Details for Henry Bradley Sanborn

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5507022769

Data

Marker Number 22769
Atlas Number 5507022769
Marker Title Henry Bradley Sanborn
Index Entry Sanborn, Henry Bradley
Address 401 S. Buchanan
City Amarillo
County Potter
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 242302
UTM Northing 3899689
Subject Codes
Marker Year 1971
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Centennial Plaza, Amarillo Civic Center grounds, along sidewalk
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42" with post
Marker Text (1845-1912) Principal early-day developer of Amarillo. Born in New York state; employed 1875 by barbed wire inventor J.F. Glidden as his Texas sales agent. With Glidden he established the famous 250,000-acre Frying Pan Ranch in 1881 to prove the economic advantages of barbed wire fencing. Building of the Fort Worth & Denver City Railway through the region led voters to organize Potter County. In the election on Aug. 30, 1877, Sanborn offered a site for the county seat. A rival section was chosen. Undaunted, Sanborn began developing the Glidden & Sanborn Addition one mile east of the new town site. In 1889 heavy rains and other inducements led residents to move to Glidden & Sanborn Addition. In 1892 Sanborn traded his interest in The Frying Pan for Glidden's interest in the city. In 1898 he secured a rail connection to the South Plains which assured the future of Amarillo. On this site Sanborn and his wife (Glidden's niece, Ellen Wheeler) had their home, an office building, a carriage house, stables for their six matched coach horses, and a deer park. Henry Bradley Sanborn, "Father of Amarillo," died on May 19, 1912. (1971)

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