Washington County Oklahoma
Biographies L. W. SERVEY C. O. DAVIS. B. F. ROWLAND, M.
D. W. A. KIDD J. T. SHIPMAN J. S. FOUTS. A successful attorney in Indian Territory (I.T.) and prominent U.S.
senator, Robert Latham Owen, Jr., was born on
February 2, 1856, in
Lynchburg, Virginia, the son of
Robert Latham Owen, Sr., a railroad president,
and
Narcissa Chisholm, part Cherokee and originally from I.T. Owen attended
preparatory schools in Lynchburg and in Baltimore,
Maryland, and college at
Washington and Lee University,
earning a master's degree in 1877. Two years
later,
following the untimely death of his father, Owen and his mother moved to
I.T., where he became the principal teacher in the
Cherokee Orphan Asylum at
Salina, and after eighteen
months, secretary of the Cherokee Board of Education.
During the early 1880s Owen studied law, passed the bar, edited the Vinita
Indian Chieftain for several months, and presided over
the Indian
International Fair at Muskogee. Demonstrating
shrewd understanding of expanding
economic opportunities,
he unsuccessfully attempted to rent 250,000 acres of
grazing land in the Cherokee Outlet. He did successfully
acquire an oil lease
for the entire Cherokee Nation,
though no producing well was drilled before the
rights
expired. In 1885 officials appointed Owen to head the Union Agency overseeing the Five
Civilized Tribes. In his four-year tenure he dealt
steadfastly with white
intruders, citizenship disputes,
and political controversies among tribal
factions. During
his last two years as agent he also used his position to
personal advantage, injecting himself into the debate over
re-leasing the
Cherokee Outlet and taking sides in a
controversial townsite dispute in Wagoner.
He also
purchased a ranch in the northwestern corner of the Cherokee Nation.
From 1889 to 1907 Owen primarily practiced law in Indian Territory,
frequently handling important cases for the Five Civilized
Tribes. In 1893 he
helped sixty Cherokees locate
quarter-section claims in the Cherokee Outlet
prior to the
land run there. He also played a major role in acquiring
compensation for the Choctaws and Chickasaws for their
residual claims to lands
in western Oklahoma. In the early
1900s he took up the cause of other Cherokees,
helping
them gain millions of dollars in the "Eastern Cherokee" case and
reportedly drawing $160,000 in lawyer's fees for himself.
When the Dawes Commission finalized allotment agreements with the Five
Civilized Tribes at the turn of the twentieth century,
Owen undertook several
controversial speculative ventures.
In the Cherokee Nation, he induced dozens of
his
illiterate fellow tribesmen to take their surplus allotments on his ranch
and then acquired long-term leases from them for very
little money. In the Creek
Nation, his Indian Land and
Trust Company made rental contracts so suspect that
the
U.S. Department of the Interior filed suit to invalidate them. In his
hometown of Muskogee he purchased several town lots at a
fraction of their
value. In addition, he and his
representatives made questionable contracts with
Mississippi Choctaws who were entitled to move to Oklahoma
and take allotments.
As statehood approached, Owen turned his attention to politics. As committee
person for the Democratic Party, he represented Indian
Territory at the national
conventions in 1892 and 1896.
Throughout the 1890s and early 1900s he organized
meetings
to discuss statehood for Indian Territory separate from Oklahoma
Territory and played a major role in the Sequoyah
Convention in 1905. The next
year he lobbied for both
woman suffrage and prohibition at the Oklahoma
Constitutional Convention in Guthrie. In 1907 he announced
his candidacy for the
U.S. Senate, campaigning on the
popular opposition to monopolies and trusts and
promising
to push for removal of restrictions on the sale of Indian lands. He
won the non-binding preferential primary held by the
Democrats, and the state
legislature officially elected
him late in 1907, along with Thomas P. Gore of
Lawton.
In 1908 Owen helped pass the Removal of Restrictions Act, making thousands of
Indian allotments available for sale in Oklahoma. As
senator he consistently
protected the economic interests
of a majority of his constituents, including
those in the
oil industry. On national issues he spoke frequently and
passionately against special interests and supported
presidential candidate
William Jennings Bryan in his "Let
the People Rule" campaign of 1908. Owen also
sided with
so-called "Insurgent" Republicans, who later took the name
"Progressives" in their struggle within their own party.
In 1910, reflecting the
reform mentality of the day, he
introduced an unsuccessful bill to create a
cabinet-level
department of health, decades before the creation of a similar
department. In 1912, when self-styled progressive Democrat Woodrow Wilson won the
presidency, the newly reelected Owen began taking a major
role in legislation.
Most significant, as chair of the
committee on banking and currency, he
cosponsored the
Federal Reserve Act, arguably the most important banking
legislation of the twentieth century. Owen considered this
law his crowning
achievement as senator, and other
politicians and his constituents agreed. The
Keating-Owen
Child Labor Law of 1916 also reflected his effectiveness. When the United States joined the conflict raging in Europe in 1917, Owen
proved one of the staunchest senatorial allies of Wilson
and the war. He also
supported Wilson's League of Nations
in 1919, working to effect a compromise,
but the Senate
rejected those efforts. Following the war, Owen's influence waned
with the Republican ascendancy. In 1923 he shocked many of
his constituents by
announcing that a Russian-French
conspiracy had actually caused the Great War.
He declined
reelection in 1925 after three terms. In retirement Owen remained in Washington, D.C., as a lawyer-lobbyist and
frequent commentator on public events. In 1928 he became
the first nationally
prominent Democrat to bolt in favor
of Herbert Hoover, but he returned to his
party after the
election of Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1932. During the Great
Depression Owen advocated various schemes to bring about
inflation to stimulate
the economy, and he criticized
Federal Reserve policies. Following World War II,
blind
and in failing health, Owen invented an international alphabet that he
hoped would be used by diplomats. He died of complications
from prostate surgery
on July 19, 1947, and was mourned as
the state's most influential national
figure in the early
statehood era. Return to the
JOHN C. GRAY
A resident of Oklahoma for many years,
John C. Gray, who is proprietor of the Coca-Cola
Bottling Company at
Bartlesville,
Washington county, was born in Lee
county, Virginia, February 3, 1877, his parents being C.
