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John McClanahan Crockett

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John McClanahan Crockett Famous memorial

Birth
Lancaster County, South Carolina, USA
Death
4 Aug 1887 (aged 70)
Dallas County, Texas, USA
Burial
Dallas, Dallas County, Texas, USA GPS-Latitude: 32.7762445, Longitude: -96.8004651
Plot
Masonic Section, Lot 94
Memorial ID
View Source
John McClannahan Crockett, second mayor of Dallas, state representative, and lieutenant governor of Texas, son of Robert McClannahan and Elizabeth (White) Crockett, was born in Lancaster, South Carolina, on December 26, 1816. His father was a South Carolina state representative, and his grandfather, Robert Crockett, was a Revolutionary War soldier. He attended Franklin Academy in Lancaster, entered the mercantile business in Camden, South Carolina, moved to Obion County, Tennessee, in 1836 as a partner in a general store, and there married Catherine W. Polk on March 17, 1837. He began reading law in 1841 and received a license to practice in 1844. In 1847 he traveled with his wife to Paris, Texas, where they stayed for several months while Crockett worked as a bookkeeper and played his violin at village and country parties. They moved the next year to Dallas, where John's brother-in-law, William H. Hord, was county judge. Crockett opened a law practice and served as deputy county clerk his first year in Dallas. In 1850 he was appointed commissioner of the Mercer colony. He was elected state representative from the Dallas area in 1851. In 1852 he joined John H. Reaganqv and another man in investigating Peters colonyqv troubles. He participated in many court trials and was a law partner of John Jay Goodqv in Dallas in the early 1850s. He was first master of Tannehill Masonic Lodge in Dallas, chartered on June 24, 1850. He was elected mayor of Dallas in 1857 and served three terms. He was meteorological observer in Dallas for the Smithsonian Institution in 1859. In 1861 he was elected lieutenant governor of Texas. In 1863 he decided not to stand for reelection and declined to enter the race for governor, although he had a supportive constituency. Instead, he returned to the Dallas area to become superintendent of the Confederate arms factory at Lancaster. Crockett was an incorporator of Dallas Grain, Elevator, and Flouring Company in 1872 and a charter member of the executive committee of the Dallas Pioneers Association in 1875. He and his wife had no children. He died at their farm near Dallas on August 4, 1887, and he and Catherine are buried in the Old Masonic Cemetery in Dallas.
John McClannahan Crockett, second mayor of Dallas, state representative, and lieutenant governor of Texas, son of Robert McClannahan and Elizabeth (White) Crockett, was born in Lancaster, South Carolina, on December 26, 1816. His father was a South Carolina state representative, and his grandfather, Robert Crockett, was a Revolutionary War soldier. He attended Franklin Academy in Lancaster, entered the mercantile business in Camden, South Carolina, moved to Obion County, Tennessee, in 1836 as a partner in a general store, and there married Catherine W. Polk on March 17, 1837. He began reading law in 1841 and received a license to practice in 1844. In 1847 he traveled with his wife to Paris, Texas, where they stayed for several months while Crockett worked as a bookkeeper and played his violin at village and country parties. They moved the next year to Dallas, where John's brother-in-law, William H. Hord, was county judge. Crockett opened a law practice and served as deputy county clerk his first year in Dallas. In 1850 he was appointed commissioner of the Mercer colony. He was elected state representative from the Dallas area in 1851. In 1852 he joined John H. Reaganqv and another man in investigating Peters colonyqv troubles. He participated in many court trials and was a law partner of John Jay Goodqv in Dallas in the early 1850s. He was first master of Tannehill Masonic Lodge in Dallas, chartered on June 24, 1850. He was elected mayor of Dallas in 1857 and served three terms. He was meteorological observer in Dallas for the Smithsonian Institution in 1859. In 1861 he was elected lieutenant governor of Texas. In 1863 he decided not to stand for reelection and declined to enter the race for governor, although he had a supportive constituency. Instead, he returned to the Dallas area to become superintendent of the Confederate arms factory at Lancaster. Crockett was an incorporator of Dallas Grain, Elevator, and Flouring Company in 1872 and a charter member of the executive committee of the Dallas Pioneers Association in 1875. He and his wife had no children. He died at their farm near Dallas on August 4, 1887, and he and Catherine are buried in the Old Masonic Cemetery in Dallas.

Bio by: The Silent Forgotten



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  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Added: Aug 10, 2003
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/7752236/john_mcclanahan-crockett: accessed ), memorial page for John McClanahan Crockett (26 Dec 1816–4 Aug 1887), Find a Grave Memorial ID 7752236, citing Pioneer Cemetery, Dallas, Dallas County, Texas, USA; Maintained by Find a Grave.