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John Wesley Hunt

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John Wesley Hunt

Birth
Death
21 Aug 1849 (aged 75)
Burial
Lexington, Fayette County, Kentucky, USA GPS-Latitude: 38.0579458, Longitude: -84.5079341
Plot
Section C, Lot 23
Memorial ID
View Source
Hunt was a businessman and leader in Lexington KY. He was one of the first millionaires west of the Allegheny Mountains. He postmaster of Lexington. In 1814, Hunt built a mansion known as Hopemont. The house is still standing and is on the National Register of historic places as The Hunt-Morgan House. His son Charlton Hunt was the first mayor of Lexington. John Wesley Hunt's grandson, John Hunt Morgan, was a famous Confederate general during the American Civil War. A great-grandson, Dr. Thomas Hunt Morgan, was the first Kentuckian to win a Nobel Prize.

He is a lot owner and may not be buried here. He is likley the John Wesley Hunt buried in Lexington Cemetery as many were moved.


John Wesley Hunt (1773-1849)
Section C, Lot 17
Considered to be the first millionaire west of the Alleghenies, the family of John Wesley Hunt was one of Lexington's most prominent families. He is the father of Charlton Hunt, who became the first mayor of Lexington. Coming to Lexington in 1795, John Wesley Hunt became a merchant, horsebreeder, hemp manufacturer, and banker. He was appointed postmaster by President John Adams in 1799. As postmaster, Mr. Hunt established a mail route from Lexington to Washington, D.C. That pony express route took two weeks to complete.

John Wesley Hunt built Hopemont (today known as The Hunt-Morgan House). The house is believed to be haunted by the old Negro nurse, Bouviette, who was called "Aunt Betty" by the Morgan Children. After "her" boys went to war, she would appear on Main Street whenever she thought any Southern troops were coming through town. She often waited for hours to give a drink of lemonade to one of "her" boys. Four of the six boys she nursed lived to carry her remains to the family lot in The Lexington Cemetery where a little stone has this simple inscription, "Bouvieete James Col. Ever Faithful."
Hunt was a businessman and leader in Lexington KY. He was one of the first millionaires west of the Allegheny Mountains. He postmaster of Lexington. In 1814, Hunt built a mansion known as Hopemont. The house is still standing and is on the National Register of historic places as The Hunt-Morgan House. His son Charlton Hunt was the first mayor of Lexington. John Wesley Hunt's grandson, John Hunt Morgan, was a famous Confederate general during the American Civil War. A great-grandson, Dr. Thomas Hunt Morgan, was the first Kentuckian to win a Nobel Prize.

He is a lot owner and may not be buried here. He is likley the John Wesley Hunt buried in Lexington Cemetery as many were moved.


John Wesley Hunt (1773-1849)
Section C, Lot 17
Considered to be the first millionaire west of the Alleghenies, the family of John Wesley Hunt was one of Lexington's most prominent families. He is the father of Charlton Hunt, who became the first mayor of Lexington. Coming to Lexington in 1795, John Wesley Hunt became a merchant, horsebreeder, hemp manufacturer, and banker. He was appointed postmaster by President John Adams in 1799. As postmaster, Mr. Hunt established a mail route from Lexington to Washington, D.C. That pony express route took two weeks to complete.

John Wesley Hunt built Hopemont (today known as The Hunt-Morgan House). The house is believed to be haunted by the old Negro nurse, Bouviette, who was called "Aunt Betty" by the Morgan Children. After "her" boys went to war, she would appear on Main Street whenever she thought any Southern troops were coming through town. She often waited for hours to give a drink of lemonade to one of "her" boys. Four of the six boys she nursed lived to carry her remains to the family lot in The Lexington Cemetery where a little stone has this simple inscription, "Bouvieete James Col. Ever Faithful."

Bio by: Philip Lafleur

Gravesite Details

s/w Catherine Hunt



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