American businessman (1889–1974)
H. L. Hunt | |
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From print ad for Hunt's 1965 book Hunt for Truth: A Timely Collection of the Stimulating Daily Newspaper Columns of H. L. Hunt. | |
Born | Haroldson Lafayette Hunt Jr. (1889-02-17)February 17, 1889 Ramsey, Illinois, U.S. |
Died | November 29, 1974(1974-11-29) (aged 85) Dallas, Texas, U.S. |
Occupation | Petroleum industry |
Spouses |
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Children | 15, including Margaret, Caroline Rose, Nelson Bunker, William Herbert, Lamar, Ray Lee, June, Helen, and Swanee Hunt |
Relatives |
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Haroldson Lafayette Hunt Jr. (February 17, 1889 – November 29, 1974) was an American oil tycoon. By trading poker winnings for oil rights according to legend, but more likely through money he gained from successful speculation in oil leases, he ultimately secured title to much of the East Texas Oil Field, one of the world's largest oil deposits. He acquired rights to East Texas oil lands initially through a $30,000 land purchase from oil speculator Dad Joiner, and founded Hunt Oil in 1936. From that acquisition and others including diverse interests in publishing, cosmetics, pecan farming, and health food producers, he accrued a fortune which was among the world's largest. In the 1950s, his Facts Forum Foundation supported highly conservative newspaper columns and radio programs, some of which he authored and produced himself, and for which he became known. At his Hunt he was reputed to have one of the highest net worths of any individual in the world, a fortune estimated between $2–3 billion dollars.
Life
Hunt was born near Ramsey in Carson Township, Illinois, the youngest of eight children. He was named after his father, Haroldson Lafayette Hunt, who was a prosperous farmer-entrepreneur. His mother was Ella Rose (Myers) Hunt.
H.L. Hunt Jr. was homeschooled. He did not go to elementary school or to high school. Later, he said that education is an obstacle to making money. As a teenager, Hunt traveled to different places before he settled in Arkansas, where he was running a cotton plantation by 1912. He had a reputation as a math prodigy and was a gambler. Hunt is reported in internal FBI memoranda to have run prostitution activities in Arkansas and, later in the 1950s, a private horse racing and gambling bookmaking operation from his office in Dallas.
It was said that after his cotton plantation was flooded, he turned his last $100 into more than $100,000 after he had gambled in New Orleans. With his winnings, he purchased oil properties in El Dorado southeast of Texarkana, Arkansas. He was generous to his employees, who in turn were loyal to him by informing him of rumors of a massive oil field to the south, in East Texas. In negotiations over cheese and crackers, at the Adolphus Hotel in Dallas, with the wild-catter who discovered the East Texas Oil Field, Columbus Marion "Dad" Joiner, Hunt secured title to what was the largest known oil deposit in the world. Hunt had agreed to pay Joiner $1,000,000 and to protect him from liability for his many fraudulent transactions surrounding the property.
In 1957, Fortune estimated that Hunt had a fortune of $400–700 million, and was one of the eight richest people in the United States. J. Paul Getty, who was considered to be the richest private citizen in the world, said of Hunt, "In terms of extraordinary, independent wealth, there is only one man—H. L. Hunt."
Personal life
External videos | |
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"H. L. Hunt: The Richest and the Rightest." NET Journal, Ep. 149. (August 21, 1967). Houston, Texas: KUHT-TV. American Archive of Public Broadcasting. |
H.L. Hunt had fifteen children by three wives.
He and Lyda Bunker of Lake Village, southeast of Pine Bluff, Arkansas were married in November 1914 and remained married until her death in 1955. His seven children by her were: Margaret (1915–2007), Haroldson ("Hassie", 1917–2005), Caroline (1923–2018), Lyda (born and died in 1925), Nelson Bunker (1926–2014), William Herbert (1929–2024), and Lamar (1932–2006). Their home on White Rock Lake in Dallas was styled after Mount Vernon though much larger.
His first son, Hassie, who was expected to succeed him in control of the family business, was lobotomized in response to increasingly erratic behavior. He outlived his father. Lamar founded the American Football League and created the Super Bowl, drawing on the assistance of his children in selecting the game's name. Two other children, Herbert and Bunker, are famous for their purchasing much of the world's silver, in an attempt to corner the market. They ultimately owned more silver than any government in the world before their scheme was discovered and undone. Bunker Hunt was briefly one of the wealthiest men in the world, having discovered and taken title to the Libyan oil fields, before Muammar Gaddafi nationalized the properties.
