency. He allied himself
with area cattlemen and farmers in their battle for lower
freight rates and better rail service. After enlisting
support throughout the region Stinnett carried the
farmers' and ranchers' demands to the Interstate Commerce
Commission in Washington, D.C., where he was successful
in obtaining favorable rates and other concessions,
particularly for the area beef-cattle industry.
As a leading Panhandle booster Stinnett served as
industrial manager of the Amarillo Board of City
Development and in June 1919 was elected president of the
Panhandle-Plains Chamber of Commerce, which he had helped
organize; by that time the chamber represented thirty-one
counties. In November 1920 he persuaded voters to approve
a bond issue supporting a proposed new city library and
auditorium. He likewise envisioned a railroad line
connecting Amarillo with the northern plains states. He
sold his grain business in 1923 and spent the next two
years researching and persuading the Rock Island Railway
officials in Chicago to approve such a project.
After securing the permit and right-of-way in 1925,
Stinnett personally financed the first three months of
construction on the new Rock Island branch line from
Amarillo to Liberal, Kansas. Then, at the suggestion of
Lee Bivins, the city of Amarillo started a department to
handle the financing through the Board of City
Development. In Hutchinson County Stinnett and a partner,
Joseph Williams, platted a townsite on a 960-acre tract
just north of the Canadian River breaks, formerly owned
by rancher W. A. Starnes. In 1926, with the Rock Island
officials and several others, the partners began selling
lots and attracting people to the new town, which was
named after Stinnett and shortly afterward became the new
Hutchinson county seat. For the next three years Stinnett
was active in promoting other townsites on the new Rock
Island branch lines, including Sunray in Moore County.
Stinnett simultaneously worked toward the fulfillment of
the Canadian River Project, which called for the
construction of a dam on the upper Canadian in eastern
New Mexico. As a member of the Arkansas River Basin
Commission, he felt that such a dam would greatly benefit
the High Plains area. With the backing of Vincent Jones,
a civil engineer responsible for the building of several
reservoirs in New Mexico, Stinnett presented his case
before the president and other federal officials in
Washington with favorable results. After a preliminary
study in January 1924 construction on the Conchas Dam,
near Tucumcari, New Mexico, was approved.
In addition Stinnett pushed for construction of a
short-cut highway from Amarillo across Hutchinson County,
complete with a combination rail and highway bridge
across the Canadian at Sanford, to connect the North and
South Plains. He also considered the possibility of using
natural gas to generate electricity and produce a
sufficient water flow from the South Plains shallow-water
belt for irrigation purposes. Stinnett was plagued with
failing health during his last year. He fell seriously
ill and died at his Amarillo home on January 5, 1935. He
was interred in Llano Cemetery, Amarillo. The Conchas Dam
was completed a few months later.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Amarillo Daily News, January 6, 1935.
Amarillo Genealogical Society, Texas Panhandle
Forefathers, comp. Barbara C. Spray (Dallas: National
ShareGraphics, 1983).
H. Allen Anderson
BORGER, ASA PHILLIP
(1888-1934)
Asa Phillip (Ace) Borger, town builder, was born to
Phillip and Minnie Ann (West) Borger on April 12, 1888,
on the family farm near Carthage, Missouri. His father, a
veterinarian, died when Ace was six, and the Borger
children were raised by their mother and two
grandmothers. Borger attended school in Carthage and
graduated from business college. Around 1907 he married a
classmate, Elizabeth Willoughby. The couple spent their
first years in a rented farmhouse near Carthage, where
Borger opened a lumberyard; they had three children.
Borger began his career as a town promoter when World War
I broke out in Europe. In 1915 he and his younger brother
Lester Andrew (Pete) sold real estate in the mining town
of Picher, Oklahoma, in the center of valuable lead and
zinc deposits. Much lead was produced from Picher for the
war effort. In 1917 the Borgers, in company with the
noted wildcatter Tom Slick, laid out the oil town of
Slick near Bristow, Oklahoma. At each town the Borgers
and their associates built hotels, filling stations, and
lumberyards, sold real estate, and pushed for the
building of railroad lines to the sites. In 1922 they
successfully launched Cromwell, Oklahoma, as a boomtown.
Though Borger and his family maintained a home for a time
in each of these towns, he continued to use Carthage as
his main base.
