W. H. Cooke W. H.
Cooke president and cashier of the Citizens Bank at Clarendon, has been
identified with this town and with Donley county ever since their organization,
and his prominence as a business factor and as a public-spirited citizen has
done no little for the cause of progress and advancement along all lines of
activity. He is essentially a business man, has made the management of
commercial and financial affairs the principal occupation of his life and the
line in which he has won his principal success, and having lived in Texas since
he was twenty-one years old he is a typical man of affairs and a representative
of the progressive element which has done most for the welfare of Northwest
Texas.
Mr. Cooke was born in Athens, McMinn county, Tennessee, February 14, 1855. His
father, Judge J. B. Cooke, a native of North Carolina, but who was reared
in east Tennessee, studied law and became a leading attorney at Athens before
the war, representing McMinn county in the state legislature. He was colonel of
the Fifty-ninth Tennessee Regiment of the Confederate army, and was a loyal and
devoted son of the south throughout the war. After the war he removed with his
family to Chattanooga, where he became a member of the law firm of Van Dyke,
Cooke and Van Dyke, and was elected and served as one of the judges of the
supreme court of Tennessee. His death occurred at Chattanooga, in 1899, when he
was eighty years old. His wife, Penelope (McDermott) Cooke, was the
daughter of a prominent planter of Monroe county, Tennessee, and she died at
Chattanooga in 1875.
Mr. Cooke's early boyhood days were spent during the war period, on Tellico
plantation, his mother's old home in Monroe county, and, after the war, at
Chattanooga. His educational advantages were ample, three years being spent in
study at East Tennessee University in Knoxville. In 1876, when he was an
ambitious young man of twenty-one, he came to Texas and became a clerk in the
employ of C. D. Cates, a merchant of Decatur, Wise county. Decatur was
the home of T. Waggoner, the millionaire cattleman, who soon offered the
energetic young clerk a job on one of his ranches, and the latter, after working
and showing his mettle in the capacity of cowboy, became one of Mr. Waggoner's
foremen, and continued in the great cattleman's employ for several years, mostly
on the ranch in Wichita and Wilbarger counties. In 1887 Mr. Cooke came to
Clarendon, in which year the town had its inception, and he has been one of its
leading citizens ever since. For the first two years he was bookkeeper and
cashier for the Wood-Dickson Mercantile and Banking Company, but in 1889 he
helped organize and became cashier of the Bank of Clarendon, of which Colonel
Charles Goodnight, the noted cattleman, was president. He remained with that
institution until 1892, when he was elected county and district clerk of Donley
county, and he filled this office for eight consecutive years, being elected
four times. In 1899 he and his associates organized the Citizens Bank, with E.
A. Kelly, of Leavenworth, Kansas, as president, and Mr. Cooke became
cashier. When Mr. Kelly retired from the presidency Mr. Cooke assumed the
positions of both president and cashier, and is at the present time manager of
this bank, which is a flourishing financial institution, and enjoys an
especially large patronage among the cattlemen and other large interests of this
section.
During his boyhood and while still at home Mr. Cooke took much interest in the
study of law, and did considerable reading in his father's office. And while
county and district clerk he attained added familiarity with legal business,
both through reading and his associations in the district court, and in August,
1900, he passed the necessary examinations and was admitted to the bar by Judge
H. H. Wallace. He has had no intention of engaging in active practice,
but has found his legal knowledge and skill of great value to him in his own
business.
Mr. Cooke is a member of the Presbyterian church, and affiliates with the Masons
and the Knights of Pythias, he also takes great interest in the welfare of the
United Confederate Veterans, and in 1905 was appointed an aide de camp on the
staff of the Fifth Brigade, United Confederate Veterans, by B. B. Paddock,
general commanding. He was married in 1886 at Harrold, Texas, to Miss Hallie
Moore, who was born in Kentucky. They have lost by death a little
daughter, Hallie, and their seven living children are: W. H. Cooke, Jr.,
Thomas B., Julia Penelope, Frances Melissa, Mary Swaney, Eugene Allen and Helen.
B. B. Paddock, History and
Biographical Record of North and West Texas. Chicago: Lewis Publishing Co.,
1906, Vol. I, pp. 663-664.
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