(1810–1887)
Ammon Underwood, early settler, son of Asa and Mercy (Durant) Underwood, was born at Dracut, Massachusetts, on February 13, 1810. In 1834 he took passage from Boston to Texas and arrived at Velasco on April 18. In the succeeding months, in an effort to find suitable partners and a location for a business of his own, he visited many Texas communities, made a buying trip to New Orleans, worked in a hotel at San Felipe, clerked in the Thomas Cochran store there, worked for W. J. Eaton in Columbia, and kept books for several business firms. He joined the Texas army in October 1835 and traveled to Bexar, where he was involved in a skirmish on October 25. On November 4, one day before the siege of Bexar, he went on furlough. On January 25, 1836, he received a land grant of a quarter league from the Mexican government. In the spring of 1836 he was acting post commissary at Columbia and returned from the Runaway Scrape to reestablish order there. Eventually Underwood decided on a business partnership with John P. Coles and David H. Milburn. Underwood was postmaster at Columbia from 1836 to 1845. In January 1839 he married Rachel Jane Carson. For fifty years the Underwoods continued the mercantile business at Columbia and lived in the same home there. Sam Houston nominated Underwood to be justice of the peace in Brazoria County on January 15, 1842, but withdrew the nomination three days later. Underwood owned twelve slaves in 1850 and thirty-four in 1860. Much of the Underwood fortune was invested in cotton and was lost during the Civil War. Underwood represented the Brazoria district in the Nineteenth Legislature (1884), in which he served on the Finance, Insurance, Statistics and History, and Public Buildings and Grounds committees. He was a field observer for a study of cotton insects (1887–89) and an incorporator for the Columbia, Wharton and Austin Railroad (1854) and the Houston Tap and Brazoria Railroad (1856). When he died at Columbia, on November 17, 1887, he was survived by his wife and four children.
Ammon Underwood served for over a year with the Texas Army during the fight for independence from Mexico. The late Wilma Ogilvie, a longtime high school teacher in West Columbia, wrote a story that ran in the July 13, 1960 edition of The Facts newspaper. In that story published 63 years ago, Ogilvie wrote, “Entries in his journal show the reader that (Ammon Underwood) often wondered if this land was worth the effort which it was requiring of him and other newly arrived colonists. He spoke longingly and often of home (in Massachusetts where Ammon had grown up).”
Author Unknown (1952, Updated September 1, 1995) https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/underwood-ammon
Gupton, Robert Tracy (October 25, 2023) “Rachel Jane Carson Underwood” Facebook – Columbia Historical Museum