Sapulpa
Herald
Sapulpa, Creek County, Oklahoma
January 4, 2012
JENKINS, WILLIAM MILLER (1856-1941)
A native of Alliance, Ohio, born in 1856, future Oklahoma territorial
governor William M. Jenkins attended school in his home town and then
attended Mount Union College before embarking on a career in education and
law. He married Delphina White, of Indiana, and the union produced six
children.
In the 1880s Jenkins practiced law in Harlan, Iowa, and in Arkansas City,
Kansas. A Republican, he participated in the 1888 Republican national
convention and cast the first vote ever received by William McKinley in a
contest for a presidential nomination. For his party loyalty Jenkins
received a job as agent for the allotment of Pawnee lands in Oklahoma.
Arriving in 1891, he remained to claim land in the opening of the Cherokee
Outlet in 1893. In mid-1897
President McKinley appointed him territorial secretary under Gov. Cassius
M. Barnes.
Because Jenkins held himself aloof from territorial Republican politics and
avoided partisanship, he was named governor to succeed Barnes in 1901.
Inaugurated on May 13, Jenkins served until November 30 of that year.
Jenkins's administration coincided with the opening of the Kiowa-Comanche-Apache and
Wichita-Caddo lands by lottery in
August 1901. The governor collaborated with the Interior Department and
named officials for the new counties created from the former Indian
reservation.
With McKinley's assassination in late 1901 Jenkins lost his protector. His
opponents investigated the governor's role in a corporate stock exchange
involving the Oklahoma Sanitarium Company, which contracted with the
territory to provide mental health services. The Interior Department also
examined the situation, and although the agency found no irregularities,
Pres. Theodore Roosevelt decided
to remove Jenkins from office because of his "indiscreet" and inappropriate
role in the handling of the stock. In 1903-05 the Oklahoma territorial
legislature investigated the situation and completely exonerated Jenkins.
William M. Jenkins remained in Guthrie for
several years and farmed in Kay
County. Later he moved to Utah and then returned to spend the rest of his
life in Sapulpa, where he
held various public offices. He died on October 19, 1941.
source:
http://digital.library.okstate.edu/encyclopedia/entries/J/JE003.html
Burial South Heights
Cemetery, Sapulpa, Oklahoma
http://image2.findagrave.com/photos/2007/249/9611400_118922619242.jpg
WILLIAM M. JENKINS
New York Times (1923-Currentfile); Oct 20, 1941;
ProQuest Historical Newspapers: The New York Times (1851-200S) Pg- 17
WILLIAM M. JENKINS
SAPULPA, Okla., Oct 19 UP— William Miller
Jenkins, who served as Governor of Oklahoma Territory for seven months in 1901,
died today. His age was 85.
William M. Jenkins remained in Guthrie for several years and farmed in Kay
County. Later he moved to Utah and then returned to settled at Sapulpa, Oklahoma
and in 1920 was elected Court Clerk of Creek County, Oklahoma. He died at
Sapulpa on October 19, 1941 and is buried in the
South Heights Cemetery near that
city. He died on October 19, 1941.
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