Samuel Sylvester Cobb
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Samuel Sylvester Cobb | |
Born | December 12, 1865 Bradley County, Tennessee, U.S. |
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Education | State Agricultural College, Manhattan, Kansas |
Occupation | Business Man |
Samuel S. Cobb was born on December 12, 1865, in Bradley county, Tennessee, he was the youngest son of J.B. Cobb.[1] In 1870 Cobb and his family traveled by train to Fort Scott, Kansas, where then loaded up and took a wagon pulled by mules oxen to Tahlequah, Indian Territory which at that time was the Cherokee Nation's capital. After about ten months Cobb and his family left Tahlequah and settled southeast of the present day town of Wagoner. At this spot Cobb's father paid $1500 to a Cherokee Indian for a two room box house, a log barn and few acres of fenced land. All the land was owned together by the Cherokees and anyone could farm as much they wanted as long as no one's rights were infringed upon.[2] Cobb went to school at home until he was sixteen, then entered the Cherokee Male Seminary, in Tahlequah, Oklahoma, for two years. In 1884 he became a student at the State Agricultural College (now Kansas State University) in Manhattan, Kansas and graduated after four years in 1889.[3]
[edit] Wagoner
On return to Indian Territory, Cobb went to work for "The Brother in Red", a weekly paper published in Muskogee. Cobb worked there for until July, 1890, when he opened a drug store in Wagoner. Cobb was also appointed as Wagoner's 2nd postmaster on August 6, 1890.[4] In 1895 construction was completed on the building to be used for his drug store, the Cobb Building was Wagoner's first brick business building and was listed on the NRHP in 1982.[5][6] Cobb used the building throughout his life and was home not only to his drug store but was also the first post office, it was also used as an office for his real estate business in the early 1900's.[7]
[edit] Citations
- ^ A biographical sketch from Indian Territory It's Chiefs, Legislators and Leading Men. H. F. & E. S. O'Beirne. Retrieved on 2008-01-31.
- ^ A History of Wagoner, Oklahoma from Samuel Sylvester Cobb. L.W. Wilson. Retrieved on 2008-01-31.
- ^ A biographical sketch from Indian Territory It's Chiefs, Legislators and Leading Men. H. F. & E. S. O'Beirne. Retrieved on 2008-01-31.
- ^ A biographical sketch from Indian Territory It's Chiefs, Legislators and Leading Men. H. F. & E. S. O'Beirne. Retrieved on 2008-01-31.
- ^ Cobb Building. The Houses of Wagoner County. Retrieved on 2008-01-31.
- ^ National Register of Historical Places - Oklahoma (OK), Wagoner County. National Park Service.
- ^ A History of Wagoner, Oklahoma from Samuel Sylvester Cobb. L.W. Wilson. Retrieved on 2008-01-31.
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