John Villers Farwell, Jr. (October 16, 1858 to June 17, 1944) was an American merchant. He was the son of John V. Farwell, the namesake of the John V. Farwell & Co. wholesale dry goods of Chicago. John Junior became president of the company after his father passed in 1908.
John was born on October 16, 1858 in Chicago, Illinois, growing up with his parents in Chicago. In 1870, his father was tasked with being a commissioner to the Osage Indians. John, eleven, was invited to go along.
In 1936, John wrote of his trip to Kansas to see the Osage. He was invited to a footrace with an Indian boy a few years older than he:
John attended Yale College at the same time as future president, William Howard Taft. This connection would come in handy later, during his time at XIT Ranch, which was owned by investors, including the Farwells.
John was also instrumental in another frontier dispute. When New Mexico Territory wrote its Constitution, it merely listed the description of the intended border, not the true one, with Texas. John contacted his old friend Taft and asked him to intervene. The XIT Ranch owned several thousand acres on the New Mexico-Texas border. Any shift would immediately result in a dispute over residency, taxes, and land ownership. The intervention worked, and a joint resolution of Congress passed on February 24, 1911.