Decker,
Nathan
H. Lee “Nat” or N. H. L.
Nat
Decker was an attorney
specializing in real estate and
commerce in
Denison. In 1907, he was
chairman of the City of
Denison's Charter Committee,
which oversaw a complete
reorganization of city
government. He
also served
as city attorney for a while and was
a member of the city's school board.
He
was the Denison attorney for the
Katy Railroad for 30 years and was
instrumental in building Randell
Lake and the Rod and Gun Club Lake.
Decker
was a fine writer and an
indefatigable promoter of Denison's
growth. In the last decade of the
nineteenth century, he was
responsible for
the publication of a beautifully
printed large-format book of
photographs of
landscapes, town streets, and fine
homes in cities throughout Grayson
County: Art Work of
Grayson County. Published in
Twelve Parts, issued by the W.
H. Parish Publishing Company of
Chicago in
1895. Nat wrote the introductory
text extolling Grayson County's
commercial and
cultural opportunities.
"Colonel
Decker"
was born at Owensboro, Kentucky, on
December 28, 1854, the son
of William
H. (1825 - 1907) and Mary
Catherine Horn Decker (1833 -
1856). He read law
in an Owensboro law office while
teaching school to support himself.
He
taught
two years in the Owensboro High
School and one year in West
Tennessee
before
coming to Texas in August 1880.G. T.
Harris (who died in June 1896) was
his only law partner.
Decker
was married to Miss Corrilla
Wilson (1856–1931) in Kentucky on
September 3, 1888. In Denison, the
Decker
home was at 618 West Chestnut
Street. Corrilla died before her
husband, on
December 12, 1931. Nat called her
“the truest woman and the really
truest
Christian I ever knew.” Neither had
any descendants. When Nat died on
April 16,
1934, he willed specific volumes
from his library to numerous
individuals.
Art
Work of Grayson County was
the first full-scale photographic
work documenting Grayson
County, Texas. The quality of the
photography and printing was very
high. The
identity of the photographer is not
known, but it seems likely that the
publisher sent a staff photographer
to produce these images. Many of the
images
were reproduced in Hunt and Bryant's
pictorial history, Images
of America: Denison
(Arcadia, 2011).
Art Work was one of
a series of
numerous similar books dealing with
cities all over the United States,
issued
by the same publisher. According to
scholar Zach Watson Rice, the Parish
Company and the Gravure Illustration
Company, both of Chicago, published
some
160 such books between about 1891 and
1930. In Texas alone, in addition to
Grayson County, Art Works books were
published between 1894 and 1904 for
Austin, Dallas, Galveston, Houston,
and San
Antonio.

