Henry_Jackson_Hunt_(Mayor_of_Detroit)

Henry Jackson Hunt (Mayor of Detroit)

Henry Jackson Hunt (Mayor of Detroit)

American politician


Henry Jackson Hunt (frequently called "Henry I. Hunt")[1] was a politician and businessman from Detroit, Michigan.

Quick Facts 2nd Mayor of Detroit, second charter, Preceded by ...

Henry Jackson Hunt was born in Watertown, New York, in 1786, the first son of American Revolutionary War colonel Thomas Hunt.[2][1] He arrived in Detroit around 1800 and went into the mercantile and[1] real estate business, in some cases in partnership with Lewis Cass.[3] In 1811,[3] he married Ann MacIntosh, daughter of Angus MacIntosh, a well-to-do fur trader[4] and "Earl of Moy."[3] The couple had no children,[5] but Hunt's brother Samuel named his son after Henry.[6] The younger Henry Jackson Hunt went on to become a brigadier general in the American Civil War.

The elder Henry Jackson Hunt held various political offices in the city, including Colonel of the militia (1800- 1815), County Court Judge (1815), City Assessor (1817), Trustee of the University of Michigan (1821), and in 1826 Mayor of Detroit.[1] Hunt died while in office, on September 15, 1826.[7]


References

  1. Silas Farmer (1889), THE HISTORY OF DETROIT AND MICHIGAN, p. 1032
  2. John Elliott Hunt (1978), The John Hunt Memoirs: Early Years of the Maumee Basin, 1812-1835, Maumee Valley Historical Society, p. 55
  3. William Stocking; Gordon K. Miller (1922), Clarence Monroe Burton (ed.), The city of Detroit, Michigan, 1701-1922, Volume 2, The S. J. Clarke publishing company, pp. 1382, 1444
  4. Pioneer Society of the State of Michigan (1884), Pioneer collections, Volume 5, The Society, p. 558
  5. "Henry Jackson Hunt". FindAGrave.com. Retrieved September 9, 2010.
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