HENDERSON, JAMES WILSON (1817-1880). James Wilson Henderson,
governor, was born in Sumner County, Tennessee, on August 15, 1817. At the
age of nineteen he left college near Georgetown, Kentucky, to travel to
Texas, expecting to participate in the struggle for independence. He arrived
in Texas shortly after the battle of San Jacinto and was sent
back to the United States on recruiting service. When he returned to Texas,
Sam Houston offered him a commission in the ranger service, but
he declined, having decided to settle in Harris County and become a
surveyor. While he was county surveyor of Harris County, Henderson began
reading law in his spare time and was admitted to the bar. In 1842 he
interrupted his practice to enlist as a private on the Somervell expedition.
On September 4, 1843, he defeated Col. James Morgan for a seat
in the House of Representatives, to which he was reelected in 1844. After annexation
Henderson was elected to the House of the First
Texas Legislature. In 1847 he was reelected and chosen speaker, defeating
former president Mirabeau B. Lamar.
On June 6, 1848, Henderson was married to Laura A. Hooker. He was
defeated for lieutenant governor in 1849 but elected to the position on
August 4, 1851. Governor Peter H. Bell resigned his office,
effective November 23, 1853, and on that day Henderson was inaugurated
governor of Texas; he served until December 21. He was reelected to the
legislature in 1857. His wife died on July 21, 1856, leaving him with two
sons. Later he was married to Saphira Elizabeth Price; they had three
children.
When the Civil War broke out Henderson joined the
Confederate Army and was made a captain under Gen. John B. Magruder.
He was a delegate to the Constitutional Convention of 1866,qv a
member of the executive committee at the Democratic state convention in
1868, and vice president of the state Democratic convention in 1871. He was
afflicted with paralysis in 1877 and died at the home of his sister in
Houston on August 30, 1880.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Presiding Officers of the Texas Legislature, 1846-1982
(Austin: Texas Legislative Council, 1982). Vertical Files, Barker Texas
History Center, University of Texas at Austin.
L. W. Kemp