JAMES L. JONES
JAMES L. JONES, M. D., deceased, was one of the most prominent, honored and
greatly loved physicians that has practiced in Denison, and no history of the
city would be complete without mention of his life and work. He was born in
Cleveland, Tennessee, November 18, 1840, and with his parents came to Texas
while yet a small lad, the family home being established near Palestine in
Houston county. When a young man he came to Grayson county in 1868 and entered
upon the practice of medicine with Dr. F. N. Cutler. He took up his
abode in the neighborhood where his remaining days were passed, being one of
the first practicing physicians of Grayson county. He followed his profession
in this locality, and all along the border of the Indian Territory before
Denison was established and incorporated and before the building of the
Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railroad through this part of the country. He was a
splendid example of the high principled and highly cultured country gentleman
and physician, and was loved by his patients and his neighbors for his
charitable nature and kindly spirit. He never refused to accommodate a
neighbor or friend if it lay within his power to do so, and his home was
celebrated for its generous hospitality throughout this section of the state.
No man was better beloved than Dr. J. L. Jones, no man was more generous and
no man more charitable. There are today many who could tell tales of his ready
and helpful assistance. He gave of his strength and skill for the alleviation
of human suffering, oftentimes without hope of pecuniary reward, but content
in the knowledge of duty well done. None ever called on him in vain, for his
sympathy responded readily to the need of a fellow man. In the early days when
settlements were widely scattered no call, however distant, was unheeded by
him. He was every ready to go through rain, storm, heat or cold to aid in
checking the ravages of disease and restoring health, and he not only took
with him professional skill, but also a sympathy as broad as human needs.
Moreover, Dr. Jones was a successful business man and at his death left a
large estate, consisting of a fine farm east of the city and also a drug store
at No. 225 West Main street, which he had conducted for more than a decade.
At the time of the Civil war Dr. Jones espoused the cause of the Confederacy,
becoming a member of a Texas Cavalry regiment, commanded by Colonel J. B.
Liken, and he was a charter member of Denison Camp No. 885, United
Confederate Veterans, in the work and aims of which he ever took an active and
helpful interest. He was likewise a member of the Denison Medical Society,
which he joined on its organization, and he was ever interested in whatever
tended to promote the efficiency of the medical fraternity and broaden their
knowledge and skill.
Dr. Jones was twice married. He first wedded a daughter of William and
Martha (Clark) Lankford, and her death occurred in 1879. By this
marriage there were two daughters and a son. One daughter, Lillie H., a
graduate of St. Xavier Academy, now deceased, was the wife of Edward
Ringer, and had one child, Thelma, born November 27, 1894. The
other daughter was Rosalie M. Jones. For his second wife Dr. Jones
chose Miss Sophia A. O'Dell, a daughter of the late Enoch
O'Dell, who was one of the prominent farmers of Desvoign, Texas, and one
of the substantial citizens of Grayson county. He came to this state at an
early day before the town of Denison was founded and he accumulated
considerable land and other property interests in the county. He was always an
enterprising and business-like farmer and a man of most excellent character
and of sterling honesty and integrity, so that all who knew him were his
friends. He reared a large family of children, who have become prosperous,
energetic and valued residents of this section of the state. By his second
marriage Dr. Jones had one daughter, Miss Frances S. Jones. Rosalie M.,
the elder daughter by his first marriage, died July 5, 19093, at the age of
twenty-four years and eight months. She was reared in Grayson county, about
four miles east of Denison, and was a young lady of superior intellectual and
aesthetic culture. She was liberally educated by her father, whose pride and
ambition were centered in her, and she graduated first at St. Xavier Academy.
She displayed decided talent for music, and, after completing her literary
course, was sent to the Nashville Conservatory of Music, where she attained
high proficiency as a musician, completing her course with honors. She then
returned to Denison, where she at once proceeded to make use of her talents
and musical education. She was the composer of several excellent piano
selections, the last of which was the Galveston-Dallas News March,
which attracted wide attention for its merit as a musical composition, and for
which Miss Jones received the thanks of the proprietors of the News.
They published the selection and received a large number of congratulatory
letters from the best musicians of the south. Miss Jones also engaged in
teaching, finding great enjoyment from her work. She became one of the
foremost representatives of the art of music in this section of Texas, but the
work which she voluntarily undertook--from choice, not from necessity--proved
too great a strain upon her and undoubtedly hastened her death. The surviving
daughter of the second marriage of Dr. Jones is Miss Fannie Seay Jones,
who was born in Denison, October 24, 1885. She graduated in 1903 in St. Xavier
Academy, in both the literary and musical departments, and was awarded a gold
medal by the faculty. She is particularly proficient in music and is a young
lady of much local renown in musical circles. The death of Dr. Jones occurred
December 30, 1903, when he was sixty-three years of age. His memory is
enshrined in the hearts of those who knew him and they cherish the record of
his noble life, his kindly deeds and lofty purposes. His name is inseparably
interwoven with the history of Denison and this section of the state and it
stands as a synonym for business integrity, professional skill and for the
highest traits of manhood.
B. B. Paddock, History and Biographical Record of North and West
Texas (Chicago: Lewis Publishing Co., 1906), Vol. I, pp. 627-628.
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