Haroldson Lafayette Hunt Jr., better known as H.L. Hunt, was an influential American oil tycoon and political activist. From humble beginnings in Arkansas, he built a vast financial empire through his astute investments in the oil industry, eventually founding the renowned Hunt Oil Company. Hunt’s business prowess made him one of the largest independent oil producers and gas suppliers in the country. Beyond oil, he diversified his interests, venturing into canned goods, health products, and cosmetics. With an estimated fortune of two to three billion dollars and a staggering weekly income of over one million, Hunt’s success was undeniable. However, his life was not without controversy, as he found himself entangled in various scandals, including allegations of involvement in John F. Kennedy’s assassination.
Quick Facts
- Died At Age: 85
- Family:
- Spouse/Ex-: Lyda Bunker, Ruth Ray
- Father: Haroldson Lafayette Hunt
- Mother: Ella Rose (Myers) Hunt
- Children: Caroline, Haroldina, Haroldson, Helen, Howard, Hugh, Lamar, Lyda, Margaret, Nelson Bunker, Ray, Ray Lee, Swanee, William Herbert
- American Men
- Southern Methodist University
- Died on: November 29, 1974
- Place of death: Dallas
- U.S. State: Illinois
- More Facts
- Education: Southern Methodist University
- Children: Nelson Bunker Hunt, Ray L. Hunt, Lamar Hunt, Swanee Hunt, Helen LaKelly Hunt
Childhood & Early Life
H.L. Hunt was born on February 17, 1889, near Ramsey, Fayette County, Illinois. His father was Haroldson Lafayette Hunt, and his mother was Ella Rose Hunt. He was the youngest amongst eight siblings. He received his primary education at home.
Career
He travelled a lot as a young man and worked in a number of odd jobs. By 1912, he was running a cotton plantation, having settled in Arkansas. During the 1910s he acquired around 15,000 acres of land in Arkansas and Louisiana. He grew cotton and flourished for a while. However, with the end of the World War I, the cotton market collapsed, which led to his cotton lands losing their value.
After hearing rumors of an oil strike in El Dorado, Arkansas, he decided to head out there, and began trading in oil leases. Using multiple business tactics, he soon became the owner of several oil producing wells in El Dorado. Hunt continued to drill wells in Arkansas, Oklahoma and Louisiana for the rest of the 1920s. He continued doing so till he had 100 producing wells throughout the South and the Southwest.
Later, he met C.M. Joiner who had just discovered oil on his 4000 acres in Rusk County Texas. However, he needed capital to drill, which he lacked at that moment. Neither was he in a condition to borrow any, being too much in debt. He even tried to sell his land, but the large oil companies were not interested. Hunt offered C.M. Joiner $30,000 in cash, and $1.2 million in oil when it was produced. Thus, Hunt acquired rights to the greatest oil discovery of that time.
Hunt was able to create his own pipeline and he supplied Sinclair Oil Company tank cars with oil of his own. Later, he founded the Hunt Oil Company in 1936, whose headquarters was in Tyler, Texas. It was later moved to Dallas where it became the largest independent oil producer of America. The amount of oil he sold to the Allies during World War II even exceeded the total oil output of Germany. In 1946, in order to help with the critical fuel shortage that year, he supplied 85 percent of the natural gas that was piped into the US.
He also showed an interest in politics and founded his own foundation ‘Facts Forum’ in 1951 to counter what he felt was a serious communist menace. He spent around $3.5 million in the organization, which used to produce and distribute radio and television programs of conservative nature as well as distribute patriotic and anti-communist books and pamphlets. Though Hunt suspended the operations of ‘Facts Forum’ in 1956, he revived it two years later as ‘Lifeline’, to distribute a daily 15-minute radio program which was aired by more than 400 radio stations. He also began writing columns for a conservative newspaper in 1964, which was followed by several books dealing with aspects of his conservative ideology.
Alleged Involvement in JFK Assassination
H.L. Hunt was involved in various controversies, and the most famous one among them was the assassination of John F Kennedy. He is believed to be linked to the assassination because of a number of reasons. Madeleine Duncan Brown, who was supposedly an ex-lover of President Lyndon B Johnson, claimed that she was at a party at the home of Clint Murchison Sr. on the evening prior to the John F. Kennedy assassination. The party was attended not only by Johnson but also other famous individuals like Hunt and Richard Nixon. According to Brown’s claim, Johnson had a meeting with several of the men after which he had told her that the Kennedys would never embarrass him from the following day. He added that it wasn’t just a threat, but a promise. This story received national media attention. It was also widely said that the day before the JFK assassination, Jim Brading, a mafia man with a big arrest record, had come to meet Hunt in his Dallas office. Brading was found to be connected to Carlos Marcello, who was another suspect in the president’s death. Shortly after the killing, Brading was arrested, as he was found to have taken the elevator into the Dal-Tex building just after the shots were fired. However, after a short period of time, he was released. Hunt received much negative publicity due to this association with Brading.
Personal Life & Legacy
H.L. Hunt had three wives and fifteen children. His first wife was Lyda Bunker whom he married in 1914. The couple had seven children. But Hunt was not faithful to her and is said to have married Frania Tye while still married to Lyda. This union produced four children. He also had a relationship with Ruth Ray which resulted in the birth of four more children. Hunt and Ruth got married in 1957. Hunt died on November 29, 1974, at the age of 85.
Trivia
Hunt was believed by people to be quite pretentious and eccentric. While he was introducing himself to strangers, he would sometimes proclaim, “Hello, I am H.L. Hunt, the world’s richest man.” Though he became one of the richest men in the world, there is no published biography available of him.