B. and Matilda (Ball)
Gray, both of whom were
also natives of Virginia. The
parents were married in
Virginia
and soon thereafter removed
to Eldorado
Springs, Missouri, and from there to
Caney, Kansas,
where he and his
family lived for many years. This
town is situated on the Oklahoma
boundary line. The
father has been a Baptist clergyman
throughout his
active career
and
while a resident of Kansas was also
interested in
real estate, as well as at Bartlesville,
Oklahoma, where
both he and his
wife are now making
their home. They
reared a family of ten children.
John C. Gray acquired
his early education in the schools of Lee county,
Virginia, and also in the
Kansas
schools,
where he came with his parents on
their removal to this state in 1893. In 1895 he removed
with his parents to
Bartlesville,
Oklahoma, here establishing a general
merchandise business just south of where the courthouse
now stands. This
he conducted
successfully alone until
1898 when his
brother, James Gray, joined him in the
enterprise, under the
firm style
of Gray Brothers, and
they were among the
older firms of the now flourishing
city of Bartlesville. They
continued this
establishment for
about seven years and
then retired,
James Gray becoming identified with the oil
industry.
They next engaged in
the real estate
business and built
a two-story brick store on Second and Johnstone
avenue, which they sold and
later erected the coliseum
on Fourth and Johnstons
avenue. The first floor of this
building has five
store rooms and there is a hotel of
sixteen rooms above
and on top is a roof garden. In 1912
John C.
Gray purchased the Coco-Cola Bottling Works at
Bartlesville, with a capacity to turn out twelve
hundred
cases per day. The company manufactures
all kinds of
soft drinks, has a fine plant with the most
modern
machinery
equipment
necessary to the successful
conduct of- this
business, the machinery costing twenty
five thousand dollars.
The
building is of brick
construction and is situated
on a tract of land fifty by
one
hundred and forty feet. He
employs about eight
people and his trade covers the
northeastern part of the
state,
four trucks making deliveries
to a distance of
forty miles. He is very successful in
the undertaking,
thus rapidly
becoming one of the prominent
and
prosperous manufacturers of Bartlesville.
On October 4, 1901,
Mr. Gray was married to Miss Nola Edmondson, a native of
Tennessee, and they
have become
the
parents of four children, all girls:
Jewell, who graduated from high school as a member of
the class of 1920; Cloe,
who graduated in 1921;
Ruth, who is in the junior year
at
high school; and
Bessie Jane, who is a little lass of
four years. In
religious faith
John Gray is a
Methodist, and he is a
member of the Chamber of Commerce of Bartlesville.
When Mr. Gray came to
Bartlesville in 1895 it had a
population of but three
hundred and the town was without
railroad
communication from the outside world. Today
it has a
population of over
fourteen thousand, with
railroad and telegraph
communication and every
convenience of a modern
American
city. (Source:
Page 8-10,
Benedict, John Downing,. Muskogee
and northeastern
Oklahoma : including the
counties of Muskogee, McIntosh,
Wagoner, Cherokee,
Sequoyah,
Adair, Delaware, Mayes,
Rogers, Washington, Nowata, Craig, and
Ottawa. Chicago:
S.J.
Clarke
Pub. Co., 1922.,
Submitted by Nancy
Piper)
A. E. MYERS.
One of the most attractive establishments of
Bartlesville is that conducted by Mr. and Mrs. A. E.
Myers, who have
here carried on
both a wholesale and
retail florist
business during the past four years. Mr.
Myers was born in
Iowa on the
13th of September, 1879,
and when a little
lad of five years accompanied his
parents on their removal
to
Indiana, in which state he
obtained his education.
Experience that well qualified
him
for his present line of
business came to him
during six years' employment on
the Coles Rose Farm at
Kokomo,
Indiana. In 1912, when a young
man of
thirty-three years, he carne to Bartlesville,
Oklahoma,
and assumed the duties
of manager of what is now
the
Steinhauser Florist & Nursery Company, then
owned by
George B. Keeler; He
served in that capacity until
1917. In the latter year he
embarked in the florist
business on his own account,
establishing his present
place
at Eleventh and Shawnee streets, where he owns
three
acres of land devoted
largely to the propagation
of flowers
of all varieties. He sells to both the
wholesale and
retail trade and has
enjoyed a constantly
growing business,
having already twice enlarged his
facilities and
expecting to do so
again in the near
future. He now has about
fourteen thousand feet under
glass.
On the 22d of
August,
1902, Mr. Myers was joined
in wedlock to Miss
Mary Lambdin of Indiana, and
they have a fine
home near the
greenhouse. Mr. Myers
is a Scottish Rite Mason and also
belongs to the Woodmen
and to the Red Men.
His social characteristics are
such as have won him
wide
popularity, while as a
business man he has gained
recognition
and prosperity
through enterprising, progressive and
honorable methods.
(Source:
Page 11-12,
Benedict, John Downing,. Muskogee and northeastern
Oklahoma : including the
counties
of Muskogee, McIntosh,
Wagoner, Cherokee,
Sequoyah,
Adair, Delaware, Mayes,
Rogers, Washington, Nowata, Craig, and
Ottawa. Chicago:
S.J.
Clarke
Pub. Co., 1922.,
Submitted by Nancy
Piper)
The
lumber industry of Washington county finds a prominent
representative in L. W.
Servey,
who as president of
the Ochelata Lumber
Company is
controlling a large and
growing business, which he has developed
through close
application,
capable management,
energy
and
determination. He was
born in Dempsey-town, Venango county, Pennsylvania,
July
2,
1873, of the marriage of
A..
J. and Adeline
(Weikal) Servey, both now deceased.
The father, who was a building
contractor, went to
Kansas in
1868 and there took up a
homestead, which he
improved and developed.
L. W. Servey completed
a course in the high school at Iola, Kansas, after
which
he attended the
normal
school at
Mankato, Minnesota, and a business
college at St. Paul, that state. Following the outbreak
of the
Spanish-American
war he
became a member of the
Fifteenth Minnesota Volunteer
Infantry, commanded by Captain Spicer. After
receiving
his discharge Mr.
Servey entered the employ
of the Clark & Bates
Lumber Company, first working
in their plant
at Gas City, Kansas. He was then sent
by the firm to
Bartlesville,
Oklahoma, arriving there on
the 1st of December,
1899, and eating his first meal
at the National Hotel,
which was
the first good hostelry
established in the town
and was situated on the
present
site of the Model
Clothing Store, being operated
by Frank Overlees. The yards of
the Clark & Bates
Company
were then located where
the Union Bank now
stands; Keeler's store was at that time
in the old
town of Bartlesville;
and on the present
site of the
courthouse there was an oil well.
