- Isaac Van Zandt
Isaac Van Zandt (
July 10 ,1813 –October 11 ,1847 ) was a political leader in theRepublic of Texas .Van Zandt County, Texas , was named in his honor.Van Zandt was born in
Franklin County, Tennessee in theUnited States to Jacob and Mary Isaacs Van Zandt. In 1833 he married Frances Lipscomb and went into a joint business venture with his father by opening a store. Van Zandt later moved toCoffeeville, Mississippi , where he opened his own store. After experiencing financial difficulties after the depression of 1837, Van Zandt became interested in a debate society which enabled him to use his natural talent forpublic speaking . This spurred an interest in law and within a year he was a member of theMississippi bar.He came to the
Republic of Texas in 1838 and settled in Elysian Fields in what was then Panola County. In 1839 he moved to what is nowMarshall, Texas .Van Zandt was the representative of Harrison County in the House of Representatives of the Republic of Texas from 1840 until 1842, when
Sam Houston appointed him Republic of Texas Chargé d'Affaires inWashington, DC . In 1841 Van Zandt donated land, along with Peter Whetestone, to create acounty seat for Harrison County. Van Zandt named the new city in honor of the Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme CourtJohn Marshall . As the Republic of Texas ambassador to the United States Van Zandt was instrumental in crafting theAnnexation Treaty of the Republic of Texas to the U.S.He returned to Texas in 1845 to serve as a delegate to the Texas state constitutional convention. Van Zandt died during a
yellow fever epidemic in Houston while campaigning for governor in 1847.The Van Zandt family donated their
plantation as the site for theCollege of Marshall in 1912. In 1936 a memorial was constructed in Canton, the seat of Van Zandt County. Isaac Van Zandt is the father of Texas politician and businessmanK. M. Van Zandt and the third great-grandfather ofcountry music songwriter and performerTownes Van Zandt .External Links
* [http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/ttusw/00256/tsw-00256.html Papers, 1774-1953 and undated, of son Khleber Miller Van Zandt in the Southwest Collection/Special Collections Library at Texas Tech University]
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