Historical Markers of Texas logo

Historical Markers of Texas

Back to El Paso County

James H. White

El Paso, El Paso County

Marker Text

(Feb. 15, 1847 - Aug. 19, 1907) Virginia native James Harrison White came to El Paso in 1869 after serving with the Confederacy in the Civil War. In the 1870s he saw service in the Mexican army, the U. S. Army, and as U. S. Marshal of Las Cruces, New Mexico. As a civic leader and law official, he played a role in El Paso's growth from a small border town to a modern city. Offices held included sheriff and tax collector, chief of police and vice president of the El Paso Street Railway Company. A Mason, Shriner and Knight Templar, white married Barbara Dupper, and they were the parents of one child. (1967, 2001) ORIGINAL (1967) TEXT: (Feb. 15, 1847 - Aug. 23, 1907) Soldier, frontiersman, public official, civic leader. Born in Portsmouth, VA.; came to Texas in 1866; in 1861-1872, fought for three nations: the Confederacy, the United States, and Mexico. U.S. Marshal, 1879; inspector of customs, 1881; sheriff, El Paso County, 1883-1892; El Paso chief of police, 1901-1903. Worked in mining and for railways. A Mason, Shriner, and Knight Templar. Married Barbara Dupper. Had one child, James C. White. Recorded 1967

Marker Details

Address
Location Description Concordia Cemetery, enter cemetery at corner of Stevens near IH-10 feeder road, grave is 8 blocks east (right) of road and near the center of cemetery, El Paso
Marker # 720
Dedicated 1967
Size, Type grave marker
Code sheriffs; law enforcement
Latitude, Longitude 31.779351, -106.448524

Map