Biography of Oscar Branch Colquitt (from Yearbook for Texas, 1903)
     
 

Source: Raines, C. W. Year Book for Texas, Vol. II, pp. 269-270. Austin, Tex.: Gammel-Statesman Pub. Company, 1903.

 
 
 
 
  Oscar Branch ColquittOscar Branch Colquitt  
  O. B. Colquitt  
     
 

O. B. COLQUITT, MEMBER OF THE STATE RAILROAD COMMISSION.
O. B. Colquitt was born in Camilla, Mitchell county, Georgia, December 16, 1861; came to Texas in January, 1878, with his parents and located with them on a rented farm near Daingerfield in Morris county; entered the "Morris County Banner" printing office at Daingerfield in 1880; followed the office on its removal to Greenville, Hunt county, in December of that year, where its owner, J. P. Mitchell, established the "Independent Banner," a name subsequently changed to "Greenville Banner;" having learned the printer's trade, established the "Pittsburg Gazette," at Pittsburg, Camp county, in 1884; married in 1885, Miss Alice Murrell and has five children—four sons and a daughter; sold the "Gazette" in 1886 and in November of the same year moved to Terrell, Kaufman county, where he purchased the "Terrell Star," a paper he continued to own until November, 1898, when he retired from the newspaper business to engage in the practice of law; was appointed chairman of the County Democratic Executive Committee of Kaufman county in 1890; was selected in 1892 to represent the Ninth senatorial district as a member of the State Democratic Executive Committee, by which body in March, 1894, he was made a member of a sub-committee that conferred with a sub-committee appointed by the Clark, or Matlock, State Democratic Executive Committee, so called, and reached an agreement that resulted in the disbandment of the Clark, or Matlock, Executive Committee; was elected State Senator from the Ninth district in 1894, on the Democratic ticket, and won an enviable State reputation during four years service in that position; was appointed State Revenue Agent by Gov. Culberson April 21, 1898, and served as such until January 18, 1899; was appointed a member of the State Tax Commission by Gov. Sayers in 1899, and November 4, 1902, was elected by a popular majority of 283,989 votes, a member of the State Railroad Commission, to succeed Hon. John H. Reagan.

 
     
  Addendum: O. B. Colquitt passed away March 8, 1940. He is buried in the Oakwood Cemetery in Austin, Texas.  
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