Jesse Sumpter (1827-1910), born in Owen County, Indiana, originally a farmer, volunteered for service in the Mexican War in 1847, and served on Captain Seth Eastman's Company D, First Infantry regiment.
His unit marched from Port Lavaca to Salado Creek, near San Antonio, established a camp at Eagle Pass, near the Rio Grande, and joined Lieutenant Colonel Joseph E. Johnston's party at the march to El Paso. In 1852, Sumpter was discharged at the rank of sergeants and settled in Eagle Pass, where he worked as a bartender, bar owner, and cattle rancher. He served in an unofficial capacity as deputy sheriff before being elected to the actual position, which he held from 1871 to 1876. In 1876 Sumpter moved to Uvalde, but returned to Eagle Pass in the 1880s to serve as commissary manager for the railroad construction company that extended the line into Mexico. He once again worked as a bartender and bar operator, owning King Fisher's Sunset Saloon, before being appointed United States customs inspector at Eagle Pass, 1894-1910. One of the first life members of the Texas State Historical Association, Sumpter dictated his reminiscences to teacher Harry Warren from 1906 to 1907. The memoirs were published in 1969. Up until his death in 1910, Sumpter was widely known as the oldest citizen of Eagle Pass.
From the description of Sumpter, Jesse Papers, 1902-1906 (University of Texas Libraries). WorldCat record id: 776641556