Carter County, Oklahoma
Obituaries




Joe Hubb Collier
, born on September 22, 1921, departed this life on March 16th, 2009 at the age of 87 years.  Joe Hubb was the second of three sons born to Clifton and Carrie Moseley Collier.  He was born in Ringling, OK, but moved to Artesia, NM by way of Loop and Friona, TX.  He entered school there in the 5th grade and graduated from Artesia High School in 1937.  After attending New Mexico State University for one semester, he answered his dad's urgent request to return home to the farm where he farmed 250 acres of cotton, alfalfa and row crops. 
 The family later moved back to Friona where Hubb continued farming.  During this time, his mom invited him to go with her to the local revival meeting.  On the second night of the meeting, he made the decision that would forever change his life; He accepted Jesus into his heart and life.  Hubb's career in farming came to an end when he was drafted into the military.  He sold the farm, moved his mom back to Ringling and joined the Naval Air Corp where he served for 3 years with Squadrons 198, 200, and 98. 
    On November 30, 1946, Joe Hubb married Jerri Smith, a beautician, from Lone Grove, OK.  They became best friends and partners in marriage for the next 62 years.  They have three children:  Jo Nell Collier of Muskogee, OK;  Jerry Sue Hollis of Bolivar, MO; and Ron Collier of Collierville, TN. 
    Joe Hubb made a living working in the oilfield and in oilfield supply.  During this time, the Lord led him to take his pastor to an Evangelism Conference in Albuquerque, NM where he surrendered to preach the gospel under the preaching and guidance of Dr. W.A. Criswell.  At the end of the service, Dr. Criswell shared Joe Hubb's decision with the congregation and proclaimed him a "Giant for God."  He returned home and practiced preaching to the oil wells that he was pumping. 
Hubb moved his family to Shawnee and attended Oklahoma Baptist University from 1958-1962 while working at Tinker Air Force Base and preaching at churches in the area.  In his preaching career, he pastored 28 churches in OK, TX, and MO starting 11 from scratch.  With the Lord's help, he became adept at growing the membership in the Sunday School and church at each location to which he was led.  Throughout his years of serving the Lord, he taught classes at Falls Creek and served on various committees of the Southern Baptist Convention at the associational, state and national levels.  
Like another well known Okie, Joe Hubb never met a man (or woman or child) that he didn't like.  But a difference was that Joe Hubb would (1) make sure that the folks he met knew Jesus as their personal Savior and (2) that they were attending Sunday School and church.  He had a rare, but wonderful, reputation of witnessing to anything that moved.  This activity continued up until the day that he went home to be with His Lord. 
 Preceding Joe Hubb in death were his parents and his brothers, Rayburn Collier and David C. Collier. 
He is survived by his loving wife Jerri, three children, seven grandchildren and fourteen great grandchildren.  Other survivors include two sister-in-laws, Mary Collier of Roswell, New Mexico and Jimmie Collier of Artesia, New Mexico, along with a host of friends.   
  A memorial service will be held on Thursday, March 19, 2009 at 10 am at Olivet Baptist Church in Tulsa, OK. 
Burial will be held Thursday afternoon, at 4 P.M. in the Lone Grove Cemetery at Lone Grove, OK.
Submitted by: Andrew Lee Bristol


E. McLamore
Former Marshal Dies
Ardmore, Okla - E. McLamore, a pioneer resident of Ardmore, died at his home here of apolplexy. He has served as a peace officer in this section for the last twenty years, first as a deputy marshal under the Paris federal courts, which then had jurisdiction over the old Indian territory, and later a deputy under the federal courts established here. He was appointed as state enforcement officer by Governor Cruce, resigning a few months later.
[The Oklahoma Miner, Krebs, Oklahoma, April 11, 1912 - Submitted by Dale Donlon]