Mr. Servey also went
to Collinsville and Ochelata in the interests of the
firm, with whom he
continued until
1916,
during which period he acquired
a comprehensive knowledge of the
business. He then
embarked upon an
independent
venture, establishing the
Ochelata Lumber
Company, of which he has since been the
president and
the directing head.
They have two employees and their
stock, which is
valued at fifteen
thousand dollars,
consists of large timbers
used in oil development work
and
they also handle
paints and varnishes, their yards
covering an area two hundred
and
sixteen by one
hundred and twenty-eight feet. Mr.
Servey's powers of
organization
and his executive ability
have enabled
him to build up a business of large
proportions and he
controls all of
the lumber trade for several
miles
adjacent to Ochelata.
On
October 18, 1905,
was solemnized the marriage of L. W.
Servey and Daisy
Maude Castain of Iola,
Kansas, and the
circle of their
friends is an
extensive one. Mr.
Servey gives his political allegiance
to the democratic
party
and has
taken a prominent part in public
affairs. He has been
chairman of
the Washington county election board
for
the past twelve years and from 1903 to 1904 he
acted as
city clerk of
Collinsville, while from 1906 until 1908
he served as
mayor of Ochelata, giving to the town a
businesslike and
progressive administration,
characterized
by various needed reforms and
improvements. When
leisure permits
he finds recreation
in shooting and is considered
an expert marksman. In
all of
his business career he
has held closely to the
rules which govern strict integrity
and unabating
industry and
through the wise
utilization of his time
and opportunities has gained a substantial
measure of
success, while at the
same time his labors
have
contributed to the development and upbuilding of his
community, his worth as a man
and citizen being
generally acknowledged. (Source:
Page
12-13,
Benedict, John
Downing,. Muskogee and northeastern
Oklahoma : including
the counties of Muskogee, McIntosh,
Wagoner, Cherokee,
Sequoyah,
Adair, Delaware, Mayes, Rogers, Washington, Nowata,
Craig, and
Ottawa. Chicago: S.J.
Clarke
Pub. Co., 1922.,
Submitted by Nancy
Piper)
C. O.
Davis, one of the enterprising and progressive young
agriculturists of
northeastern
Oklahoma, residing five
miles northeast
of Dewey,
devotes his attention to
the pursuits of farming and stock raising
with excellent
success.
He was
born in Chicago,
Illinois, on the 7th of December, 1889,
and there pursued his education. It
was in 1909,
when a young man of
twenty years, that he
came to Oklahoma, locating in
Dewey, where he was placed
in charge of
the gas department of the W. F. Cowen
Cement, Oil
& Gas Company and
laid all of their pipe
lines here. Subsequently
he took charge of the Joe .A.
Bartles gas plant in
Dewey, being
thus engaged for three
years. In 1915 he turned
his attention to agricultural
pursuits, which have
since claimed
his time and energies
and in which connection
he has won a most gratifying
measure of prosperity, He
owns
three hundred and twenty
acres of land, has two hundred
and eighty acres more
under
lease and is extensively
engaged in the
cultivation of corn, oats and wheat, planting
one
hundred and fifty acres to
wheat in 1921. In
connection
with
the tilling of the soil he devotes considerable
attention to the raising of
cattle, including beef
cattle, and also' conducts a
dairy. He utilizes a
tractor and
modern machinery to facilitate the work of
the fields
and is widely
recognized as one of the most
progressive and
up-to-date farmers of the community,
There is a fine
residence,
together with substantial
outbuildings on his
property-the
visible evidence of
his life of well-directed industry
and thrift. .His
holdings include
one hundred and eighty
acres on the
river bottom and there is oil on all of
his land, there
being twenty-five
wells altogether.
On
the 27th of
October, 1914, Mr. Davis was united in
marriage to Miss
Anna Anderson, a
daughter of Samuel and
Josephine
(Bullett). Anderson,
both of whom
were born in Kansas, of Delaware
extraction, and became
pioneer
settlers
of the Indian
Territory. Mrs. Davis was
educated at Chilocco,
Oklahoma, and also pursued a
course of study in Haskell
Institute at Lawrence,
Kansas.
By her marriage she has
become the mother of two
children, William and Annette,
the former now six
years of age.
Mr. Davis is fond of
motoring, driving an
Apperson car, and both he and his wife
are well known
and highly
esteemed throughout the
community in which
they make their home. (Source: Page 15-16,
Benedict, John Downing,. Muskogee
and northeastern
Oklahoma : including
the counties of Muskogee,
McIntosh, Wagoner, Cherokee,
Sequoyah, Adair, Delaware,
Mayes,
Rogers, Washington, Nowata,
Craig, and Ottawa.
Chicago: S.J. Clarke Pub. Co.,
1922., Submitted by Nancy
Piper)
![]()
Important and varied
interests claim the
time and
attention of Dr. B. F.
Rowland, a leading druggist of
Ochelata,
who also
figures
prominently in financial circles as
vice
president of the Ochelata State Bank, and he is likewise
the owner of a good farm in this vicinity, his
business affairs being most judiciously managed. He was
born in
Moniteau county
Missouri, June 7, 1866, his
parents
being Powhatan and Mary W. (Longdon) Rowland,
the latter a
daughter of a
circuit rider in Missouri,
who was one
of the well known ministers of the early
days. B. F. Rowland's
father
engaged in general
merchandising at Jamestown,
Missouri, but in 1849 he
joined
the rush of gold seekers
to California, where
he won success in the mines,
later
returning to
Missouri. In 1878 he moved to Kansas, where
he passed
away in 1902, at the
venerable age of
eighty-six, having
long survived the mother, whose demise occurred
in
Kansas in 1886, when she was
sixty-six years of
age.
Their son, B. F. Rowland,
acquired his early
education in the public schools of
Missouri, after which
he completed
a course in medicine at Fort Smith,
Arkansas. In 1894
he opened an
office at Oologah, in
Rogers county, Oklahoma,
where for two years he
followed
his profession, after
which he removed to
Ringold, there continuing in practice
for three years.
On the
expiration of that period he
purchased a drug
store at Ochelata which he has since conducted,
being
recognized as one of the
leading pharmacists of
this
part
of the state. He carries a large stock of drugs
and druggists' sundries and his
reasonable prices and
reliability in filling
prescriptions have secured for
him
a large patronage. Widening the scope of his
activities, he entered the financial field and is now
serving as vice
president of the
Oklahoma State Bank,
which is one of
the sound moneyed institutions of
northeastern Oklahoma,
and he is
also interested in
farming, having a good
ranch of two hundred and forty
acres a mile south and eight
miles east of Ochelata,
which he
is renting. He no
longer follows his
profession, having discontinued the practice
of
medicine in 1907, and his
entire time is now
concentrated
upon his business interests, which are
important and
profitable.