Timeline
Dec 29, 1854 |
Nathaniel
H. Lee Decker born in
Daviess County, Kentucky |
1887 |
Nat
H. L. Decker
(Decker & Harris), notary
public, room at 206 West Main in
Denison, Texas.
His partner is George T. Harris.
They are attorneys with office at
206 West
Main Street. [Source: Denison City
Directory, 1887] |
|
Also in
Denison is William W. Decker, brick
maker. He has W. W. Decker's brick
yard on
the south side of West Crawford
between South Eddy and South Brown
avenues; his
residence is 1330 West Chestnut at
the corner of Brown Avenue. Working
at the
brick yard is John H. Decker; he
lives at 1319 West Crawford. |
|
Hezekiah S.
Decker is a brick manufacturer and
lives at 203 South Eddy Avenue at
the corner
of West Chestnut. Hezekiah S. Decker
Jr. works at a foundry, and Henry
Decker
is a moulder at the Denison Foundry
and Machine Shop; both live with H.
S.
Decker. |
1888 |
Marriage
to Corilla
Wilson |
1891 |
Nat
H. L. Decker
(Decker & Harris), notary
public, room at 209 West Hull in
Denison, Texas.
His partner is George T. Harris.
They are attorneys with office over
206 West
Main Street. [Source: Denison City
Directory, 1891] |
|
Living
in
Denison are Nat's father and
half-brother, William H. Decker Sr.
and Jr. W. H.
Decker & Son own Woodlawn
Nurseries, on the south side of
Amsden between
College Boulevard and the Houston
& Texas Central Railway. Still
in Denison
are the brickmakers Hezekiah S.
Decker, J. Henry Decker, Lafayette
Decker, and
Wallace W. Decker. |
1895 |
Publication
of a
pictorial book, Art
Work of Grayson County: Published
in Twelve Parts (N.p.:
W. H. Parish Publishing Co.,
1895). Nat Decker edited the
volume and wrote the
introductory chapter. It consists
largely of photographs. |
1896 |
Nathaniel
H. L.
Decker (Decker & Harris) lives
at 217 West Hull in Denison, Texas.
His
partner is George T. Harris. They
are attorneys with office over 206
West Main
Street. [Source: Denison City
Directory, 1896] |
|
Miss
Lillie
M. Decker, music teacher, lives at
1404 West Chestnut Street |
|
Still
in
Denison is the brick yard of H. S.
Decker & Co. (H. S. and William
W.) or
H. S. Decker & Son (H. S. and
Wallace W.), at 1301-1309 West
Crawford
Street. H. S. lives at 203 South
Eddy Avenue. Wallace W. lives at
1330 West
Chestnut. |
1900 |
Occupation:
Attorney
at law. Living with wife
Corrilla at 618
West Chestnut Street, Denison.
[U.S. Census] |
1903 |
Nathaniel
H. L.
Decker is an attorney at 206-1/2
West Main. He and wife Celise live
at 618 West
Chestnut Street. The only other
Decker in the City Directory is
Wallace W.
Decker, brickmaker. He and wife Mary
live at 1318 West Chestnut. [Source:
1903
Denison City Directory] No Deckers
in Sherman. |
1907 |
“N. H. L. Decker,
Attorney, Land and Commerce,” The
(DHS) Raven, January 1907. |
|
Nat
Decker chairs
the Charter Committee charged with
reorganizing city government in
Denison. |
1909 |
Nathaniel
H. L.
Decker is an attorney at 206-1/2
West Main. He and wife Carilla live
at 618
West Chestnut Street. The only other
Deckers in the City Directory are
Wallace
Decker, mason; wife Abbie; Carrie M.
and Rembert Decker, students, all at
1018
West Sears. [Source: 1909 Denison
City Directory] |
|
Photo
of the Decker home at 618 W.
Chestnut Street, Denison, is
published in a book.
Robinson, Frank M., comp.
Industrial Denison. [N.p.]:
Means-Moore Co., [ca.
1909]. page 15. Caption:
"Residence of N. H. L. Decker." |
1930 |
Occupation:
Lawyer
with general practice. Lives with
wife Corrilla at 618 West Chestnut
Street. [Source: U. S. Census] |
Feb
5,
1934 |
Last will made
by N. H. L.
Decker, witnessed by Leo Murphy and
A. F. Foley. Probate No. 6696. |
Apr 16,
1934 |
Death
of N. H. L. Decker in Grayson
County, Texas. |

The Will
Feb
5,
1934 |
Last will made by
N. H. L.
Decker, witnessed by Leo Murphy and
A. F. Foley. Probate No. 6696,
Grayson
County, Texas. |
Apr 16, 1934 |
Death
of N. H. L. Decker in Grayson
County, Texas |
Nat's wife, who
died before him,
was Corrilla Wilson Decker, “the truest
woman and the really truest Christian I
ever knew.” “My wife, now deceased, has no
descendants, and I have none. All
property on hand is my separate property
and estate.”
Executor the
estate was to be A.
P. Wood, “of Denison, Texas, my friend, in
whom I have the utmost confidence,
and in case he be dead or cannot act, then
I name his son Ralph F. Wood, to act
as such executor, and also my friend, J.
F. Holt, lawyer.”
Beneficiaries
of his will:
His sister,
Martha F. Graham, “who
was a real mother to me.”
Carrie
Graham
Nat
D. Graham
Juliet
Fowler Orphans and Old Women’s Home of
Dallas, Texas,
as a memorial to his wife
Henry D.
Ellis
Joseph
P. Ellis
William
R. Wilson
Ruth
D. Wilson
Nettie
B. Hite
Natalie
Hite
Henry
Graham of Brainerd, Minnesota
John
J. Graham
Anna
Crabtree
Jessie
Wilson Courtney, Florida
Mrs.
J. D. Castten
Walter
S. Wilson
Mrs.
Maud May
Wilson Taylor
Newis
Harris Muller, daughter of my deceased law
partner
Martha
Meet, my former assistant
Nat
D. Graham I give my gold watch
Mary
N. Ogg I give all my law library and
office fixtures
Personal
library:
Nina
Ditto, wife of Grover Ditto, the complete
set of World
Histories and the book cases containing
the same, as requested by my beloved
wife
Nat
D. Graham, Ridpeth’s History and Great
Races,
eight volumes
Joseph
P. Ellis, The Works of Bret Harte
His
daughter Mary Ellis, The Works of
Washington Irving
Dorothy
Hulett, Dicken’s Works
George
R. Wilson, Shakespeare
Joseph
D. Graham, Minnesota, Cooper’s Works
Decker
Graham, Johnson’s Encyclopedia
Nat
D. Graham, all other library books for use
of his six
children

