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. ===================================================================== CHARLES H. WILSON Vol. 3 p. 982 Charles H. Wilson, county superintendent of schools for McIntosh County, Oklahoma, prominent land owner and successful farmer, was born on a farm near Fayetteville, Arkansas, on February 22, 1874. He was reared, however, within the borders of old Missouri, to which state his parents moved two years after his birth, and settled in Barry County. Concerning his parentage, it should be said that Mr. Wilson is a son of James and Emmeline (CURTIS) Wilson, and a grandson of Larkin Wilson. James Wilson was born in Virginia, the natal state of Larkin Wilson, and when the former was a boy the family moved from Virginia to Tennessee. There he was reared, and there he met and married the mother of the subject. She was a native of Tennessee, and the daughter of Tennessee people. After the marriage of James and Emmeline (Curtis) Wilson they left Tennessee, moved to Missouri, and settled in Barry County in the year 1870. A short time afterward they removed to Arkansas, where they also remained but a short time, returning to Missouri, where they arrived in 1876. The father died in Missouri and the mother now lives in Oklahoma. Charles H. Wilson was reared on the Missouri farm to which he went with his parents when he was yet an infant. He attended the public schools, getting such information and training as was available, and when he was seventeen years old he taught his first school. From that time on, until he felt himself properly equipped for educational work, Mr. Wilson alternately taught and studied. For two years he was a student in the Mount Vernon Normal at Pea Ridge, Arkansas, and later on he attended the Missouri State Normal at Warrensburg, Missouri. Mr. Wilson, prior to turning his attention solely to educational matters, gave some time to the merchandise business. In 1901 he engaged in that enterprise in Vinita, Oklahoma, and the next year saw his arrival in Eufaula. He located on a farm near the county seat and for a time devoted himself to that work. He came into possession of his farm through his marriage with Lyda BURTON, a young woman with a strain of Indian blood in her veins. Since that time Mr. Wilson has added to their land holdings from time to time until they now are the owners of 800 acres of valuable farm land in McIntosh County. Since coming to Oklahoma Mr. Wilson has been especially prominent in politics. A staunch republican, he has served on the county committee of the party, and has furthered its interest in a worthy manner. He served two years as deputy United States marshal. In 1912, in recognition of his excellent training for the position, and in response to a recognized need in the county, he was elected to the office of superintendent of schools for McIntosh County. His service in this important post has been most valuable to the county, and he has distinguished himself as an educator of more than average ability. His re-election in 1914 was a speaking testimony to his record in the previous term of two years. The progress of the schools in the county under his guidance has been marked, and everywhere may be found the evidences of the success of his administration of the schools. Mrs. Wilson, it should be said is a daughter of Robert O. Burton, who came from Mississippi to the Indian Territory in an early day and here married Elizabeth SMITH, a member of one of the most prominent families of the Creek Nation. Three children have been born to Mr. and Mrs. Wilson: Oleta, Jerome and Charles Victor. Typed for OKGenWeb by: Earline Sparks Barger, December 16, 1998.