On the 7th of
December,
1897, Dr. Rowland was
united in marriage to Miss Addie B. Thomas, a
daughter
of Mr. and
Mrs. John
Thomas. The
latter
passed away when Mrs. Rowland was but
twelve years old. She was reared on
Pryor creek
and acquired her
education in the Orphans"
School at Salina, on the Grand
river. To Dr. and Mrs.
Rowland,
five children were born: Samuel W.,
twenty-two years
of age, who
married Jettie Mullins;
Robert T., who is a young
man of nineteen and is a
graduate of the Wentworth
Military
Academy at Lexington,
Missouri; Minnie C., who was
graduated from the normal
school
at Edmond, Oklahoma;
and Mary Opal and Edgar C.,
who are still attending school.
All of the children
except
Samuel W. are residing at
home with their
parents.
Dr. Rowland is a
prominent .Mason, belonging to
Ramona Lodge, No. 326, F.
& A. M., and to
the consistory at
McAlester,
Oklahoma, in which he has
taken the thirty-second
degree. His father was also
identified with this
order,
which he joined in Virginia,
three years being
required at that time to become a
member of the craft.
The spirit
of progress and enterprise has ever
actuated Dr.
Rowland, leading him
into important
connections, and his labors
have at all times been of
a
constructive nature,
contributing to public progress
and prosperity, as well as to
individual
aggrandizement. In
business circles of
Ochelata his
standing is of the highest and he is recognized
as a
loyal, public-spirited
citizen, whose influence
is at
all
times on the side of advancement and improvement.
(Source: Page
24-25, Benedict, John
Downing,. Muskogee and
northeastern
Oklahoma :
including the
counties of
Muskogee, McIntosh, Wagoner, Cherokee, Sequoyah,
Adair,
Delaware, Mayes, Rogers,
Washington, Nowata,
Craig, and
Ottawa. Chicago: S.J.
Clarke Pub. Co., 1922., Submitted by Nancy
Piper)
ZACHARIAH TAYLOR
PRESTON.
Zachariah
Taylor Preston, who is successfully engaged in farming a
mile north of Ramona
in Washington
county, was
born on Grand river,
twenty-five
miles east of Vinita,
Craig county, , Oklahoma, on the 23d of
January, 1883.
His
father,
Charles Henry
Preston, was
a native of Virginia and on
coming to the Indian Territory settled near Grove.
He was a surgeon and served in the Confederate
army
during the Civil war. He
practiced medicine and
surgery in
the Indian Territory and in the state of
Oklahoma
until fifteen years prior
to his death, passing
away at the home
of his son, Z. T. Preston, in 1917,
at the notable old
age of one
hundred and three years.
He never used a cane
and could read ordinary print
without the aid of
glasses to the
end of his life. He
possessed notable physical
endurance, was never ill
and, in
fact, was around the
house until within fifteen
minutes of his demise when he
laid down upon his bed
and
passed away without the
least suffering. "The weary
wheels of life at length stood
still" and as one
falling into a
peaceful sleep death
came to him. His
wife, who in her maidenhood was Martha
Elizabeth
LaMar, was a native of
Illinois and was
brought to the
Indian Territory by her parents during her childhood
days. She was of Cherokee
extraction and is now living
in Ramona, at the age
of fifty-eight years with her son,
George Floyd
Lane, who was born of her second
marriage.
Z. T. Preston,
whose name
introduces
this review, pursued his education
at Hickory. Grove in Craig county about
eight miles
south of Fairland
and when nineteen years
of age he
began farming on his own account. For three years
he
devoted his attention to the
tilling of the soil on
a
farm near
his birthplace and afterward removed to
Washington county, where he cultivated a farm of
eighty acres, which he owned, two and a half miles south
of Oglesby.
In 1903 he removed
to the farm of eighty
acres which
belongs to his son, Herman J. D. Preston,
and his daughter,
Goldie Agnes
Preston. This farm is
situated a mile
north of Ramona and is an eighty-acre
tract, splendidly improved
and
developed. He has an
unusually fine country home
and all modern buildings on
the
place and there is no accessory
or convenience of
the model farm of the twentieth
century that is not
found here.
Mr. Preston rents his own farm,
located
near Oglesby. He is thoroughly progressive and
modern in
all of his methods,
carrying on his work according
to
the most advanced scientific principles, practicing
the
rotation of crops, doing all
work systematically and
producing results which are
most gratifying. He
carries on general farming and in
addition raises fine
hogs,
of
which he has every reason to be proud. He has
one
sow which had a litter of seventeen pigs. The farm
which is
now the family home is
situated on the state
highway
and
the splendid appearance of the place is due
entirely to
the efforts of Mr. Preston, for he made
all of the
improvements on the
property.
In 1902 Mr. Preston
was united in marriage, at Miami, to Miss Perilina
Chadwell, a daughter of
Andy J.
and Sarah
Alice (Williams) Chadwell of
Missouri, who came to the Indian
Territory a quarter of
a century ago. Her
father
is
still living but the mother has passed away.
Mr. and
Mrs, Preston have become
parents of the following named:
Goldie Agnes, Herman
J. D., Maudres, Sarah Alice,
Everett Leon, Martha Lane,
Mary Magdelene and Estilaine
Levon.
The family is widely known in their section of
the
state and they have many warm
friends. Mr. Preston
is a man
of
most progressive spirit, constantly
advancing
toward higher standards in all that he
undertakes and his labors
are
proving a most potent
force in the agricultural
development of Washington
county.
(Source:
Page 26-28, Benedict,
John Downing,. Muskogee and
northeastern Oklahoma :
including
the counties of Muskogee, McIntosh,
Wagoner,
Cherokee, Sequoyah, Adair, Delaware, Mayes,
Rogers,
Washington, Nowata, Craig,
and Ottawa. Chicago: S.J.
Clarke
Pub. Co., 1922., Submitted by Nancy
Piper)
E. H. HUFF
E. H. Huff is well known in business
circles of Bartlesville as a successful contractor,
engaged in road
construction
work, and owing to his thorough
knowledge
of his chosen occupation and his reliable and
progressive business methods,
success has attended his
efforts. A native of
Missouri, he
was born November 11,
1897, and in 1900 was taken to
Oklahoma by his
parents, J. W.
and Bessie (Williamson)
Huff, who are
also natives of that state. For many years
the father
followed contracting
in the oil fields of
this state but
he is now living retired in Bartlesville and
the
mother also survives.
