John Richardson Harris

John Richardson Harris (October 22, 1790 – August 21, 1829) was an early settler of Mexican Texas and the namesake of Harris County, Texas. He founded the town of Harrisburg, Texas and Harris County, Texas is named in his honor.

John Richardson Harris
BornOctober 22, 1790
Cayuga, New York
DiedAugust 21, 1829
New Orleans, Louisiana
Cause of deathYellow fever
CitizenshipUnited States, Mexico
OccupationTrader, machinist, sailer
Spouse(s)Jane (Birdsall) Harris
ChildrenDeWitt Clinton Harris, Lewis Birdsall Harris, Mary Jane Harris Briscoe, John Birdsall Harris
Parent(s)John Harris, Mary (Richardson) Harris
RelativesDavid Harris, William Plunkett Harris

Family life

John Richardson Harris was born on October 22, 1790 to John and Mary (Richardson) Harris in Cayuga, New York. After serving in the War of 1812, he married Jane Birdsall, and they took residence near Waterloo, New York. Their first sons were born there: DeWitt Clinton Harris and Lewis Birdsall Harris. The family migrated to Ste. Genevieve, Missouri in 1819, where Mary Jane Harris and John Birdsall Harris were born.[1][2]

Gone to Texas

Harris prepared to locate to Texas at the urging of Moses Austin. To prepare for this gamble, he resettled his family in upstate New York. In 1823, he sailed his boat from New Orleans to Buffalo Bayou, where he scouted locations for a trading post. Harris was granted a league of land 4,428 acres (1,792 hectares) at Buffalo Bayou on 16 August 1824. He contracted for a town plat of Harrisburg in 1826, while he established a trading post and a grist mill there.[2][3] He named the new town for Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, the namesake of his great-grandfather. In addition to the grist mill, he ran a saw mill with the assistance of his two brothers, David Harris and William Plunkett Harris, and his business partner, Robert Wilson. They also offered carpentry and blacksmithing services. Harris and Wilson managed a small fleet of sailing ships, which imported trade goods from the United States and Mexico, and exported cotton and lumber.[2] John Richardson and David Harris founded a second trading post at Bell’s Landing, Texas.[1]

Death and legacy

Harris started building what was the first steam saw mill in Texas. With machine belts needed to complete the project, he sailed to New Orleans. He arrived amidst a yellow fever epidemic and died there on August 21, 1829.[2]

In 1833, two parties filed claims on the John Harris Richardson estate. Wilson and William Plunkett Harris claimed the real estate and equipment as their own. John Richardson Harris’s widow, Jane Harris, and DeWitt Clinton Harris arrived in Texas for the first time to make a competing claim. In 1836, Augustus Chapman Allen and John Kirby Allen approached the Harrises to make a bid on the Harrisburg site, but ownership of the property had still not been settled. By 1838, Mary Jane Harris and her family constructed a house on that property and reorganized the town in order to sell lots.[2]

Harris County, Texas was named for John Richardson Harris.[4]

gollark: You now have to devote a *lot* of resources from stopping people from trying to trade with each other.
gollark: I'd really prefer a government which does as little as possible, as governments have *repeatedly* shown themselves to be incapable of efficiently and sanely doing anything.
gollark: How do I propose a rule™?
gollark: Yes, clever.
gollark: So you also have suborganizations trading with *each other*?

References

  1. Beazley, Julia (February 28, 2017). "Harris, John Richardson". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved July 2, 2018.
  2. Louis Aulbach (2012). Buffalo Bayou: An Echo of Houston's Wilderness Beginnings. Houston: Louis Aulbach. pp. 569–572.
  3. Looscan, Adele B. (1928). "The Pioneer Harrises of Harris County, Texas". The Southwestern Historical Quarterly. Texas State Historical Association. 31 (4): 365–373. JSTOR 30242532.
  4. Henson, Margaret Swett (June 15, 2010). "Harris County". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved July 2, 2018.
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