Staff Sgt. Michael R. Robson

ARDMORE (AP) -- Lisa Robson doesn't know exactly where her husband's helicopter went down, killing him and two of the other members of the four-man crew. She doesn't know exactly what happened to make the helicopter crash _ enemy fire or mechanical failure. A report will be sent when the details are determined. But she knows one thing. Her husband, Staff Sgt. Michael R. Robson, would not have wanted to die any other way, than on a military volunteer mission in which he was trying to help someone else. ""I want people to know what these guys did and what everyone else is doing over there,'' Lisa Robson said Tuesday, the day before her husband's funeral. ""I don't want to focus on my own grief. ""These guys didn't have to do this and they did. They were dedicated enough to go out and do this.'' And in all the excitement of the returning troops, in the fervor of homecoming plans and patriotic salutes, she wants people to remember the war was not bloodless. Robson was a nine-year Army veteran who started out working with Pershing missiles but who for the past year served as a medic with the 507th Medical Company Air Ambulance. He married Lisa, an Ardmore-area native, in 1986, adopting her two sons. He left four sons behind when he died _ Mathew, 12; Michael, 9; Zachary, 3; and Tyrell, 1 1/2. Lisa Robson talked to her husband Feb. 11, his 30th birthday. On Feb. 28, military officials arrived at their house. ""They won't say exactly where they (Robson and his crew) were, but they were in hostile territory,'' she said. ""All four of them agreed to volunteer'' to go after an injured pilot in a downed A-10 anti-tank airplane. ""Right now they don't know if the reason the rotor stopped was because of enemy fire or technical difficulties. When the rotor stopped, the helicopter started spinning. They start spinning counter-clockwise, like they're unwinding.'' She said the pilot regained control for a few seconds, but lost it a second time. When it started spinning then, it threw a specialist from the craft, breaking his leg. ""He saw the helicopter go down and how he did it I don't know, but he tried to get to them. The helicopter blew up twice. The second time, it knocked Specialist Wright (the injured crewmember) out.'' The helicopter never made it to the downed pilot. ""We've had a great loss. My husband was a very dedicated husband and father and we hate to lose him,'' Lisa Robson said, ""but the guy who tried to get to him is probably having a really hard time of it, too.'' Before being deployed to the Persian Gulf from San Antonio, Texas, the Robsons had lived three years in Nue Ulm, Germany. She said seeing the homecoming celebrations of more fortunate soldiers bothers her somewhat, but she is pleased to see it. ""I'm glad the people are behind these soldiers so much,'' she said.
[Source: The Daily Oklahoman - Friday, March 15, 1991 ]

 

JUDGE KILGORE DEAD – The Well-Known Ex-Congressman From Texas Passes Away

 

Judge Kilgore, ex-Congressman from Texas, died at Ardmore, I. T. Thursday.

As a member of Congress from Texas, Judge Kilgore was one of the best known men in public life.  He was called “Buck” by his intimate friends, and attracted wide public attention in the Fifty-first Congress by kicking in a green baize door which had been locked by order of Speaker Reed during one of the filibustering scenes that made the first “quorum counting” Congress memorable.  He supported President Cleveland ardently…..

Mr. Kilgore was born in Newman, Ga., February 20, 1835.  In 1846 he removed with his parents to Rusk County, Texas, where he received a common school education.  He served in the Confederate army, first a s private and by successive promotions reached the grade of adjutant general, serving as such in Ecotr’s brigade, Army of the Tennessee.  He was wounded at Chickamauga and in 1864 was confined as a prisoner in Fort Delaware.  He was admitted to the bar after the war and in 1875 was a member of the Texas Constitutional Convention.  He was a presidential candidate in ---------------English ticket and in 1884 was elected to the State Senate for four years and in the following year was chosen president of that body for two years.  He was elected to the Fiftieth, Fifty-first and Fifty-Second Congresses as a Democrat.

{From The Gazette Appeal, Marion County AL, October 1, 1897
Transcribed and submitted by Veneta McKinney}


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