Details for Henry B. Sanborn

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5375002441

Data

Marker Number 2441
Atlas Number 5375002441
Marker Title Henry B. Sanborn
Index Entry Sanborn, Henry B.
Address 401 S. Buchanan St.
City Amarillo
County Potter
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 242275
UTM Northing 3899869
Subject Codes ranches/ranching; pioneers; Business topics, general
Marker Year 1984
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Amarillo Civic Center grounds, Entrance 1 on west side, SE of intersection of SE 4th Ave. and US 287
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text In 1875 Henry B. Sanborn (1845-1912) began a long association with the state of Texas when he became the Texas sales agent for Joseph F. Glidden's newly patented invention, barbed wire. A native of New York, Sanborn had become acquainted with Glidden in DeKalb, Illinois, where he had boarded with the Glidden Family and in 1868 had married Glidden's niece, Ellen Wheeler. At the time Glidden and his partner, Judson P. Warner, shipped the first four carloads of wire to Texas, farmers and ranchers of the state were in the midst of a great controversy over the preservation of open ranges versus closed protection of fields. Sanborn bought 10,000 acres of ranch land in Grayson County on which he sought to prove that barbed wire could be successfully used in fencing large acreages. In 1881 he and Glidden formed a partnership and began what now is known as the Frying Pan Ranch in the Texas Panhandle. Surrounded with 120 miles of barbed wire fence, it proved to be a very successful ranching operation. Sanborn was involved in the promotion of the major Amarillo townsite, earning him the title "Father of Amarillo." His ranching and promotional ventures were major factors in making Amarillo and the Panhandle one of Texas' leading cattle and ranching centers. (1984)

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