Newspaper Clipping GRAND OLD MAN OF GREER COUNTY OKLAHOMA Submitted by: Jodean Martin jodeanmartin@cox.net ================================================================== USGENWEB NOTICE: In keeping with our policy of providing free information on the Internet, data may be used by non-commercial entities, as long as this message remains on all copied material. These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or for presentation by other persons or organizations. The submitter has given permission to the USGenWeb Archives to store the file permanently for free access. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material for purposes other than stated above must obtain the written consent of the file contributor. =================================================================== GRAND OLD MAN OF GREER COUNTY OKLAHOMA FROM PAGE ONE GRANITE ENTERPRISE, MARCH 30, 1939 "ASK S. H. TITTLE, VETERAN EX?SHERIFF, IF YOU WANT INFORMATION CONCERNING Greer County since the late eighties," is a statement that has been heard many times by citizens of western Oklahoma. Mr. Tittle is in every sense of the word a pioneer of the "Empire of Greer," having lived in the county when it was a part of Texas, during the Indian Territory days, and since statehood. He has served the county as sheriff for 25 years. Not only is Mr. Tittle well known in western Oklahoma but the histories of the state have recorded his life and in the Hall of Fame in Washington, D.C. he is known as the "grand Old Man of Greer County," Coming here in the year of 1880, Mr. Tittle has seen the country change from a trackless prairie, with sparsely settled ranch houses, to the thickly populated farm homes that it has today. He has watched the steady progress from the trading posts to the thriving towns, and has seen the trails made by jogging cattle and saddle horses, erased by ribbons of concrete, that takes the driver of a fast automobile as far in a day, as the covered wagon traveled in six months. Mr. Tittle was born in Rusk, Cherokee Co., Tx. in November 1858, and lived in the county until he was 18 years of age, when he went to Taylor County to work on a ranch. Four years later he came to Greer County driving a herd of cattle from Clay County, Texas for Haney and Powers, ranchers who handled thousands of head of cattle. He experienced all the hardships known to the cowboy, with blizzards in the winter, that would drive the cattle south to the Red River line. In the year 1886 in November, Mr. Tittle was appionted county commissioner of Greer County which began a long and distinguished life of public service, as an officer of Greer County. He became sheriff of the county one year after the county was created in 1887, and from that date until 1933 he held the office at different periods for 25 years. Mr. Tittle was appointed sheriff when the sheriff, a man by the name of Williamson was relieved of his duties because of improper conduct. He held the office until 1906, and retired for 4 years. His next experience in politics was in 19?? when he was elected county clerk, but did not accept the office, as he found it necessary to move to Texas to hold title to land that he had acquired there. In 1904, Mr. Tittle was appointed registrar of deeds to fill the unexpired term of T. G. Russell, and three years later was in the race for sheriiff at the insistance of his many friends. This was the case many times when Mr. Tittle was a candidate for office. He did so at the request of friends, that he could not turn down. He retired in 1933, which closed a quarter century as a peace officer for the county. Mr. Tittle recalled that one of the most notorious outlaws captured during his years a an officer in the early days of old Greer County, was Bill Brooking, horse thief. The sheriff received information that Brooking was in the vicinity of what is now Retrop. He organized a posse and with the sheriff of Wilbarger County, they started for the hideout of the criminal. The officers arrived at the camp, Brooking was caught by surprise and taken without his gun. He was brought to Mangum, and later taken to Seymour, where he was convicted of murder. It is said by old timers of the county that during his 25 years as an officer that he never shot a man, never struck a prisoner, never allowed a prisoner to escape, and never failed to arrest a man for whom he had a warrant. Many times in his long career, Mr. Tittle risked his life in protecting a prisoner, from mob violence. In the last years of his career as peace officer, he saved a prisoner's life when he outran a posse to the Oklahoma State Reformatory at Granite, when the irrate citizens would have taken the law into their own hands. The generosity of Ex?sheriff Tittle is well known. He has always shown a sympathetic understanding for all persons in distress and much of his salary while in public life, it is said, has been turned over to the needy of the community. In the early days he helped many settlers to pay their taxes and assisted them in many other ways to hold their land in the county.