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About John Warren Hall, Jr.
John W. (Captain Jack) Hall, member of the Old Three Hundred and judge, was born in South Carolina about 1786. His family moved to Louisiana soon after its purchase in 1803. Hall joined the Gutiérrez-Magee expedition in 1812, as did his brother, Warren D. C. Hall. He also took part in the battle of New Orleans in January 1815. In 1822 he returned to Texas and settled at the La Bahía Road crossing of the Brazos River. He received title to two leagues and two labors of land now in Brazoria and Waller counties on July 10, 1824, and established a ferry at the site of Washington-on-the-Brazos in 1825. The census of 1826 classified him as a farmer and stock raiser with a wife, Patsy (daughter of Andrew Robinson), two young sons, four servants, and twenty slaves. In December 1830 the ayuntamiento of San Felipe approved Hall's petition for an additional league of land. In March 1835 he joined with Asa Hoxey, Thomas Gray, and others in founding the Washington Townsite Company, which promoted Washington-on-the-Brazos and rented the building in which the Texas Declaration of Independence was written. Hall became county judge and sheriff of Washington County in July 1835 and in November of that year helped organize the local militia. In March 1836 he issued an address calling for volunteers; later during the revolution he furnished supplies for the army. He died on January 1, 1845. He was buried with Masonic rites and honors, and both houses of the Texas Congress adjourned as a mark of respect to his memory.
A John W. Hall immigrated to Texas in 1831 as a member of Stephen F. Austin's second colony, took part in the battle of San Jacinto, and lived in Brazoria County in 1837. He is probably the John W. Hall listed in DeWitt C. Baker's Texas Scrap-Book as dying in 1839.
John Warren Hall, Jr.'s Timeline
1786 |
1786
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1845 |
January 1, 1845
Age 59
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