While still married to Lyda, H. L. Hunt is said to have married Frania Tye of Tampa, Florida, in November 1925 by using the name Franklin Hunt. Frania claimed to have discovered the bigamous nature of her marriage in 1934, and in a legal settlement in 1941, Hunt created trust funds for each of their four children, and she signed a document stipulating that no legal marriage between them had ever existed. About the same time, she briefly married then divorced Hunt's employee, John Lee, taking the last name Lee for herself and her four children. Her four children by Hunt were: Howard (born 1926), Haroldina (1928), Helen (1930), and Hugh ("Hue", 1934). Frania Tye Lee died in 2002.
Hunt supported and had children by Ruth Ray of Shreveport to the northwest of Alexandria, Louisiana, whom he had met when she was a secretary in his Shreveport office. They married in 1957 after the death of Hunt's wife Lyda. His four children by her were Ray Lee (born 1943), June (1944), Helen (1949), and Swanee (1950). His youngest son, Ray Lee, inherited the business and was a major supporter of President George W. Bush.
H.L.'s 15 children in birth order are:
- Margaret Hunt Hill (October 19, 1915 – June 14, 2007), Philanthropist and co-owner of Hunt Petroleum
- H. L. "Hassie" Hunt III (November 23, 1917 – April 20, 2005), Diagnosed with schizophrenia in the early 1940s; co-owner of Hunt Petroleum
- Caroline Rose Hunt (January 8, 1923 – November 13, 2018), Founder and honorary chairman of Rosewood Hotels & Resorts which operates The Mansion on Turtle Creek
- Lyda Bunker Hunt (February 19, 1925 – March 20, 1925) (Died as an infant)
- Nelson Bunker Hunt (February 22, 1926 – October 21, 2014), A major force in developing Libyan oil field; eventually attempted to corner the world market in silver in 1979 and was convicted of conspiring to manipulate the market; Legendary owner-breeder of Thoroughbred racehorses
- Howard Lee Hunt (October 25, 1926 – October 13, 1975)
- Haroldina Franch Hunt (October 26, 1928 – November 10, 1995)
- William Herbert Hunt (March 6, 1929 – April 9, 2024), A major and defining force in the oil industry, he was also a legendary businessman and oilman; At times, ran Hunt Oil, Hunt Petroleum, Hunt Energy, Placid Oil, etc.; The founder of Petro-Hunt LLC
- Helen Lee Cartledge Hunt (October 28, 1930 – June 3, 1962), Died in the Air France Flight 007 disaster, the worst single aircraft disaster up until that time
- Lamar Hunt (August 2, 1932 – December 13, 2006), co-founder of the American Football League and the North American Soccer League; owner of the Kansas City Chiefs of the National Football League; owner of the Columbus Crew and FC Dallas of Major League Soccer; backer of World Championship Tennis; impetus behind 1966 AFL-NFL merger, coined the name "Super Bowl"
- Hugh S. Hunt (October 14, 1934 – November 12, 2002), Lived in Potomac, Maryland, founder of Constructivist Foundation
- Ray Lee Hunt (born c. 1943), Chairman of Hunt Oil
- June Hunt (born c. 1944), Host of a daily religious radio show, Hope for the Heart
- Helen LaKelly Hunt (born c. 1949), A pastoral counselor in Dallas; co-manager of the Hunt Alternatives Fund, one of the family's charitable arms
- Swanee Hunt (born May 1, 1950), Former U.S. ambassador to Austria; now head of the Women and Public Policy Program at the John F. Kennedy School of Government in Cambridge, Massachusetts and president of the Hunt Alternatives Fund
A scandal emerged in 1975, after his death, when it was discovered that he had a hidden bigamous relationship with his second wife living in New York.
After his marriage to Ruth Ray, Hunt became a Baptist and was a member of the First Baptist Church of Dallas. He was a major financial contributor toward the establishment of the conservative Christian evangelical Criswell College in Dallas.
After several months at Baylor Hospital in Dallas, Hunt died at age 85, and was buried in Sparkman-Hillcrest Memorial Park Cemetery in Dallas. Haela Hunt-Hendrix, who began Liturgy, a transcendental black metal band Liturgy is his grandchild. H.L. Hunt served as inspiration behind the character J. R. Ewing from the television show Dallas.
