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. ===================================================================== ARTHUR C. TRUMBO Vol. 3, p. 1047 One of the best known bankers and financiers of the State of Oklahoma is Arthur C. TRUMBO, vice president and cashier of the Muskogee National Bank. He was born on a farm in Allen County, Ohio, August 6, 1866. He received his early education in the rural schools, and at the age of seventeen became a teacher and soon principal of the Columbus Grove High School in his native state. Thereafter continuing his education, he pursued studies in the normal school at Ada, Ohio; the Tri-State Normal at Angola, Indiana; Wooster University, at Wooster, Ohio; and Leland Stanford University in California. From the last-named famous institution he took his bachelor's degree in literary and scientific subjects in the year 1894. He then entered the law school of Northwestern University, in Chicago, and in 1896 was made a Bachelor of Law. In the Illinois metropolis he began his legal career, practicing there until 1901. In the last-named year, Mr. Trumbo located at Muskogee, where, in connection with A. W. PATTERSON, he established the Bank of Muskogee, which in 1908 became the Muskogee National Bank. As vice president and cashier, he has been the active officer in building up this financial institution, which ranks among the leading banks in Oklahoma. Mr. Trumbo's legal education has contributed signally to his success as a safe and able financier, while his inherent business sagacity and executive ability have insured the success of the bank which has grown so extensively and solidly during his identification with it. The general building up of Muskogee has been scarcely second to his interest in the bank with which he is connected. He was one of the organizers of the Muskogee Commercial Club and became the third president of that organization. He has also served as president of the Muskogee Clearing House Association and in many and various ways has contributed materially to the growth and development of this adopted city. In 1912, after serving in many other capacities and giving considerable attention to western affairs, he became president of the Trans-Mississippi Commercial Congress, an institution that has done a great deal of good in the development of the western states. Mr. Trumbo is a republican in politics, but has never been an ardent partisan, and, in fact, has taken so very little interest in politics that many do not know to which party he belongs. While in college he belonged to the Delta Tau Delta fraternity and has also enjoyed the social advantages of the Masonic fraternity and is a life member of the Elks. The Trumbo home on West Broadway is one of the fine homes of the city and both financially and socially the Trumbo family occupies a very high place in the State of Oklahoma. Typed for OKGenWeb by: Dorothy Marie Tenaza, December 10, 1998.