Daily Oklahoman, The
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
June 1, 1994
GAULT, WILLIAM JAMES (1830-1899)
An original 89er and the first nonprovisional mayor of
Oklahoma City, William James Gault was born in 1830 in
Washington County, New York. At an early age he moved with
his family to Illinois. As a young man he traveled to
California, remaining there for three years before settling
in Kansas City, Missouri. There he involved himself in the
brick manufacturing business. In 1859 he married Martha
Phillips, and they had three children (Eliza, William D.,
and Mary). In 1876 Gault relocated his family to Eldorado,
Kansas, serving a term as the city's mayor. On April 22,
1889, he made the Land Run into the Unassigned Lands of
central Oklahoma by train, positioning his claim where
Oklahoma City developed.
In Oklahoma City Gault established a lumber company, which
flourished and gained a regional reputation. On August 8, 1890,
after Oklahoma City incorporated under the laws of Nebraska, as
warranted under the Organic Act, the residents elected Gault the
first mayor, an office he held until 1892. He also helped guide
the burgeoning city as president of the chamber of commerce and
president of the school board. In 1896 he was elected to the
Fourth Territorial Legislature and chaired the committee on
municipal corporations. He attended the Congregational Church
and was a member of the 89ers Club. William Gault died on April
15, 1899, in Oklahoma City. Interestingly, he defeated Henry
Overholser in the race for the mayor's office, but in 1915
Overholser's son, Edward, prevailed over Gault's son, William,
for the same position.
William Gault died on April 15, 1899, in Oklahoma City and
was interred in the Fairlawn Cemetery. His wife Martha is also
interred there having followed him in death in 1921.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Daily Oklahoman (Oklahoma City),
16 April 1899. Dan Peery,
"The First Two Years, Part II," The Chronicles of
Oklahoma 7 (December 1929). Joseph B. Thoburn and Muriel H.
Wright, Oklahoma: A History of the State and Its People
(New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Company, 1929).
Complied and transcribed by Marti Graham, 2009.
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