People of Sherman County
God, Grass & Grit : History of the Sherman Trade Area,
Vol. I
compiled and edited by Marylou McDaniel
(Hereford, Texas: Pioneer Book Publishers, Inc., 1971)
God, Grass & Grit : History of the Sherman Trade Area, Vol. II
compiled and edited by Marilyn Albert
(Seagraves, Texas: Pioneer Book Publishers, Inc., 1975)
God, Grass & Grit : History of the Sherman Trade Area, Vol. III
compiled and edited by Marilyn Albert Harkins
(Mt. Vernon, Ind.: Windmill Publications, 2000)
Postmasters & Post Offices of Sherman County
Names of men and women who served as postmasters for
Sherman County localities, 1888 through 1930, including date appointed.
Early Texhoma families
Families presently in
Texhoma whose ancestors came during the town's 1st decade:
a Centennial Project compiled in 2001-2002 by Virginia (Preston) Roach
Although Sherman County was created in 1876, the county was not organized until 1889. In the 1890 census, the population numbered 34. By 1900, the earliest census for which schedules are available, the population had grown to 104. The following surnames appear in the 1910 and 1920 censuses for Sherman County:
Acre, Acree, Adams, Addison, Alexander, Allen, Altringer, Amend, Anderson, Arnold, Ashworth, Bagewell, Banvelos, Barnes, Barnett, Bartlett, Barton, Baskin, Baskins, Baugh, Beasley, Beauchamp, Bebermeyer, Beck, Bell, Bennett, Bentley, Berry, Bickford, Billington, Blackburn, Blackwell, Blair, Blake, Blakely, Blakesley, Blonton, Blunt, Bonar, Boney, Bonner, Bothel, Bowen, Bowling, Brackin, Bragg, Brain, Brickey, Bridwell, Bromm, Brous, Browder, Brown, Brummitt, Bryan, Buchanan, Buckley, Bullington, Burkhead, Burlison, Burns, Burroughs, Burrows, Buster, Calahan, Caldwell, Calvird, Campbell, Capehart, Caple, Cartez, Cartright, Cartrite, Cartwright, Cavanagh, Chambers, Chapell, Chapman, Chesser, Chiswell, Clark, Clements, Clifton, Clury, Coan, Cobb, Cofer, Coffman, Coleman, Collins, Colton, Colvin, Commack, Cone, Cook, Cooley, Coons, Corn, Cortwright, Cotton, Craddock, Craig, Cramer, Cronk, Croven, Crowden, Cullop, Cummings, Cummins, Curry, Dalatena, Davel, Davis, Dawson, Decker, Denton, Deon, Derrick, Diaz, Dick, Dimmitt, Dixon, Dodson, Dooley, Dortch, Douglas, Dovel, Dutton, Eddy, Eden, Edwards, Elliott, Elmore, Embry, Endicott, Endsley, Estlack, Eubank, Fargen, Farr, Fedric, Ferrell, Ferriss, Fincher, Fisher, Fleming, Flores, Flyr, Forbis, Foreman, Foster, Fouts, Foxworth, Franklin, Frei, Fry, Fryar, Fuller, Furber, Galbraith, Gamble, Games, Gamewell, Garger, Gentry, Gerdes, Gex, Gibbons, Gilbert, Gilmore, Gladdish, Gladish, Glover, Goe, Goff, Goldsmith, Gomes, Gomewell, Good, Gordon, Gorman, Grant, Graves, Gray, Green, Greene, Grope, Guerson, Guffey, Gum, Guthrie, Hager, Hale, Haley, Hamilton, Hammel, Handlin, Hanson, Harlan, Harland, Harlow, Harmon, Harrington, Harris, Harrison, Harroll, Hart, Hartman, Harwell, Hastetter, Hastings, Hathaway, Havely, Haynes, Heald, Heger, Heise, Henderson, Hendrickson, Henning, Hensley, Hermandez, Herrera, Hess, Hester, Hiagg, Hibdon, Hickman, Hicks, Higginbottom, Hill, Hodges, Holland, Holloway, Holt, Hommit, Hoodenpyle, Hook, Hoover, Hopkins, Horn, Houser, Howe, Hudson, Huff, Hunt, Huntsinger, Hyso, Ingham, Jackson, Jacobs, Jahns, James, Jarrell, Jarrett, Jeffries, Jennings, Jimmerman, Jones, Judd, Kaines, Keeder, Keenan, Kelley, Kelp, Kensley, Kerley, Kerr, Kessie, Kidd, Kidwell, Kieffer, Killen, Kimbrel, Kincheloe, King, Kirk, Kirkwood, Knight, Knowlton, Knox, Knudsen, Korber, Kuper, La, Lamar, Lancaster, Landfair, Lanners, Lannker, Larley, Lasley, Lavake, Le, Lee, Lemons, Lenoir, Lenord, Levake, Lile, Lilly, Limpert, Lincas, Lindsey, Lipscomb, Lloyd, Logan, Lollis, Long, Loomis, Lopez, Loverett, Low, Lowett, Lusk, Lynch, Lyons, Madrigal, Mahon, Mallett, Mallory, Maltett, Manson, Margis, Mars, Martin, Marton, Mason, Massie, Mattingly, Mays, McAdams, McCaughey, McCord, McCrory, McDowald, McElroy, McIlvain, McKenney, McMurray, Mercer, Miles, Miller, Mitchell, Moore, Morehouse, Morgan, Morrisson, Mount, Mullins, Mulvany, Myers, Nation, Newby, Nidever, Noble, Nolan, Noland, Norris, North, Norvel, O’Brien, Odom, Oldaker, Packnett, Palmer, Park, Parker, Parson, Parsons, Paxton, Payton, Peck, Pedroza, Pemberton, Pendleton, Pepper, Perkins, Pertram, Pessel, Phegley, Pimentel, Pincham, Pitzer, Plaisier, Poer, Poklop, Polly, Ponder, Pool, Powell, Powelson, Presnal, Price, Pronger, Pruitt, Pucket, Purnell, Puterbaugh, Quintana, Ramiroz, Ratcliff, Ratcliffe, Rathje, Record, Reed, Reeder, Rees, Reese, Reeves, Reynold, Reynolds, Riccius, Riffe, Ritchie, Roach, Roberts, Robertson, Rogers, Ross, Rowe, Rowland, Rowlings, Royalty, Rudolph, Runyan, Russell, Ryan, Sandusky, Sauer, Sayre, Schenck, Schumacher, Scoggan, Scribner, Searles, Senoir, Shadinger, Shaeffer, Sharp, Shaull, Shelden, Sheppard, Shilling, Shoffit, Shorp, Short, Simmons, Simpson, Sims, Skipworth, Sloan, Smelcer, Smith, Snyder, Solomon, Somers, Spice, Spurlock, Stahl, Standley, Steel, Stewart, Stipe, Stockman, Stubblefield, Stump, Sutton, Swaney, Sweny, Tate, Taux, Taylor, Teague, Terry, Tharp, Thomas, Thomason, Thornton, Timberlake, Tompson, Torres, Triplett, Truax, Tucker, Turner, Ullum, Van, Vaskas, Vaughn, Vincent, Waddell, Wakefield, Walden, Walker, Wallace, Walls, Walthall, Walton, Ward, Watson, Webb, Weissman, Welch, Welshimer, Wetherbee, Whaley, White, Whorton, Wiginton, Williams, Wilson, Winney, Wofford, Wohlford, Wood, Woods, Woody, Wright, Yates, Zimmer, Zundel.
See also the Sherman County Census page.
Famous Names from The Handbook of Texas
CHARLES FRANCIS RUDOLPH (1859-1929)
WILLIAM BAXTER SLAUGHTER (1852-1929)
CORDELIA JANE SLOAN DUKE (1877-1966)
SIDNEY SHERMAN
(1805-1873)
Sidney Sherman, soldier and entrepreneur, came to Texas in 1835 with
a company of fifty-�two volunteers for the Texas Revolution. At the battle of
San Jacinto, Sherman commanded the left wing of the Texas army, opened the
attack, and has been credited with the battle cry, "Remember the
Alamo." When the fighting
was over, he brought his wife to Texas and settled near San Jacinto Bay. When
the town of Harrisburg was laid out, he organized the Buffalo Bayou, Brazos
and Colorado Railway Company, which constructed the first rail line in the
state. Sherman spent his last
years in Galveston, where he died in 1873. Sherman County and the city of
Sherman in Grayson County are named in his honor.
Adapted from:
"SHERMAN, SIDNEY." The Handbook of Texas Online.
http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/view/SS/fsh27.html
CHARLES FRANCIS
RUDOLPH
(1859-1929)
Charles Francis Rudolph, newspaper editor, was born in Ohio and moved
to Texas at the age of sixteen. In 1882, at the age of twenty-three, Rudolph
began a successful weekly newspaper that he turned into a daily three years
later. Stories of the fertile,
sparsely-settled Panhandle, with its prospects for development by the
approaching Fort Worth and Denver City Railway, intrigued Rudolph and
influenced his decision to move there.
