OKGENWEB NOTICE: These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or presentation by any other organization or persons. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material, must obtain the written consent of OKGenWeb State Coordinator. Presentation here does not extend any permissions to the public. This material can not be included in any compilation, publication, collection, or other reproduction for profit without permission. Files may be printed or copied for personal use only. ===================================================================== DAN J. DAVISSON Vol. 3, p. 1008-1009 One of the prominent and aggressive representatives of the real- estate business in the City of Tulsa, Mr. DAVISSON has been associated with business interests in this thriving and ambitious city since 1904, and since 1908 has given his attention to his present important line of enterprise, his operations as a real-estate broker having been of extensive order, his methods and policies of progressive order, and his every transaction having been based upon absolutely reliable representations, so that his reputation in his chosen field of endeavor constitutes his best business asset and most effective advertising. Mr. Davisson was born in the City of Ottawa, Franklin County, Kansas, on the 1st of December, 1865, and is a scion of a representative pioneer family of that section of the Sunflower State, he having been the second in order of birth in a family of eight children, of whom five are living. He is a son of Green B. and Julia B. (BUCHANAN) Davisson, the former of whom was born in Cass County, Missouri, and the latter at Aurora, Dearborn County, Indiana. The father died at the age of forty-four years and the mother was sixty- one years of age when she was summoned to eternal rest. Green B. Davisson was reared and educated in Missouri, and among his youthful schoolmates was Hon. Frank COCKRELL, who later represented that state in the United States Senate. In 1855 Mr. Davisson made the weary and hazardous journey across the plains to California, the trip having been made with wagon and ox team. In the New Eldorado he was measurably successful in his mining operations and other enterprises, but within a comparatively short period he made the return trip and settled as a pioneer in Kansas, where he became a farmer and stock grower, the closing years of his life having been passed on his farm in Franklin County, Kansas. He was a stalwart democrat in his political proclivities and both he and his wife held membership in the Cumberland Presbyterian Church. The conditions and influences of the pioneer farm in Kansas compassed the boyhood days of Dan J. Davisson, and in the meanwhile he availed himself of the advantages of the public schools, which he continued to attend while assisting in the work and management of the home farm. Finally he became a traveling salesman for a leading wholesale grocery house at Kansas City, Missouri, and after representing the firm in this capacity for a period of five years he was made manager of another Kansas City firm at Joplin, Missouri, where he continued to be thus engaged until 1904, the year of his removal to Tulsa, Oklahoma Territory. Here he assumed the position of manager for the firm of Ratcliff & Sanders Grocery Company, engaged in the wholesale grocery trade, and of this position he continued in tenure until 1908, since which year he has been actively and successfully identified with the real-estate business, his operations including the handling of both farm and city properties and all property and his business being now one of broad scope and importance. The political allegiance of Mr. Davisson is given to the democratic party and both he and his wife hold membership in the First Presbyterian Church of Tulsa, of which he is a trustee. The marriage of Mr. Davisson occurred on the 17th of January, 1897, when he wedded Miss Mae JOHNSON, who likewise is a native of Franklin County, Kansas, and of the two children of this union the younger, Dan J., Jr., is living, the first born, Dorothy Mae, having died at the age of ten years. Typed for OKGenWeb by: Dorothy Marie Tenaza, Dec. 13, 1998.