Borger became interested in the discovery of the
Panhandle oilfield. Early in 1926, after personally
checking out the reports, he purchased 240 acres from
rancher John Frank Weatherly at fifty dollars an acre. He
next obtained a grant from Texas secretary of state Emma
Grigsby Meharg to organize the Borger Townsite Company,
with capital stock of $10,000 divided into 100 shares of
$100 each. In addition to Borger himself, the company's
stockholders included C. C. Horton of the Gulf Oil
Company and John R. Miller, an old friend from Oklahoma
boom days who became the new town's first mayor. The
company proceeded to lay out the town and opened the sale
of lots on March 8, 1926. By the end of that first day,
it had grossed between $60,000 and $100,000, and after
six months Borger sold out completely, for more than a
million dollars.
He established a lumberyard in the town named for him and
opened its first bank. Often he took out full-page ads in
area papers promoting settlement in Borger and other
oil-rich sites throughout West Texas and eastern New
Mexico in which he had bought an interest. He also owned
a string of Panhandle wheat elevators and 19,000 acres of
farmland in Hansford County. In 1927 Ace and Pete Borger,
in association with Albert S. Stinnett, established the
towns of Stinnett and Gruver and were influential in
making Stinnett the Hutchinson county seat. In 1929
Borger built a spacious two-story family home, the first
brick residence in Borger. From the start he had set
aside building sites for churches and schools. His wife,
Elizabeth, became active in community affairs; her love
for beauty and culture was reflected in the antiques with
which she decorated their home. Visiting dignitaries were
lavishly entertained there.
Borger's overt generosity with friends and acquaintances
caused hard feelings among certain of the town's
populace, however, particularly Arthur Huey, the
Hutchinson county treasurer. Huey's dislike for Borger
intensified after the Borger State Bank, which Borger had
established in June 1930 with himself as president and
his son Phillip as vice president, failed, causing a
minor panic among local businessmen and small depositors.
The elder Borger was later convicted of receiving
deposits in the insolvent bank and assessed a two-year
prison term, a judgment that he appealed. Meanwhile, Huey
was jailed for embezzlement and reportedly asked Borger
to help bail him out.
When Borger refused, Huey made threats against his life.
On August 31, 1934, Borger was getting his mail at the
city post office when, according to witnesses, Huey
walked in with a Colt .45, shouted obscenities, and shot
him five times. Huey then took Borger's own .44 and fired
four more shots with it. Lloyd Duncan, farm boss for the
Magnolia Petroleum Company, was severely wounded by the
shots and died five days later. At his trial, which was
held in Canadian, Huey claimed that he had shot in
self-defense, arguing that Borger was gunning for him.
The jury believed him and acquitted him. Three years
later, however, he was sent to the state penitentiary for
theft of county funds. Funeral services for Ace Borger
were held in Borger, and his body was shipped back to
Missouri for burial in the family plot at Carthage.
Borger's sons, Phillip and Jack, left the area soon after
their father's death. However, their sister, Helen,
remained and occupied the brick house with her husband,
Fritz Thompson. Ace Borger's dream house, now a Texas
historical landmark, has remained a family treasure.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Hutchinson County Historical Commission,
History of Hutchinson County, Texas (Dallas: Taylor,
1980). Jerry Sinise, Black Gold and Red Lights (Burnet,
Texas: Eakin Press, 1982).
H. Allen Anderson
HERRING, CORNELIUS TAYLOR
(1849-1931)
Cornelius Taylor (Neal) Herring, rancher and businessman,
one of eight children of Jesse and Sarah (Friend)
Herring, was born on November 13, 1849, in Grayson
County, Texas. He was devoted to his mother and was
devastated by her death when he was about ten years old.
His father remarried, but the boy apparently disliked his
stepmother and went to live with a neighbor. His father
enlisted in the Confederate Army in 1861 and served with
honor throughout the Civil War.
At the age of thirteen, Neal, who never worked for hire,
began farming near Hillsboro, in Hill County, and started
buying, selling, and trading cattle. Within two years he
had acquired 100 head. After the war he and his younger
brother, Emerson, formed a partnership, bought cattle in
Navarro County, drove them to Shreveport, Louisiana, and
shipped them to market in New Orleans. On one of these
drives through Smith County, the Herrings met Richard
Lawrence, who had two daughters. On February 23, 1869,
Neal married Sarah Jane Lawrence at her hometown,
Starrville; Emerson married her sister a short time
later. In 1872 the brothers purchased two farms totaling
500 acres in Smith County. There C. T. and Sarah Herring
spent their first years. They had two children.