Connection to white supremacy
Multiple sources, including American civil rights icon Malcolm X, implicate Hunt as a lifelong racist who provided major financial assistance to several far-right organizations, such as the Minutemen and the John Birch Society. Hunt considered African Americans a political threat and made this clear in his radio interviews and broadcasts. One of Hunt's chief allies, Allen Zoll, said that since 1936 Hunt advocated deporting all African Americans to Africa. For this reason, Hunt supplied Nation of Islam leader Elijah Muhammad continuous financial support due to the latter's belief in racial separation from whites.
In 1965, Hunt encouraged Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace, a white supremacist, to use the scheme of running his wife, Lurleen Wallace, for election as governor in a bold effort to evade the state's constitutional rule that a governor could not succeed himself.
JFK conspiracy allegations
Madeleine Duncan Brown, an advertising executive who claimed to have had both an extended love affair and a son with President Lyndon B. Johnson, said that she was present at a party at the Dallas home of Clint Murchison Sr. (another oil tycoon), on the evening prior to the assassination of John F. Kennedy which was attended by Johnson as well as other famous, wealthy, and powerful individuals including Hunt, Murchison, J. Edgar Hoover, and Richard Nixon.
According to Brown, Johnson had a meeting with several of the men after which he told her: "After tomorrow, those goddamn Kennedys will never embarrass me again. That's no threat. That's a promise." Brown's story received national attention and became part of at least a dozen John F. Kennedy assassination conspiracy theories. Kennedy assassination investigator Dave Perry refuted this theory with evidence showing neither President Johnson nor Hoover were in Dallas at the time of the alleged party and Murchison had not lived in his Dallas home for a number of years. Witnesses place Murchison at his East Texas ranch.
Publications
Books
- Fabians Fight Freedom. Dallas: H. L. Hunt Press
- Alpaca. Dallas: H. L. Hunt Press (1960)
- Alpaca Revisited. Dallas: HLH Products (1967)
- H. L. Hunt: Early Days. Dallas: Parade (1973)
- Hunt Heritage: The Republic and Our Families. Dallas: Parade (1973)
- Right of Average. Dallas: HLH Products (1960s)
Articles
- "From H. L. Hunt." American (February 2, 1967)
- "Reducing Hospital Costs." Life Lines, vol. 16, no. 4 (January 9, 1974), p. 4. JSTOR community.28146704.
See also
- Walter L. Buenger, historian at Texas A&M University, in 1994 wrote the Hunt biography in Dictionary of American Biography.
- Hunt Oil Company
- List of richest Americans in history
- Hunt family
Explanatory notes
- Brown provided a similar account on A Current Affair stating: "On the day of the assassination, not but a couple of hours prior to the assassination, he said that John Kennedy would never embarrass him again and that wasn't a threat – that was a promise."
Citations
- ^ Ford, Robert E. (November 30, 1974). "H.L. Hunt, among world's riches, dies". St. Petersburg Times. (Florida). Associated Press. p. 1A.
- ^ Encyclopedia Britannica online, "H. L. Hunt", Encyclopedia Britannica, 13 Feb. 2022, Retrieved July 24, 2022.
- Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "Владыки без масок. Игрок на Олимпе". YouTube. Retrieved October 26, 2021.
- "FOIA: Hunt, H.L.-HQ-2". Archive.org. Retrieved December 10, 2023.
- "Seven Ways to Compute the Relative Value of a U.S. Dollar Amount - 1790 to Present". Measuringworth.com. Retrieved October 26, 2021.
- Lohr, Steve (August 20, 1981). "Books of the Times". The New York Times. Retrieved June 13, 2012.
- Brown, pp. 40 & 191.
- https://www.dignitymemorial.com/obituaries/dallas-tx/william-hunt-11766202. Retrieved April 12, 2024.
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(help) - Brown, pp. 78–79 & 156–157.
- Burrough, p. 437.
- Brown, pp. 192–193.
- Nelson Bunker Hunt biography Archived September 23, 2015, at the Wayback Machine, National Thoroughbred Racing Association.
- Palmer, Jerrell Dean. "Hunt, Haroldson Lafayette." In: Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association. Archived from the original.
- Porterfield, Bill. "H.L. Hunt's Long Goodbye." Texas Monthly (February 28, 1975). Archived from the original.
- "Billionaire H.L. Hunt". Lewiston Morning Tribune. (Idaho). Associated Press. November 30, 1974. p. 1A.
