JACK P. FLOYD
JACK P. FLOYD, one of the honored early settlers of northwestern Texas, was
born in Lincoln county, Tennessee, in 1852, being a son of J. F. and
A. T. (Cole) Floyd, both also natives of that commonwealth. In 1857 the
family came to Parker county, Texas, where they were among the early pioneers,
their arrival being soon after the organization of the county, and in Parker
county and vicinity they continued to make their home until their son Jack
became established in business on the plains, since which time they have made
their home with him. The mother is a daughter of J. P. Cole, a noted
old timer who located in Dallas county in 1842, and in 1854 removed to Parker
county and built the third house that was erected west of Fort Worth. In his
early boyhood days the father was apprenticed to a tanner, following that
common occupation to a limited extent after coming to Texas, but soon
abandoned it to embark in the cattle business, the prevailing industry here at
that time. He was a Confederate soldier throughout the period of the Civil
war, enlisting in Parker county.
Jack P. Floyd in his early youth was inured to the cattle business, and in the
days before ranches were organized and the business carried on in a systematic
manner the cattle of the settlers were allowed to drift toward the plains,
and at the proper season the boys would go after them, drive them in, and they
were then divided according to the number that each man had put into the herd,
there being then no branding to distinguish the ownership or a systematic
separation at the roundup, which came in later days, beginning in 1878. Mr.
Floyd went on his first cattle hunt in 1868, was a member of the first squad
of men that went west of Comanche Peak, in Hood county, after cattle, and
continued in this occupation for his father until 1871. During the Civil war
he was left at home to protect the family during his father's absence, for at
that period and some years subsequent thereto the country was often harassed
by Indian raids, Mr. Floyd being occasionally required to chase the savages on
this account. In 1871 he started into the business on his own account, going
into the then new county of Coleman, and in fact nearly his entire life has
been spent on the frontier. Working in western Texas toward the edge of the
plains until 1882, he in that year came out upon the plains, and has ever
since remained in this country. At that time Oldham was the only organized
county on the plains, and Tascosa, the county seat, was a typical western town
of wild ways and lax morals. On his arrival in this country Mr. Floyd assisted
in moving cattle from near Seymour in Baylor county, working for the Oxsheer
and Frying Pan ranches, and in 1884 remembers driving cattle for water to the
lake where Amarillo now stands. At that time there were only two settled
habitations on the plains, the old Frying Pan ranch and the LX ranch. For six
years he continued to work for the Cross L outfit on the Cimarron, and was
with that company's cattle on the Texas plains and in New Mexico as far west
at Clayton. In 1890, the town of Amarillo having started with seemingly good
prospects of growth, Mr. Floyd came to the embryo city and established a
restaurant, which subsequently became well and favorably known all over
northwestern Texas as the Metropolitan Restaurant, it being conducted by him
with financial success for eleven years, five months and seven days, when it
was sold. During all this long period the restaurant was never closed day or
night with the exception of one occasion, on account of fire, and it was the
only one to survive the boom times, others coming in and running for a short
time and then abandoned.
Mr. Floyd is now the owner of a valuable dairy ranch of two hundred acres
lying just across the line in Randall county, and has also leased a section of
land in Potter county adjoining Amarillo, on which he has a herd of cattle and
carries on farming operations. At this time, however, he is preparing to
dispose of his cattle interests and embark in the raising of swine. He was one
of the organizers of the Amarillo City Council, of which body he was a member
for five years, and in 1900 was elected tax collector of Potter county, re-
elected in 1902, and at this writing, October, 1904, is again a candidate,
without opposition. He resides with his parents in a pretty home on North
Taylor street, and his fraternal relations is a member of the Odd Fellows and
Knights of Pythias.
B. B. Paddock, History and Biographical Record of North and West
Texas (Chicago: Lewis Publishing Co., 1906), Vol. II, p. 500.
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