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Alexander Calvit

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Cause of death
  
Pneumonia

Occupation
  
Sugar planter


Children
  
Barbara Mackall Calvit

Name
  
Alexander Calvit

Born
  
June 17, 1784 (
1784-06-17
)
Mississippi, United States

Spouse(s)
  
Barbara Mackall Wilkinson

Relatives
  
Jane Herbert Wilkinson Long (sister-in-law) John Hunter Herndon (son-in-law)

Died
  
January 7, 1836, Brazoria County, Texas, United States

Alexander Calvit (also known as Sandy Calvit) (1784–1836) was an early settler in colonial Texas and a sugar planter. His Evergreen Plantation lay where the town of Clute, Texas, was later built.

Contents

Early life

Alexander Calvit was born on June 17, 1784, in what is now Mississippi, which was then part of Spanish West Florida and in 1798 became the Mississippi Territory of the United States. He served as a First Lieutenant and aide-de-camp in the Creek War of 1813–1814.

Career

He was one of the earliest settlers in Mexican Texas, going on Stephen F. Austin's mission. As a member of the Old Three Hundred, in 1824 he received some land in what are now Brazoria and Waller Counties. This included what is now known as Clute, Texas.

He established the Evergreen Plantation, a sugar plantation in what later became known as Clute, Texas.

Personal life

He married Barbara Mackall Wilkinson, sister of Jane Herbert Wilkinson Long, known as "the mother of Texas." Their daughter, Barbara M. W. Calvit, married John Hunter Herndon, a lawyer and a planter. When she inherited her father's plantation, they renamed it the Herndon Plantation and raised Arabian horses and cattle.

Death

He died of pneumonia on January 7, 1836, at his home in Brazoria County (then Brazoria District, Mexican Texas).

References

Alexander Calvit Wikipedia