In
the acquirement of
an education E.
H. Huff attended the
public schools of Bartlesville and
Kendall College at
Tulsa, after
which he became a
student in the
Bartlesville Business College, from which
he was
graduated in
1917.
He
then entered the cigar and confectionery
business but
later disposed of his
store and for a time was identified
with oil
interests, abandoning that line of activity
to engage in
contracting. He is now at the .head of the
Huff
Construction Company and is doing road
construction
work for the state,
being most thorough and
conscientious in
the execution of contracts and
rendering excellent
service to the
commonwealth.
On the
22d of
September, 1917, Mr. Huff was united in marriage
to Miss
Viola Tayrien, a
daughter
of Andrew J and
Fannie Tayrien; members of
one
of the oldest and most
prominent families in the state. Mrs. Huff is a
native
of
Oklahoma, her birth
having
occurred in Osage
county, west of Bartlesville,
and by her marriage she has become the
mother of a
daughter, Betty May.
The family reside in
a beautiful
home at No. 521 East Eighth street. Mr. Huff's
fraternal connections are with
the Masons and the
Independent Order of Odd Fellows. He
is a progressive
and capable
young business man, who displays sound
judgment,
energy and determination
in the conduct of his
interests, and
judging from what he has already
accomplished his
future will be
well worth the watching,
while his personal qualities
are such as make for
popularity.
(Source:
Page 30-31, Benedict,
John
Downing,. Muskogee and
northeastern Oklahoma : including
the counties of
Muskogee, McIntosh, Wagoner,
Cherokee,
Sequoyah, Adair,
Delaware, Mayes, Rogers,
Washington, Nowata, Craig, and
Ottawa. Chicago: S.J.
Clarke Pub. Co.,
1922., Submitted by Nancy
Piper)
LOUIS TINKER
Louis Tinker, a retired farmer and stock
raiser of Bartlesville, Oklahoma, was born on the
Neosha
river, Kansas,
and is a
son of William H. and Lucille
(Lessart)
Tinker, both of whom were of Osage Indian
origin. Both have passed
away.
Louis Tinker's parents
removed with him to
Oklahoma when he was a child, and on
reaching adult years he there
turned his attention to
farming
and stock raising. He
followed this occupation
in Oklahoma successfully for many
years and as a
result of his
close application and
industry he is now,
at the age of fifty-four years, living retired
from
active business life,
enjoying in well earned
rest the
fruits of his former toil. He has also made some
judicious
investments in oil and he and eight of his
children
who have oil holdings are receiving large
royalties
annually.
Thus he is
enabled to live in ease and
comfort.
On October 5,
1890,
Mr. Tinker was united in
marriage to Miss Ida May
Harness, also a native of
Neosha county,
Kansas. She is a
daughter of John and
Sarah (Meeks) Harness, the former a
native of Illinois,
while the mother
was born in Platte county, Missouri.
After the death
of her husband
Mrs. Harness married
Duncan McIntyre, who has
also passed away. She became
the
mother of seven
children. She has now reached the
age of seventy-nine years and
is
making her home with
her daughter, Mrs. Tinker. She
became a resident of
Indian
Territory in the early 70s.
Mr. and Mrs. Tinker
have become the parents of twelve
children: William,
born August 22,
1891; Bessie, born November
11, 1894;
James, born November 10, 1896, who has
passed away; Nora
and Ora, twins,
born May 14, 1898; Eva, born
September
28, 1900; Isabell, born March 16, 1903;
Rose, born May
4, 1905; Cora, born
March 8, 1907-; Lela, born
May 8,
1909; and Ida Bell and Louis, Jr., also twins,
born
August 28, 1915.
Mr.
Tinker has very
few outside
interests, preferring to
enjoy the companionship of his
wife and
family in their
beautiful home at 600 Delaware,
Bartlesville, Oklahoma. He still
owns eight hundred
acres of land in Oklahoma
and
is
planning to return to his farm in 1923. (Source: Page 32, 35,
Benedict,
John Downing,.
Muskogee and northeastern Oklahoma
: including the
counties of Muskogee,
McIntosh, Wagoner, Cherokee,
Sequoyah, Adair,
Delaware,
Mayes, Rogers, Washington, Nowata, Craig, and Ottawa.
Chicago: S.J.
Clarke Pub. Co.,
1922.,
Submitted by Nancy
Piper)
H. H. BOWEN
Among those who are doing effective work
in connection with the development of the rich oil
fields of northeastern
Oklahoma
is numbered H. H.
Bowen, a successful
operator residing at Ochelata, who
is the possessor of considerable
creative ability
which he has
utilized to good
advantage in this field of
activity. He was born in Adams county,
Ohio, October
27, 1868, of the
marriage of Reuben R.
and Kate Bowen,
the former a native of Virginia, while the
latter was
born in Ohio and was
left an orphan when
but an infant.
The father devoted his attention to the buying
of
timber and became a pioneer
of Indiana, passing
away in
1907.
H. H.
Bowen acquired his education in the common schools of
Indiana and in 1905 he
came to
Oklahoma, first locating
at Bartlesville and
later
removing to Ochelata, where
he entered the oil business, in which he has
been very
successful.
He owns
improved
property in
both Bartlesville and Ochelata and
has a one hundred and thirty acre tract of
land
situated two and a half
miles southwest of
Ochelata, on which he has five wells
which at first
produced one hundred
and fifty barrels per day, while
their present output
is about
forty barrels daily. He
has done all of the development
work on this property
with his
own funds and has
devoted much thought to oil
development work, which has resulted
in the invention
of a sand trap
for oil wells, and he
has also invented a
wench for pulling rods and tubing from
oil wells, the
device being so
made that it can be
adjusted to the rear
wheels of an automobile, which furnishes
the motive
power and is a great
saving over the old
method. Mr.
Bowen is also interested in the Ochelata Mercantile
Company and likewise owns a farm
of one hundred and
forty acres near Fort Recovery, in
Mercer county, Ohio,
and
has
made nine trips from Oklahoma to that state by
automobile.
In 1902
Mr.
