John Graves Leeper
John
Graves Leeper was born at Chillicothe, Livingston County,
Missouri, May 23, 1854, died at Sherman, Texas, March 2, 1931.
He was the son of James Leeper and Elizabeth Graves Leeper. His
father was a pioneer merchant of Chillicothe. He conducted a
large general store and his trade territory extended over two or
three counties. His business was established before the Civil
War and continued until about 1879. He was a substantial
citizen, very active in church work, and especially interested
in the Methodist school at Fayette, Mo.
After finishing the course in the common schools of his home
town Graves Leeper, the subject of this sketch, attended the
Methodist college at Fayette in the early seventies but did not
complete the course of study as he was not interested in all the
abstract subjects taught in the school, and besides he had other
things on his mind.
He left his home in Missouri and located in North Texas in 1879
and engaged in the lumber business. He and his brother, J. D.
Leeper, established the Leeper Brothers Lumber Company and their
business was soon extended over several counties in North Texas.
They had yards at Denison, Gainesville, Decatur, Bowie and
perhaps other towns in North Texas.
When Oklahoma was opened to settlement Graves Leeper came in at
the run and was in Oklahoma City for some time after the
opening. The firm of Leeper Brothers had established yards at
several places along the Santa Fe in Oklahoma and the Chickasaw
Nation. He returned to Texas and made his home at Bowie for two
or three years. At the opening of the Kiowa and Comanche country
in 1901, Leeper Brothers established a chain of lumber yards
along the Mangum branch of the Rock Island road west of
Anadarko, with Graves Leeper in charge of the business. He made
his headquarters at Old Mountain View while this town was
located north of the Washita River, in Washita County and was
there when the railroad built west and helped move the town two
miles south across the river and into Kiowa County where it is
now located. After disposing of all their interests along the
Rock Island they established a lumber yard in South Oklahoma
City (Capitol Hill) and he was again a resident of Oklahoma
City. His health having failed, he located in Sulphur, Oklahoma,
were they also had business interests. Graves Leeper made his
home at Sulphur until he was elected to the office of Secretary
of State in the fall of 1926. He assumed the duties of this
office in January, 1927, and served the full four year term,
only retiring when his successor, his old friend, General R. A.
Sneed, was sworn in to succeed him in January, 1931.
He had been in poor health for several years and had not been
able to give the duties of his office his full time. Several
times he thought that he would not be able to hold out until the
end of his term and he only lived about six weeks after retiring
from office.
His memories of the early settlers of Missouri when he was a boy
were almost uncanny. If you ever lived in North Missouri he
could regale you by the hour telling the ludicrous yarns of Old
Sam Thompson and Bob Lauderdale, two well known characters of
Livingston County, Missouri, whom Graves had known when he was a
boy. Nor did he spare his own kin, two or three of whom were
Methodist preachers, from his shafts of wit in telling his
stories. He was related to the Ashby family, the most
distinguished member of which who ever lived in Oklahoma was the
Hon. Stump Ashby, who represented Pushmataha County in the
second and third state legislatures. His younger brother, now
deceased Cyrus S. Leeper, was a member of the Constitutional
Convention.
Contributed by Marti Graham, August 2003. Information posted
as courtesy to researchers. The contributor is not related to
nor researching any of the above.
Source: "Necrology." Chronicles
of Oklahoma, Vol. 9, No. 2 June 1931. 18 Aug 2003
<http://digital.library.okstate.edu/chronicles/v009/v009p212.html>.
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