Following the war, Jackson returned to Tennessee and managed his father's cotton plantation. In 1868, he married Selene Harding. They had five children: William Harding Jackson (1874–1903), Eunice, Elizabeth, Selene (1876–1913) and infant son (b/d 1872) Jackson. With his father-in-law
William Giles Harding, the senior Jackson learned to co-manage the latter's
Belle Meade Stud near Nashville. In the 1870s, Jackson became heavily involved in
The Grange movement. He also belonged to the Tennessee Agricultural and Mechanical Association, and sat on the Tennessee Bureau of Agriculture. His older brother, jurist
Howell Edmunds Jackson, married Selene's younger sister Mary Harding after the death of his first wife in 1873, likely in the widespread
cholera epidemic. In 1886 Jackson and his brother Howell took over control of Belle Meade following the death of their father-in-law William G. Harding. Jackson and his brother expanded the breeding operations and raised prize race horses. General Jackson purchased a stallion named
Iroquois in 1886; the horse had been the first American winner of the British
Epsom Derby in 1881. Jackson continued Harding's practice of holding yearling sales at Belle Meade, but in 1892 he expanded his sales to New York, taking his yearlings there. That year was the most successful, and he sold 53 yearlings for $110,050. But the financial
Panic of 1893 and the ensuing economic depression adversely affected his operations. In addition his horse breeding business suffered because of reform efforts by the evangelical movement in Tennessee, which resulted in closing down racetracks and ending associated gambling. The Jacksons were generous hosts, and many notable guests visited the plantation during the late 19th and early 20th century. They included
President Grover Cleveland and his wife
Frances,
Robert Todd Lincoln,
President Ulysses S. Grant,
General William T. Sherman,
General Winfield Scott Hancock, and
Adlai E. Stevenson, who served as vice-president of the US from 1893 to 1897. The guests enjoyed country pursuits in the fenced deer park, barbecues, and tours of the thoroughbred paddocks. Jackson was fond of the sport of live bird
wing shooting, and he founded the
Belle Meade Gun Club on his farm in 1897. It hosted the Wing Shot Championship of the United States in 1898. William Hicks Jackson died at Belle Meade in 1903 and was buried in the family's
mausoleum in the plantation's cemetery. His son William Harding Jackson died that same year, survived by his wife Annie and a
son of the same name. The youngest Jackson later served as an intelligence officer in World War II, and was part of the establishment of the CIA, serving as its deputy director. In 1906, after the plantation was sold, Jackson's remains and those of other members of the Harding-Jackson family were reinterred in
Mount Olivet Cemetery in
Nashville, Tennessee. ==See also==