Bowen was united in
marriage
to Miss Dora Cochran, a
native of Indiana and a daughter
of William
and
Anna (Brown)
Cochran, who were also born in the
Hoosier state. To
this union has been born a daughter,
Magdalene
M., who is attending Forest Park College at
St. Louis,
Missouri. Mr. Bowen
owns two residences, one
being at Bartlesville
and the other at Ochelata. He is
a keen, farsighted
business man
whose energy and
determination have enabled him
to carry forward to a
successful
issue whatever he has
undertaken, and
Oklahoma has greatly benefited through his
labors.
(Source:
Page 38-39, Benedict,
John
Downing,. Muskogee and northeastern
Oklahoma :
including the
counties of Muskogee, McIntosh, Wagoner,
Cherokee,
Sequoyah,
Adair, Delaware, Mayes, Rogers,
Washington, Nowata,
Craig, and
Ottawa. Chicago: S.J. Clarke Pub. Co., 1922., Submitted
by Nancy
Piper)
W. A. Kidd,
an astute, energetic and successful business man, is
well known in commercial
circles
of Washington
county as head of the W. A. Kidd
Lumber Company of Bartlesville and in the conduct of his
interests he displays
foresight, determination
and
marked executive
ability. A native of
Pennsylvania, he was born March 9,
1869, and after
completing his public
school course entered an academy
in that state. After
reaching
mature years he went to
Bowling Green, Ohio, and
there engaged in drilling oil
wells as a contractor
until 1900,
when he went to
Bakersfield, California, where
for three years he was
similarly
occupied. From there
he came to Bartlesville
and for three years operated four
strings of tools
here, at the
end of which period he
disposed of his
interests along that line, and in 1906 he
became a
member of the firm of
Kidd & Bailey,
later
purchasing the interest of his partner, since which time
he has conducted the enterprise independently. He
handles lumber, catering to the retail trade
exclusively,"
and obtains his
stock from Texas and
Arkansas. He has
built up a business of large
proportions, giving employment
to seven people and
utilizing
four delivery trucks. In
1922 he opened up a
yard at Shidler, Oklahoma. He is also
engaged in the
tile business
and. in fact, handles
everything
pertaining to the building of a house. He has also
invested heavily in oil stock
and he likewise owns a
lumberyard at Tulsa, this state,
where he employs six
men,
being
one of the most successful lumber operators
in
northeastern Oklahoma. He is deserving of great
credit for
what he has
accomplished in a business way
for when he
left California he was two thousand dollars
in debt and
upon reaching
Bartlesville had to borrow
the sum of
thirty-five dollars, but through economy,
industry and the
wise management
of his affairs he has
managed to
payoff all indebtedness and is now the
possessor of a substantial
competence.
On April 21, 1905, Mr.
.Kidd was united in marriage to Miss May Layton, a
native of Missouri, who
previous
to her
marriage was a teacher in the public
schools of Bartlesville. They have two sons: Coburn
Byron and Theodore Conlin,
aged, respectively,
twelve
and ten years. By a former
wife, now deceased,
Mr. Kidd has a son, Kenneth, who is a
young man of
twenty-seven years.
W.
A. Kidd is a
prominent Mason,
having taken the thirty-
second degree in the
consistory, and
he is also
connected
with the Knights of
Pythias,
while Mrs. Kidd is a member of the Woman's
Christian
Temperance Union, of
which she
is a past president. Mr. Kidd
possesses in
large measure that quality which has been
termed the
commercial sense.
In
other words, he realizes and
embraces the
opportunities for business development. He
has fought life's battles
unaided, his marked force of
character, persistency of
purpose
and untiring industry
enabling him to overcome all
obstacles and
difficulties in
his path, and he
deserves classification
with the self-made men and progressive citizens
of
Bartlesville and Washington
county. (Source: Page 39-41,
Benedict,
John Downing,.
Muskogee and northeastern Oklahoma
: including the
counties of Muskogee,
McIntosh, Wagoner, Cherokee,
Sequoyah, Adair,
Delaware,
Mayes, Rogers, Washington, Nowata, Craig, and Ottawa.
Chicago: S.J.
Clarke Pub. Co.,
1922.,
Submitted by Nancy
Piper)
J. T.
Shipman, a successful attorney of Bartlesville, where he
has practiced
continuously during
the past fifteen
years, is now
associated with B.
A. Lewis and is
widely recognized as one of the able
representatives of the legal
profession in
northeastern
Oklahoma. He was born
in Ashley county, Arkansas, on the 1st of
February,
1874, and-
began his
education
in the common
schools there, later pursuing a
high school course at Hamburg, that state.
Subsequently
he became a student
in Ouachita College
at Arkadelphia, Arkansas, which
institution conferred
upon him the degree
of Bachelor of Arts, while his
professional training
was received
in the law department
of the University of Michigan
at Ann Arbor, from which
he was
graduated with the
class of 1906. In the same
year he came to Oklahoma and opened
an office in
Bartlesville, here
beginning the practice
of law in
partnership with W. T. Sidell, who is now deceased.
Throughout the period of his
professional career he
has devoted his attention
strictly to civil law and his
present
associate is B. A. Lewis, the firm acting as
attorneys
for the National Oil
& Development
Company, the Dewey-Portland
Cement Company, Tyler
&
Company, the Central
National Bank and the
Security- National Bank of Dewey. For four
years, from
1911 until 1915, Mr.
Shipman filled the
office of county
judge, making a most creditable and commendable
record
in that connection. He is
likewise attorney for
the Rome
Savings Loan Association of" Bartlesville,
which has assets of one million,
five hundred thousand
dollars and
of which he is one of
the directors. His clientage,
which is now extensive
and of an
important character,
has come to him in
recognition of his pronounced ability
in the handling
of litigated
interests.
On the 2d
of June,
1910, Mr. Shipman was united in marriage to
Miss
Samuella McKorkle of
Arkansas, and they occupy
an
enviable position in the
social
circles of Bartlesville and vicinity. Fraternally
Mr.
Shipman is
identified
with
the Masons, being a past master and
past high priest,
and he also
belongs to the Benevolent Protective Order
of Elks. He
gives his political allegiance to the
democratic party
but has never sought nor desired office
outside
the strict path of his profession. For two
years he
filled the office of city
attorney, while at
the present time
he is acting as attorney for the
board of education.
His record
both as a lawyer and
citizen has been such as to
commend him to the
confidence
and esteem of all who
know him and the circle
of his friends has constantly grown
as the number of
his
acquaintances has increased.
