New York and Texas Land Company

Dates:
Active 1875
Active 1921

Biographical notes:

The New York and Texas Land Company, one of the largest, privately owned land companies to operate in Texas after the Civil War, was formed in 1879 from the lands of the International-Great Northern Railroad Company and consisted of over 3 million acres. During the company’s existence it owned over 5.5 million acres. The company’s purpose was to locate, survey, map, and sell these properties. Ira Hobart Evans, the former general manger of the Texas Land Company, was appointed president of the company. The company sold 637,440 acres of Texas land to Charles G. Francklyn in 1882, the largest sale of land in the company’s history. Francklyn eventually formed the Francklyn Land and Cattle Company and the land became known as the White Deer Lands. Offices for the New York and Texas Land Company were initially in Palestine, Texas, and New York, but due to an increase in business, the Texas office was moved to Austin.

In 1886, Timothy Dwight Hobart, Evans’ cousin, was placed in charge of a million acres of land in the Texas Panhandle. Hobart leased the land to cattle interests and used the first year’s rent to make improvements, such as fences, wells, dams, and windmills. He believed that the improved land would then sell at a higher price. The improvement program proved successful and all the land was sold by the turn of the century. Hobart resigned in 1903 to become the general manager of the White Deer Lands in 1903.

The company sold over 4,000 acres in Brazoria County to former governor James Stephen Hogg in 1901. The sale included an old plantation known as Patton Place, today known as the Varner Hogg Plantation State Historical Park. Hogg was convinced the land contained oil and mandated that his children not sell it for fifteen years. In 1918, oil was found and a portion of the land became the West Columbia Oilfield.

The company was dissolved in 1918 after all the land sold. However, today only 1,161,616 acres are accounted for, because at a celebratory barbecue the company made a bonfire of its thirty years of records.

Source:

Evans, H. Leslie. “New York and Texas Land Company.” Handbook of Texas Online. Accessed May 11, 2010. http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/ufn02.

From the guide to the New York and Texas Land Company Records 91-341., 1875-1921, (Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, The University of Texas at Austin)

The New York and Texas Land Company, one of the largest, privately owned land companies to operate in Texas after the Civil War, was formed in 1879 from the lands of the International-Great Northern Railroad Company and consisted of over 3 million acres.

During the company's existence it owned over 5.5 million acres. The company's purpose was to locate, survey, map, and sell these properties. Ira Hobart Evans, the former general manger of the Texas Land Company, was appointed president of the company. The company sold 637,440 acres of Texas land to Charles G. Francklyn in 1882, the largest sale of land in the company's history. Francklyn eventually formed the Francklyn Land and Cattle Company and the land became known as the White Deer Lands. Offices for the New York and Texas Land Company were initially in Palestine, Texas, and New York, but due to an increase in business, the Texas office was moved to Austin.

In 1886, Timothy Dwight Hobart, Evans' cousin, was placed in charge of a million acres of land in the Texas Panhandle. Hobart leased the land to cattle interests and used the first year's rent to make improvements, such as fences, wells, dams, and windmills. He believed that the improved land would then sell at a higher price. The improvement program proved successful and all the land was sold by the turn of the century. Hobart resigned in 1903 to become the general manager of the White Deer Lands in 1903.

The company sold over 4,000 acres in Brazoria County to former governor James Stephen Hogg in 1901. The sale included an old plantation known as Patton Place, today known as the Varner Hogg Plantation State Historical Park. Hogg was convinced the land contained oil and mandated that his children not sell it for fifteen years. In 1918, oil was found and a portion of the land became the West Columbia Oilfield.

The company was dissolved in 1918 after all the land sold. However, today only 1,161,616 acres are accounted for, because at a celebratory barbecue the company made a bonfire of its thirty years of records.

Source:Handbook of Texas Online, s.v. "New York and Texas Land Company," http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/NN/ufn2.html (accessed May 11, 2010).

From the description of New York and Texas Land Company Records, 1875-1921 (University of Texas Libraries). WorldCat record id: 742346674

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Subjects:

  • Land companies
  • Land companies

Occupations:

not available for this record

Places:

  • New York (as recorded)
  • Austin (Tex.) (as recorded)
  • New York. (as recorded)
  • Austin (Tex.) (as recorded)
  • Texas Panhandle (Tex.) (as recorded)
  • Palestine (Tex.) (as recorded)
  • United States (as recorded)
  • Texas Panhandle (Tex.) (as recorded)
  • Palestine (Tex.) (as recorded)