John George Adair

John George Adair

Infobox Person
name = John George Adair


image_size =
caption = John Adair
birth_date = birth date |1823|3|3
birth_place = County Laois (Queen's County), Ireland
death_date = death date and age|1885|5|4|1823|3|3|
death_place = St. Louis, Missouri, USA
occupation = Businessman; Landowner
spouse= Cornelia Wadsworth Ritchie Adair (1837-1921, married 1869-his death)
children=Two stepsons:
Arthur Ritchie Montgomery Harrison “Jack” Ritchie (1861-1924)
residence=Glenveagh Castle, County Donegal, Ireland
footnotes=(1) Adair visited his JA Ranch named in his honor only three times before his unexpected death.

(2) Adair was in the brokerage business in England, Ireland, and the United States but realized a large return from the JA Ranch investment.

(3) Adair was trained in the British diplomatic service, but his temperament was too volatile for him to become a professional diplomat.

(4) Anger at townspeople in Derryveah in County Donegal, Ireland, in 1861 prompted Adair to evict forty-seven families from their dwellings to beautify the land surrounding his Glenveagh Castle.

John George Adair, sometimes known as Jack Adair (March 3, 1823May 4, 1885), was a Scots-Irish businessman and landowner who provided the seed capital for the large JA Ranch in the Palo Duro Canyon of the Texas Panhandle. In its peak year in 1883, the JA encompassed convert|1335000|acre|km2 in portions of six Texas counties and boasted 100,000 head of cattle.

An undiplomatic temperament

Adair was born in County Laois (Queen's County) in east central Ireland. He attended Trinity College, Dublin, where he was trained for the British diplomatic service. He had the military rank of captain. However, he seemed to lack the patient, smooth temperament required for diplomacy. He owned considerable real estate in Ireland, including the large Glenveagh Castle. In 1860, Adair went hunting on land he had rented to tenants in violation of the rental agreements. When the tenants objected, an irate Adair threatened them. A year later, in April 1861, with the force of the law behind him, he removed forty-seven families from forty-six houses in Derryveagh in County Donegal, Ireland. The evictions were part of Adair's efforts to beautify the land about the castle. More than 150 screaming children and their parents were ordered off the property. Adair cleared twelve thousand acres. Many of the evicted had no idea where they might find shelter; some relocated to Australia. [http://www.geocities.com/glenveaghnationalpark/owners.html Castle Owners & Derryveagh Evictions ] ]

Adair also established far-flung brokerage firms with offices in Ireland, New York City, and then Denver because of his interest in buffalo hunts and the burgeoning American West.JA Ranch exhibit, Panhandle-Plains Historical Museum, Canyon, Texas]

Marriage at 46

At the age of forty-six, Adair married the former Cornelia Wadsworth Ritchie (1837-1921), a Philadelphia native who was reared in Geneseo, the seat of Livingston County in western New York State. She was the widow of Montgomery Harrison Ritchie (1826-1864), a Boston native descended from the Federalist Party spokesman Harrison Gray Otis (1765-1848). They were married for seven years. Ritchie died of illness contracted during the American Civil War. Cornelia was left with two young sons, Arthur Ritchie (died in childhood) and Montgomery “Jack” Ritchie (1861-1924), whom she took to Europe for their schooling. Back in New York at a Republican reception, she met Adair. The couple married in 1869 and split their time between Ireland, England, and New York. Cornelia became a naturalized British citizen. One of her nephews was Republican U.S. Senator James Wolcott Wadsworth, Jr., of New York. [http://www.ranches.org/JAranch.htm JA Ranch ] ]

The Colorado sojourn

Adair was known for his fiery temper, a stereotype of the hard-drinking Irishman of the 19th century. He disliked life in New York City, and the couple and the two sons headed west to Colorado, where Adair would temporarily move his brokerage office. In eastern Colorado near Pueblo, they met Texas cattleman Charles Goodnight (1836-1929), an Illinois native who took them on his guided buffalo hunt in 1874. The personable Goodnight told the couple about the Palo Duro country southeast of Amarillo and how the land was particularly suited to grazing cattle on the then open range. The cattle had excellent grass during summers and could winter comfortably in the protection afforded by the canyon walls. The canyon country also had sufficient water as well as natural physical beauty, he explained. The hunt had a tragic ending, for Adair was injured when his gun accidentally discharged, and his horse was killed though Adair shot no buffalo.

Financing the JA Ranch

Soon, the Adairs came to the Palo Duro to see what Goodnight had accurately described. The two entered into the first of two five-year partnership contracts. Adair would finance the building of what would become a massive ranch in the canyon, and Goodnight would be the daily manager of the ranch and supply the starting cattle. Adair would finance two thirds of the cost, and Goodnight would borrow his one-third share at 10 percent interest from Adair. Goodnight would also draw a $2,500 annual salary. It was Goodnight’s suggestion that the ranch be named the “JA” for the initials of his financial partner, John Adair.H. Allen Anderson, ‘’The JA Ranch’’, ‘’The Handbook of Texas’’]

Goodnight had a free hand in managing the ranch and speedily increased the acreage through shrewd, skilful purchasing of the best plots of land. Adair visited the ranch only thee times before his death in 1885. The ranch was profitable, and though Adair had wanted Goodnight to expand more cautiously, he could hardly complain. The undertaking made a profit of $510,000 at the end of the first contract. Goodnight benefited from the arrangement but personally found Adair’s disposition irritating.

Mrs. Adair as ranch manager

Cornelia Adair took over her husband’s share of the cattle operation and maintained a hands-on interest for the rest of her life. At times, she disagreed with Goodnight on business matters and persisted with her point of view. Goodnight continued to be the manager until 1888, when he left the partnership. Goodnight believed that the building of the Fort Worth and Denver City Railroad and the coming of farmers with barbed wire to fence the land meant the end of the previously lucrative open range. In the dissolution of the partnership, Goodnight acquired the convert|140000|acre|km2|sing=on Quitaque Ranch with 20,000 head of cattle.

Mrs. Adair lived on an irregular basis in England, Ireland, and the Palo Duro. From 1888 until her death, she was the sole owner of the ranch. Her son Jack worked on the ranch in his early adulthood but ran afoul of Goodnight’s strict work ethic. Goodnight demoted Jack after he caught him shooting craps and drinking liquor with the cowboys. Jack’s older son, Montgomery Harrison Wadsworth “Montie” Ritchie (1910-1999), worked at the ranch and was the manager from 1935 until his retirement in 1993, having followed Timothy Dwight Hobart, a native of Vermont and the former mayor of Pampa. Montie Ritchie was credited with getting the ranch on a sound footing after, first, the death of Cornelia and her related debts and liens and, then, the impact of the Great Depression.

Adair’s death

In 1885, after his last trip to the Palo Duro, accompanied by his valet, Adair began the return trip to Ireland. He died of natural causes at the age of sixty-two while in St. Louis, which was known as the “Gateway City to the West”.

Adair, who had no heirs other than Cornelia, is interred in Glenveagh, Ireland. His wife had the face of a large rock inscribed with his name and the inscription "Brave, Just and Generous". However, lightning in a thunderstorm broke the rock into many pieces which fell into a nearby lake. Two years after his death, Adair’s Bellegrove House, also in Ireland, was reduced to ruins in a fire. Cornelia did not remarry after Adair’s death. She lived part of the time at Glenveagh Castle, and, unlike Adair, was popular, improved the beauty of the castle grounds, and was considerate of the townspeople. She too is interred in Glenveagh.

References


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