George Cassety Pendleton was born to Edmund Gaines "Ned" Pendleton and Sarah (
née Smartt) Pendleton in
Coffee County, Tennessee, near the town of
Viola in
Warren County. In 1857, the family moved to
Ellis County, Texas. Pendleton was as a private in the
Confederate Army, joining after the beginning of the
Civil War and saw action with the Nineteenth Texas Cavalry in the Trans-Mississippi Department. His father was a member of the Texas House of Representatives during the Civil War. After the war he returned to Texas and enrolled in Waxahachie Academy, but was forced by illness to withdraw. In an effort to regain his strength through work, Pendleton accepted a job as a traveling salesman for a
Dallas implement company. He remained with the firm for ten years. In 1870, he married Helen Embree of
Belton, Texas. The couple raised five children. During 1881 and 1882 Pendleton lived in
Bell County, Texas, first in Old Howard, and later, after the Santa Fe Railroad bypassed that village, at Pendleton, where he was involved in various business pursuits for a short time. His experiences as a farmer apparently drew him to the activities of the Grange for a time. In 1882 he moved to
Temple, where he entered the land abstract and title firm of his brother-in-law, William E. Hill, and A. M. Monteith. ==Political career==