John D. Henderson
John D. "Colonel Jack" Henderson was an American editor, rancher, businessman, and pro-slavery politician in the Kansas Territory. He was a Colonel in the Border Wars of Bleeding Kansas.[1]
He was born in Pennsylvania but moved to the Kansas Territory and became a leading advocate of slavery there. He was the proprietor and editor of the Leavenworth Journal. He was elected Chairman of the Central Committee of the pro-slavery National Democratic Party of Kansas, but later was accused of vote fraud.[2]
In 1859, Henderson built a ranch, trading post, and hotel on Henderson Island in the South Platte River in Arapaho County, Kansas Territory. Henderson sold meat and provisions to gold seekers on their way up the South Platte River Trail to the gold fields during the Pike's Peak Gold Rush. Henderson Island was the first permanent settlement in the South Platte River Valley between Fort Saint Vrain in the Nebraska Territory and the Cherry Creek Diggings in the Kansas Territory. He returned to eastern Kansas and fought for the Union in the American Civil War.[1]
In Colorado, Henderson bought a chain of gold mines; on a visit to Colorado he and some eighteen others were slaughtered by a group of Osage Indians for crossing the Osage territory with loaded weapons.[1] This is not correct, John Henderson moved to New York and died after 1900 this is proved by his Army records and his pension. (I will put the information up later but he also didn't buy a chain of gold mines, he had various jobs, and also was an Indian Agent in New Mexico. I have researched this person when I worked as a planner for Adams County in the late 1960s. (Cherry Emerson, Ph.D) I have his Army records.
The Adams County Fairgrounds are now located on Henderson Island. The community of Henderson, Colorado, has been largely absorbed by Commerce City, Colorado.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Adams County, Colorado: Forgotten Past of Adams County, Vol. II". COGenWeb Project. September 18, 2011. Retrieved May 30, 2013.
- ↑ Gihon, John H. (1857). "Geary and Kansas: Governor Geary's Administration in Kansas". Kansas Collection Books. Retrieved May 30, 2013.