(Source:
Page 42-43,
Benedict, John
Downing,. Muskogee and
northeastern Oklahoma : including
the counties of
Muskogee, McIntosh, Wagoner,
Cherokee, Sequoyah,
Adair,
Delaware, Mayes, Rogers, Washington, Nowata, Craig, and
Ottawa.
Chicago: S.J. Clarke
Pub. Co.,
1922., Submitted by
Nancy Piper)
Modern
progressive agriculture finds a worthy representative in
J. S. Fouts; who owns
a valuable
farm near Dewey,
in Washington county, on
which
he has placed many
improvements, while his land also contains oil, from
which source
he derives a large
addition to his
income. A native
of Kansas, he was born
April 14, 1862, and his father
died
during his
infancy. When
but five years of age he was
brought by
his mother to the Cherokee Nation and three years
later her death occurred, so
that he was left an
orphan when very young. He is of
Delaware extraction and
was reared
by his maternal aunt, Mrs. Susie Elkhair,
the wife of
Charley Elkhair. His
education was acquired
in the mission
schools in the eastern part of Oklahoma
and after
laying aside his
textbooks he chose the
occupation of farming,
which he has since followed
successfully, also
engaging in
stock raising. He resides
on a ten acre farm situated
three miles north of
Dewey, on
the main road to Copan,
on which he has built
a good home and substantial outbuildings,
and he also
owns a tract of one
hundred and fifty
acres on the
Little Caney river, a mile northwest of his home
place, this land being rich in
oil, from which he
draws about five hundred dollars a
month in royalties.
He likewise
has a ranch of forty acres situated two
and a half
miles north of Copan, a
portion of which is
used as pasture
for his stock, and his farming
operations are
conducted along the
most practical and
progressive lines, resulting
in the attainment of a
substantial measure of
prosperity.
In 1899
Mr. Fouts was united in marriage to Mrs. Minnie (Bullet)
Longbone, who by her
former
marriage to William
Longbone became the mother
of a
son, Ray. Her parents are
both deceased. She owns forty acres of land a
mile
northeast
of the home farm
and
although no oil
wells have as yet been drilled on
this property it will no doubt be developed
in the
near future, as it lies
within the oil section.
She
likewise has an eighty-acre tract a mile distant from
the home place and from the oil
wells on this property
she derives a good
revenue.
Mr.
Fouts is
the possessor of a fine physique, being six
feet, one
inch in height, and
weighing two hundred and
fifty
pounds. He is a
self-made
man,
deserving of all the praise which the term implies, for he has
worked his
way upward entirely
through his own
efforts, placing
his dependence upon the
substantial qualities of
industry,
perseverance and
integrity, and Washington county
numbers him among its
leading
agriculturists and substantial
citizens. (Source: Page 47-48, Benedict,
John Downing,.
Muskogee and
northeastern
Oklahoma :
including the counties of Muskogee, McIntosh,
Wagoner,
Cherokee, Sequoyah,
Adair, Delaware,
Mayes, Rogers,
Washington, Nowata,
Craig, and Ottawa. Chicago: S.J.
Clarke Pub. Co., 1922.,
Submitted by Nancy
Piper)
WILLIAM GRANT ROGERS.
William Grant
Rogers, a
member of one of the
honored pioneer families
of Oklahoma, has the
distinction
of being
the oldest
settler in Dewey, coming here long
before the
establishment of the town. He has been called
to public
positions of honor and trust and for many
years has
been engaged in general
farming and stock
raising in this section
of the state but is gradually
retiring from the more
arduous
cares of business,
devoting his attention to the
supervision
of a well
improved
ranch lying adjacent to the town.
He was born
April 13, 1865, in the neutral land of the Cherokee
Nation, which was sold after the
Civil war for "bread
money," and his parents were
Hilliard and Martha
(Fields) Rogers, both of
whom
were of the Cherokee
tribe,
the former a native of
Georgia, while the latter was
born in Chattanooga,
Tennessee.
The father acted as
interpreter of the
Cherokee language for President Zachary
Taylor during
the Mexican war.
In 1866 he came to
Indian Territory,
settling on the Caney river, one and a half
miles
north of the present site
of Bartlesville. Here
he
devoted
his attention to general farming and stock raising,
the country being at that time in a wild and
undeveloped state. He passed away in 1871, when still a
young man.
He was a stanch
supporter of democratic
principles and
was actively interested in the welfare
and success of the
party. The
mother was a daughter of
John and Sarah
Fields, who also became residents of
Indian Territory. Her grandmother
died at Maysville,
Arkansas, and
Mrs. Rogers passed
away on the old
homestead eight months prior to the death of
her
husband.
As the
parents of
William Grant Rogers
both died when he was
very young; he was reared by N. F.
Carr, who was a
sincere friend
of the family and also
came to the territory in 1866,
the year of their
arrival. On reaching manhood
Mr. Rogers took up the
occupation of farming and also
engaged in stock raising,
being
very successful in the management
of his
business affairs. He is now living practically
retired,
although he is farming an
eighty-acre tract situated
a
half mile south of Dewey, his principal crops being
alfalfa and grain, and he also
raises horses and cattle.
He likewise owns some
good oil-producing property on
Sections 31 and 36, in
Washington county, and his
investments
have been most judiciously placed. For
nine years he
devoted his
attention to merchandising,
successfully conducting
a hardware and furniture
business in Dewey and later
selling his mercantile
interests
to R. B. Myers.
In
1891 Mr. Rogers was
united in
marriage to Miss Lillie
Washington, a native of the
Cherokee Nation,
born in the
Delaware district, and a daughter of
William and Eliza (Conner) Washington, who died when she
was very young. She
attended the
Cherokee Orphans'
Home on Grand river, in
the Saline district, in which
institution Mr. Rogers also
acquired his education,
and
seven children were born
to their union, all of whom
reached adult years: Lula M.,
the eldest in the
family, died
soon after her marriage
and her daughter,
Beautis Lillian Sexton, makes her home
with her
grandparents. William
E., twenty-seven years
of age,
married Bess Knight and they have one child, Patsy
Bess. The other children are
Rilla B., Eliza J.,
A.rthur M., Joseph E. and Dewey L.,
aged, respectively,
nineteen,
sixteen and thirteen years. The daughter,
Eliza J.,
married William Clark
and they have one child,
Lula May, The
family live in an attractive home on the
outskirts of
Dewey and their
warm-hearted hospitality is
often enjoyed
by their many friends.
Mr.
Rogers is related
by marriage to
George B. Keeler, who
married his cousins, Josie
Gillstrap and
Josie Cass.