As early as 1878 "Colonel" Herring (an honorary
title given him by boyhood friends) began running cattle
in Archer County, where he reportedly introduced his
Chain C brand. Though he had established his reputation
as a cowman and entrepreneur throughout central and
eastern Texas, he felt that better opportunities lay in
the West. He made Fort Worth a center for his operations
in the early 1880s and leased rangeland from the Comanche
and Kiowa tribes in the Indian Territory. At about the
same time he secured contracts to build portions of both
the Texas and Pacific and the Cotton Belt railroads. By
1884 Herring owned about 3,000 steers that grazed north
of the Red River. In 1887 he and a partner, Bill Stinson,
began using the Chain C brand on their herd of about
12,000 longhorns grazing on 150,000 acres in the disputed
Greer County. Their headquarters was south of Navajo
Mountain. Among the cowboys working the ranch were Allen
Stagg, Herring's brother Emerson, who ran his own herd,
and their half-brothers Bud and Dick Herring.
Sarah Jane Herring apparently never shared her husband's
ambitions and would not leave her mother and family.
Their marriage ended in 1888, and she subsequently
"took to her bed" for nearly two decades. On
September 23, 1889, Herring married Elizabeth (Birdie)
Smithey of Fort Worth. Shortly afterward they moved to
Vernon in Wilbarger County. They had no children. There
Herring cemented his friendship with Quanah Parker, who
became so impressed with Birdie's cooking that he
reportedly once offered Herring twelve Indian ponies for
her. When his cattle began disappearing on a regular
basis, Herring made the Comanche chief a partner and the
losses were stopped.
In the summer of 1890 Herring was driving a herd across
the Red River at Doan's Crossing during a thunderstorm
when lightning knocked him from his horse. Though his
felt-lined hat saved his life, he was ill for several
months and was temporarily paralyzed. By 1894 Herring had
20,000 cattle and was leasing 175,000 acres in Oklahoma.
In 1895 he opened the C. T. Herring Banking Company in
Vernon and became its first president. He also built the
Wilbarger Hotel in Vernon and owned thirteen lumber
companies throughout North Texas. By the late 1890s he
and his son Will were ranging cattle all the way from the
New Mexico border to the Red Box Ranch near Emporia,
Kansas.
Herring's interest in the Panhandle began in 1904, when
he purchased the Seven-Up Ranch in Castro County from L.
D. Green. He operated this spread for about twenty years
as the Flagg Ranch before dividing it into farm tracts in
1925. In 1907 Herring and his son bought 100,000 acres of
the L S Ranch in Oldham County near Tascosa and stocked
it with 10,000 Herefords. He moved to Amarillo at that
time and two years later built a three-story mansion in a
wheat field south of downtown Amarillo. The
seventeen-room home featured pillars and a balcony and
contained imported chandeliers, rugs, tapestries, marble
fireplaces, oak woodwork, and a parquet floor.
An eastern artist was commissioned to paint frescoes in
the interior of the house, a summerhouse was constructed
on the back lawn, and the grounds were formally
landscaped. From this showplace Herring proceeded to
expand his cattle operations. In 1915 he purchased the
Kit Carson Ranch on Big Creek, so named because the
famous scout Christopher H. Carson had reportedly camped
there during a buffalo hunt in Hutchinson County. Other
holdings included the Y Ranch near Paducah, the H-Anchor
Ranch near Crowell, a ranch in the Big Bend country, and
farming interests in Hartley and Moore counties.
Herring was the first president of the West Texas Chamber
of Commerce, which encompassed all of the Panhandle, and
president of the Tri-State Fair Association. He erected
the five-story Palo Duro Hotel in 1923 and the
fourteen-story Herring Hotel three years later. He was
among those who financed the construction of the Amarillo
Building, helped draw up the city's first charter, and
owned stock in the Amarillo Gas Company, forebear of
Pioneer Natural Gas. He was president of the Panhandle
Livestock Association and was involved with such
organizations as the Texas and Southwestern Cattle
Raisers Association, Rotary Club, Boy Scouts, Odd
Fellows, and Elks Club.
Herring died on June 29, 1931, and was buried in the
Llano Cemetery. Birdie subsequently sold the house and
moved into a suite in the Herring Hotel, where she died
on March 12, 1953. The Herring mansion at 2216 Van Buren
Street, Amarillo, became a part of Amarillo College but
was razed in 1970 for a parking lot near the Amarillo Art
Center. The Herring (Kit Carson) Ranch near Stinnett and
the Herring National Bank in Vernon were both still
operated by family heirs in the 1980s.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Amarillo Genealogical Society, Texas
Panhandle Forefathers, comp. Barbara C. Spray (Dallas:
National ShareGraphics, 1983). Castro County Historical
Commission, Castro County, 1891-1981 (Dallas: Taylor,
1981). Gus L. Ford, ed., Texas Cattle Brands (Dallas:
Cockrell, 1936). Hutchinson County Historical Commission,
History of Hutchinson County, Texas (Dallas: Taylor,
1980).
H. Allen Anderson
Back
|