- Weil, Martin (November 30, 1974). "Billionaire Hunt succumbs". Victoria Advocate. (Texas). (Washington Post). p. 1A.
- Charrier, Emily (September 20, 2016). "Ghosts of Sparkman-Hillcrest: Mickey Mantle, Mary Kay Ash and H.L. Hunt". The Advocate. Retrieved June 18, 2023.
- "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on June 17, 2020. Retrieved May 13, 2020.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - "Forbes Profile: The Hunt family". Forbes. Retrieved June 13, 2023.
- Washington Post, May 6, 1967, p. E-15, July 2, 1967, January 30, 1975, p. B7.
- Hakim Jamal, From the Dead Level, p. 247-248; Louis Lomax, To Kill a Black Man, p. 108-109; Karl Evanzz, The Judas Factor, p. 284-286, The Messenger, p. 303.
- Carter, Dan T. (1995). The politics of rage : George Wallace, the origins of the new conservatism, and the transformation of American politics. New York: Simon & Schuster. p. 273. ISBN 0-684-80916-8. OCLC 32739924.
- ^ Aynesworth, Hugh (November 17, 2012). "'One-man truth squad' still debunking JFK conspiracy theories". The Dallas Morning News. Dallas. Retrieved February 6, 2013.
- "Celebrity". Boston Herald. Boston. February 24, 1992. p. 015. Archived from the original on April 11, 2013. Retrieved February 6, 2013.
- name=Aynesworth
General sources
- Brown, Stanley H. (1976) H. L. Hunt. Chicago: Playboy Press. ISBN 978-0872234499. OCLC 2164939.
- Burrough, Bryan. (2010) The Big Rich: The Rise and Fall of the Greatest Texas Oil Fortunes. New York: Penguin Press. ISBN 978-0143116820. OCLC 430052039.
Further reading
- Buckley, Tom. "Just Plain H. L. Hunt." Esquire (January 1967), pp. 64+. Portrait photograph by Diane Arbus.
- "The richest American would like to be no different from you and me. He wears shiny blue suits, cuts his own hair and carries his lunch in a brown paper bag."
- Curington, John, and Michael Whitington. H. L. Hunt: Motive & Opportunity. Foreword by Cyril Wecht, M.D., J.D. 23 House (2018). ISBN 978-1939306241.
- Curtis, Adam. "YOU THINK YOU ARE A CONSUMER BUT MAYBE YOU HAVE BEEN CONSUMED". BBC (March 5, 2013).
- Hendershot, Heather. What's Fair on the Air? Cold War Right-Wing Broadcasting and the Public Interest. University of Chicago Press (2011).
- Honorable Mention for the Prose Book Award, Association of American Publishers. Covers the rise and fall of prominent right wing radio hosts: H. L. Hunt, Dan Smoot, Carl McIntire, and Billy James Hargis.
- Hurt, Harry (III). Texas Rich: The Hunt Dynasty, From the Early Oil Days Through the Silver Crash. New York: W.W. Norton (1981). ISBN 978-0393013917. OCLC 6916014.
- Glaser, Vera. "Millionaire H. L. Hunt Talks Politics." News (August 27, 1964).
- "Interview with H. L. Hunt". Playboy (August 1966), pp. 47+.
- This article can be collected in the video game Mafia 3 on the PlayStation 4 and read in its entirety.
- Tuccille, Jerome. Kingdom: The Story of the Hunt Family of Texas. Beard Books (2004).
- Vertical Files. Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, University of Texas at Austin.
External links
- Hunt Oil
- H. L. Hunt at Find a Grave
- Files on Hunt at the Harold Weisberg Archive
- H.L. Hunt's Boys and the Circle K Cowboys
- Hunt Heirs fight over Estate
- Biography of H. L. Hunt by Jerrell Dean Palmer in the Handbook of Texas Online
- A Matter of Trust by Gretel C. Kovach . D Magazine (c. February 2008).
- Hunt's FBI files at Internet Archive
- 1889 births
- 1974 deaths
- 20th-century American businesspeople
- American billionaires
- American businesspeople in the oil industry
- American segregationists
- Bigamists
- Burials at Sparkman-Hillcrest Memorial Park Cemetery
- Businesspeople from Arkansas
- Businesspeople from Illinois
- Businesspeople from Texas
- Hunt family
- John Birch Society members
- People from Ramsey, Illinois
- Southern Baptists
- Texas Oil Boom people
- Texas Republicans