Mr.
Rogers keeps well informed concerning
all matters of
public moment and has been a close
student of the early
history of Indian Territory,
being deeply interested
in all
that pertains to the
welfare and progress of his
community,
state and
nation. He
has taken an active part in
public affairs,
serving as deputy United States marshal when Hon,
I.
O. Parker was judge of the
federal court at Fort
Smith,
Arkansas, He was also treasurer of Dewey township for
two terms, while for four years
he was connected with
the work of the federal court at
Fort Smith. He is a
capable
business man who has displayed sound judgment,
energy
and determination in the
management of his
affairs and his
present success is due entirely to-
his own efforts.
His life has been
spent in this state
and his mind is stored
with many interesting incidents
relating to the early
days. He has
ever led an upright,
honorable life, his earnest
toil bringing him
prosperity and
his integrity
bringing him the high
regard of all who know him, and Oklahoma numbers
him
among her honored pioneers.
(Source:
Page
54-56,
Benedict, John
Downing,. Muskogee and
northeastern Oklahoma : including the counties of
Muskogee, McIntosh, Wagoner,
Cherokee,
Sequoyah, Adair,
Delaware, Mayes, Rogers,
Washington, Nowata, Craig, and
Ottawa. Chicago: S.J.
Clarke Pub. Co.,
1922., Submitted by Nancy
Piper)
![]()


A founder, president and board member of the American Quarter Horse
Association, Moore also was involved in other areas of equine activity and in
many aspects of life in Washington County, Oklahoma, from his birth, Sept. 18,
1903, to his death, April 4, 1994. "He was involved in all kinds of activities,"
says Bill Blakemore, retired Washington County extension agent. "He's in the
AQHA Hall of Fame and started the youth program when he was president of the
association. He was on the board of the Dewey (Oklahoma) bank for 40 years, an
oil producer and the originator of the Monsieur Moore Quarter Horse Show, held
in Dewey for 26 years. At one time, it was the largest show of its kind in the
world. He was selected as the most dependable, honest judge and judged the
junior Quarter Horse shows for free. He was on the fair board for years and a
member of the Bluestem Quarter Horse Association." Blakemore says he's sure
Moore attended and judged more Quarter Horse shows than anyone else. The
official start of AQHA is alleged to have taken place March 15, 1940, during the
Fort Worth Livestock Show. However, a lot of thought went into it before that
date. "The Quarter Horse association was really founded under a tree on the
campus of Oklahoma State University (Oklahoma A&M, as it was known at that
time) in 1940," asserts Moore's daughter, Marilyn Moore Tate. Moore's interest
in developing the breed probably was tied to the herd of Steel Dust mares he
inherited from his father, William Sherman Moore. He wasn't happy with the mean
temperament and contrary nature of the strain, so he sold those mares and began
building a herd of more amiable horses. Moore greatly admired Ronald Mason's
famous stallion, Oklahoma Star, and wanted a herd of mares as good-natured as
that stallion. His foundation stock included Cutie M, an Oklahoma Star mare, and
Red Lady M, of Coke Blake breeding. To these he added Star Boy, a son of
Oklahoma Star out of Bay Babe. Bay Babe was by Red Buck, John Dawson's renowned
stallion who later belonged to King Merrit. Moore was an AQHA director from 1946
to 1979 and became a lifetime member in 1963. He served as president in 1961,
first vice president in 1960, and second vice president in '51, '55, '56 and
'59. From 1958 through 1975, he was show and contest chairman and was finance
committee chairman in 1963. In 1961, AQHA was looking for someone to sponsor a
major Quarter Horse show. Moore, chairman of the agriculture committee of the
Bartlesville (Oklahoma) Area Chamber of Commerce, convinced the group to sponsor
the event. In 1981, he was honored by the chamber on the 20th anniversary of the
Monsieur Moore Quarter Horse Show. C.G. Richardson, a fellow Washington County
rancher and Quarter Horse breeder, stated he was sure the show wouldn't have
enjoyed the success it had if Moore hadn't allowed his name to be used. Moore
was presented with a certificate of commendation from the Oklahoma State Senate,
signed by State Senator John Dahl, for his contribution to the endeavor. Moore
also was considered part of backbone of the cutting-horse industry, and spent 15
years as a Quarter Horse show judge, traveling all over the country in this
capacity. He also was a timekeeper for the Rodeo Cowboys Association. Moore had
a deep interest in young people and gave many weanlings to deserving 4-H and FFA
members. For all his work with these organizations, he was named an honorary
member of various 4-H clubs and FFA chapters. "He usually gave a filly, as he
wanted it to be the start of a herd," says Tate of her father's generosity.
Moore was a cattle rancher as well as a horse breeder and helped found the
Bluestem Cattlemen's Association, which named him Rancher of the Year in 1978.
In 1993, he was inducted into the Western Heritage Hall of Fame in Amarillo,
Texas, an honor from the state that produced his father. With his father's death
in 1937, Moore inherited the position of director of the First National Bank of
Dewey. The Moore family ranch, the Horseshoe L, had been founded by William
Sherman Moore in 1894. Encompassing nearly 30 sections of land, it reached from
Coon Creek in Washington County to just west of Delaware in Nowata County.
However, all the buildings were located near Hogshooter Creek on the 160-acre
Indian allotment received by Mary Emma Scudder. Of Cherokee descent, she married
William Sherman Moore in 1898. They had three children: Monsieur, Clark and
Marie (Mrs. William Murdock Payne). "This ranch is the oldest in the state
that's continued to remain in the family that founded it," remarks Tate.
Honoring Moore's Memory Monsieur Moore's 1994 funeral reflected his love
of western life. According to his daughter, he didn't want any slow, sad songs.
Instead, the service included such songs as "Back In the Saddle Again" by Gene
Autry, and Roy Rogers' "Happy Trails." Tate, who shares Moore's affection for
western life and his aptitude for keeping up with trends, worked with her
husband, Kenneth, to construct a replica of an 1800s village on the family
ranch. Called Prairie Song, it's open for tours and available for weddings,
family reunions, festivals and other gatherings. In their most recent effort to
honor Monsieur Moore, family members and friends have nominated him to the
National Cowboy Hall of Fame in the Great Westerner category. "There are five
categories for nominations," says Blakemore, "and we chose the Great Westerner
category. Source: Western Horseman Magazine Article Written by Charlotte Anne Smith
©2009 Genealogy Trails