Hunter, Robert Hancock, 1813-1902
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Hunter, Robert Hancock, 1813-1902
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Hunter, Robert Hancock, 1813-1902
Hunter, Robert Hancock
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Hunter, Robert Hancock
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Robert Hancock Hunter (1813-1902) was born in Circleville, Ohio, to Mary Martha (Harbert) and Dr. Johnson Calhoun Hunter. The Hunters moved to Texas in 1822, settling in Fort Bend County in 1829. Robert Hancock Hunter served during the Texas Revolution, participating in the Grass Fight and the siege of Bexar in both Captain James Franklin Perry’s volunteer company and Captain John Bird’s company. Upon receipt of the news that the Alamo had fallen, Hunter’s unit retreated, and though the unit saw battle in the San Jacinto campaign, Hunter stayed behind in Harrisburg to guard the baggage train. Following the battle, he served as a guard for General Antonio López de Santa Anna.
Upon the end of the Texas Revolution in 1836, Hunter returned to Fort Bend County where he farmed and raised stock. He married Samirah M. Beard in 1841, and they had seven children. With his wife’s father in 1845, Hunter established a farm and a saw and grist mill in Guadalupe County. He sold the mill in 1857 and moved to Victoria, where three years later he wrote his reminiscences of life in Texas and the Texas Revolution, based on his diary. His memoir, Narrative of Robert Hancock Hunter, 1813-1902, was published in 1936 to great success. In 1880 Hunter moved to Flatonia, Fayette County, where he was a member of the Texas Veterans Association and active in the Democratic party and the Methodist Church. He died in 1902.
Source: Handbook of Texas Online, s.v. Hunter, Robert Hancock, http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/HH/fhu38.html (accessed July 21, 2010).
Robert Hancock Hunter (1813-1902) was born in Circleville, Ohio, to Mary Martha (Harbert) and Dr. Johnson Calhoun Hunter.
The Hunters moved to Texas in 1822, settling in Fort Bend County in 1829. Robert Hancock Hunter served during the Texas Revolution, participating in the Grass Fight and the siege of Bexar in both Captain James Franklin Perry's volunteer company and Captain John Bird's company. Upon receipt of the news that the Alamo had fallen, Hunter's unit retreated, and though the unit saw battle in the San Jacinto campaign, Hunter stayed behind in Harrisburg to guard the baggage train. Following the battle, he served as a guard for General Antonio López de Santa Anna.
Upon the end of the Texas Revolution in 1836, Hunter returned to Fort Bend County where he farmed and raised stock.
He married Samirah M. Beard in 1841, and they had seven children. With his wife's father in 1845, Hunter established a farm and a saw and grist mill in Guadalupe County. He sold the mill in 1857 and moved to Victoria, where three years later he wrote his reminiscences of life in Texas and the Texas Revolution, based on his diary. His memoir, Narrative of Robert Hancock Hunter, 1813-1902, was published in 1936 to great success. In 1880 Hunter moved to Flatonia, Fayette County, where he was a member of the Texas Veterans Association and active in the Democratic party and the Methodist Church. He died in 1902.
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/72585852
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n81028330
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n81028330
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Subjects
San Jacinto, Battle of, Tex., 1836
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Harrisburg (Tex.).
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Richmond (Tex.).
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Texas
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Harrisburg (Tex.)
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Galveston (Tex.).
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Brazoria (Tex.).
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San Jacinto (Tex.).
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San Felipe (Tex.)
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San Antonio (Tex.).
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Circleville (Ohio)
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Richmond (Tex.)
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Brazoria (Tex.)
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Galveston (Tex.)
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San Antonio (Tex.)
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Fort Bend County (Tex.).
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Fort Bend County (Tex.)
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San Jacinto (Tex.)
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Texas
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Circleville (Ohio).
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San Felipe (Tex.).
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<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>