In the summer of 1886 Rudolph moved his family and his newspaper plant to Tascosa, where he established the region's second paper, the Tascosa Pioneer. In 1889 he expanded his printing facilities to Amarillo, where he began the Amarillo Daily Northwest. He discontinued the Tascosa Pioneer in 1891 and moved to Hartley, where he started the Hartley County Citizen.
Rudolph and his family remained in Hartley County until 1896, when they filed on land in the southwestern corner of Sherman County. There they established a ranch on which they grew much of their food, opened a rural school, and ran cattle bearing a C Bar N brand. Rudolph continued editing various area newspapers, most notably the Sherman County Banner, which he published at Coldwater; he also served there for several years as county clerk. In 1901 he moved his family to Stratford. Rudolph died on June 8, 1929, and was buried in El Reno, Oklahoma.
Adapted from:
" RUDOLPH, CHARLES FRANCIS." The Handbook of Texas Online.
http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/view/RR/fru28.html
WILLIAM BAXTER
SLAUGHTER
(1852-1929)
William Baxter (Bill) Slaughter, pioneer rancher, spent his boyhood in Palo Pinto County and made his first trail drive at the age of fifteen. As early as 1889 Slaughter had begun leasing and buying up tracts of land along Coldwater Creek and in 1895 built a spacious ranch house near the community of Coldwater. Appointed Sherman County judge by the commissioners' court in 1901, he was ever after known locally as Judge Slaughter. Slaughter and his son Coney organized Stratford’s first bank and operated a dry goods store. In 1905 he moved to Dalhart to open a new bank there.
After living briefly at Texline, where they established another bank, the Slaughters moved to Pueblo, Colorado, where Bill was installed as president of its Mercantile National Bank and Coney as cashier. In March 1915 the bank in Pueblo folded under a cloud of embezzlement charges. Coney resigned his position and fled to Chicago. Bill Slaughter was tried in court for his alleged role in the bank's fatal losses but was acquitted. After the trials, Bill and his wife resided in Dallas and later moved to San Antonio. Bill Slaughter died on March 28, 1929, and was buried in the old family cemetery at Palo Pinto./p>
Coney Slaughter evaded the law for eight years before finally being discovered in Phoenixville, Pennsylvania in April 1923. He was found guilty of embezzlement and sentenced to six years in the federal penitentiary at Leavenworth, Kansas. Coney served two years before escaping from prison, but was later arrested at Englewood, Colorado and sent back to Leavenworth to complete his term. After finishing his jail sentence, Coney lived for a time in Dallas before moving to San Antonio in 1931 to be near his widowed mother. Coney Slaughter died by his own hand on March 18, 1932.
Adapted from:
"SLAUGHTER, WILLIAM BAXTER." The Handbook of Texas Online.
http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/view/SS/fsl14.html
CORDELIA JANE
SLOAN DUKE
(1877-1966)
Cordelia (Cordia) Duke, rancher, writer, and game warden, was born near Belton, Missouri. She attended school in Overbrook, Kansas, passed the teachers' examination at the age of sixteen, and taught school for several years in the Cherokee Nation, Oklahoma Territory, before moving to Sherman County, Texas. In September 1906 she began teaching in a four-pupil school on a strip of Texas land between Oklahoma and the XIT Ranch. There she met Robert L. Duke, then foreman of the Buffalo Springs division of the XIT, whom she married on January 9, 1907.
During her years as a ranch wife, Cordia Duke kept a diary in which she noted details of a rapidly vanishing way of life. She used these and reminiscences of the ranchhands in articles for such newspapers and magazines as the Cattleman. Later, excerpts from this diary were used as the basis for a book entitled 6,000 Miles of Fence, which she coauthored with Joe B. Frantz. This book, published in 1961, was the first in the M. K. Brown Range Life Series of the University of Texas Press.
In the 1920s, when the land around the Duke homestead was designated
a wildlife sanctuary, Mrs. Duke was appointed game warden, the first woman to
hold that job in Texas. She was warden for a number of years and became
legendary for her rapport with the thousands of wild ducks that found refuge
on the sanctuary during their annual migrations. After her husband's death in 1933, Cordia Duke moved
to Dalhart, where she died on July 23, 1966, and was buried.
Adapted from:
"DUKE, CORDELIA JANE SLOAN." The Handbook of Texas Online.
http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/view/DD/fdu11.html
This page was last updated July 22, 2003