JOHN TROY ROBERTS
JOHN TROY ROBERTS. The Roberts Business College, of Bowie, and
its branches in the Territory, constitutes one of the coming
commercial schools of the Red river country, and its founding
marks an event in the life of its president and owner, the
subject of this review. For more than twenty years engaged almost
continuously in educational work in the Lone Star state, from
country school to high school, college, and finally the founder
of a series of commercial schools, Professor Roberts has been and
is a leading factor in the practical education of the Texas
youth.
Soon after his birth, August 9, 1861, Professor Roberts' parents
migrated from Claybourn parish, Louisiana, to Jasper county,
Texas, where his father, Captain W. T. Roberts, became a
merchant and planter in and near the town of Jasper. The father
came step by step across the south from his birthplace in North
Carolina, and lived in Georgia, Alabama and Louisiana, in Minden,
of which latter state he carried on mercantile pursuits for some
years. He was born in 1817, which service he declined a pension
to his death--and in the Civil war commanded a company in
Walker's Division in the Trans-Mississippi Department of the
Confederate government. He was successful in business, spent many
years in active mercantile and agricultural pursuits subsequent
to the war, and retired to private life at Holman. He was an
unswerving Democrat and was a Royal Arch Mason.
In the state of North Carolina Captain Roberts married Miss
Sarah Griffith, who died at Hempstead, Texas, at the age of
forty-eight years. The issues of their union were: Walter
T., of Wymar, Texas; Mrs. R. F. Sellers, of Gonzales;
Mrs. G. W. Lewis, of Uvalde, and John T., of this
sketch.
Pecan Creek Academy, a private institution in Fayette county,
Texas, furnished Professor Roberts his intermediate education and
the A. and M. College equipped him with higher learning. As a
climax to his student career he took a civil law course in an
institution at Floyd, Mississippi, especially fitting him for the
special work of education which he was destined to take up. He
began his work as a teacher in the rural schools of Montague
county, and in 1888 became superintendent of the Bowie public
schools. He had charge of this important work for five years and
went to Decatur as president of the Baptist college there for one
year. From Decatur he went to St. Jo, Texas, where he took charge
of the public schools and conducted them most efficiently for
four years. Relinquishing his work there he returned to Bowie and
established a literary school for high-grade work in January,
1901, the curriculum of which was modified in the direction of
commercial school work, and after the first year the whole course
was shifted and swallowed up in a business college course and the
Roberts Business College was born.
The institution of which Professor Robert is president and with
which his future life is destined to be associated was chartered
in 1904 as the Roberts Business College Company, capitalized at
$20,000, and under it Texas charter he hold the office of chief
executive and his daughter, Minnie L. Roberts, is the
secretary. All the stock of the company is held in the family and
the future outlook for the institution gives promise of a most
healthy condition for the company. March 4, 1904, the Chickasaw
branch of the institution was established, which now enrolls
eighty pupils, and February 6, 1905, the Shawnee branch was
founded, with the phenomenal enrollment, in less than six weeks,
of forty-three students. The schools are established and
maintained for both sexes, and its graduates are taking their
places among the world's clerical force out of every class. The
parents school at Bowie has an enrollment of one hundred and
forty students, and the process continually going on of making
business men and women for the future is a busy and interesting
one.
March 17, 1886, Professor Roberts married, in Bowie, Miss M.
C. McDonald, a daughter of Cash McDonald, who brought
his family to Texas from Missouri in 1859. This union has been
productive of the following children, viz: Cash, a student
in the institution for the blind at Austin; Minnie L., secretary
of the college and teacher of shorthand; Edna, Grover, Lucile,
Lulu and Nellie, completing the family.
Professor Roberts has taken much interest in the work of the
leading fraternities, being past high priest of St. Jo Chapter of
Royal Arch Masons, a member of Godfrey Commandery of Knight
Templars, a Shriner of Hella Temple, past chancellor Raleigh
Lodge, Knights of Pythias, and is past grand of Bowie Lodge of I.
O. O. F. He has represented the Pythian Knights in the State
Grand Lodge and is a leading member of the Missionary Baptist
congregation in Bowie.
B. B. Paddock, History and Biographical Record of North
and West Texas (Chicago: Lewis Publishing Co., 1906), Vol.
II, pp. 32-33.
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