Obituary
N. H. L. Decker
(Denison
TX Daily Herald, Tuesday, April 17,
1934)
Last Rites for
N. H. L. Decker To Be Held Here Wednesday
Nathaniel H. L.
Decker, 79 years
old, prominent North Texas attorney and a
resident of Denison more than a half
century, died Monday morning at 5 o'clock
at the Denison City Hospital after
six days of suffering from injuries
received Tuesday night of last week at the
intersection of Mirick Avenue and Chestnut
Street, a few doors form his home.
Taken to the
hospital in a
partially unconscious condition, Mr.
Decker launched a determined battle
against death rallying several times but
never completely emerging from the
coma that clouded his mind. Concussion of
the brain was blamed by the attending
physician for his death. Mr. Decker
suffered his last relapse Saturday and
lost
ground steadily over the weekend, with
hope for his recovery abandoned.
Funeral services
will be held
Wednesday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at
George Shields funeral home with Rev.
Homer T. Fort, pastor of Waples Memorial
Methodist Church, and Rev. Gerald L.
Miller, First Christian Church pastor, as
the officiants.
Burial will be
in Fairview
Cemetery beside the body of his
wife. Judge J. F. Holt of Sherman, a long
acquaintance of Mr. Decker, will speak
during the rites. Pallbearers will be
Roy M. Finley, C. C. Cooper, Grover Ditto,
A. P. Wood, Leo Murphy, and J. H.
Randall. The body will lie in state at the
funeral home until time for the
services.
Born in Kentucky
Mr. Decker, a
lawyer of the old
school who achieved his professional
standing through personal sacrifice and
struggle, was born at Owensboro, Ky., Dec.
28, 1854, the son of William H. and
Mary Catherine Horn Decker.
After
preliminary schooling, Mr.
Decker, known to hundreds of North Texas
citizens as Colonel Decker, began
studying in an Owensboro law office,
being obliged to divide his time between
teaching school five months of the year
and working on a farm as well.
He was assisted
by two school
mates, J. J. Sweeney and Robert Fry, with
his studies, and at the same time
drew up documents and filed papers in the
line of general office work. In
gaining admission to the bar, Mr. Decker
and his two companions were subjected
to a three-day examination in open court
by a committee appointed by the
Kentucky Bar Association.
Was School
Teacher
Passing the
examination
successfully, Mr. Decker practiced some as
an attorney and taught two years in
the Owensboro High School and one year in
West Tennessee, where G. T. Harris,
the man destined to be his only law
partner, went to school to him and studied
law.
Coming to Texas
in August of 1880,
Mr. Decker launched a career that won him
wide prominence over North Texas,
especially as a civil attorney highly
skilled in land matters. Mr. Harris came
to
Texas and was associated with Mr. Decker
until the former's death in June of
1896, after which Mr. Decker never
acquired a new partner.
Upon his
Kentucky license, Mr.
Decker was permitted to practice law in
the district court at Grayson County
under Judge Joseph Bledsoe, and during his
more than a half century was active
in Denison, Sherman, and other Texas
points in his profession. His office is on
the second floor of the State National
Bank building where it has been located
a number of years.
Had Active
Career
Mr. Decker's
aggressive enthusiasm
carried him into political and civic
affairs on an active basis. He served as a
member of the city commission and was a
member of the committee drafting the
city charter when the present commission
form of government was adopted.
He also served
as city attorney
for a while and was a member of the city
school board. He was the Denison
attorney for the Katy railroad for thirty
years, and was instrumental in
building Randell Lake and the Rod and Gun
Club Lake.
Mr. Decker was
married to Miss
Corrilla Wilson of near Owensboro, Ky., on
Sept. 3, 1888. She died in Denison
Dec. 12, 1931. The Decker home is at 618
West Chestnut Street.
As a young man
in his native
Owensboro, Mr. Decker was received into
the Methodist Church. In Denison he
gained something of a reputation as a
philanthropist and ruggedly adhered to
the ethics of his profession.
Surviving are
one brother, W. H.
Decker, Fresno, Cal.; four sisters, Mrs.
Martha F. Graham, Owensboro; Mrs. Emma
Buchanan, Frederick, Okla.; Mrs. B. B.
Hite, Sherman [TX]; and Mrs. G. N.
Wilson, Denison; and several nieces and
nephews.

618
W. Chestnut St.
Denison, Texas
Decker
Residence
"Residence
of N. H. L. Decker." Robinson,
Frank M., comp. Industrial
Denison.
[N.p.]: Means-Moore Co., [ca.
1909]. Page 15.

618
W, Chestnut St.
Home
of N. H. L. Decker
photo
by Mavis Anne Bryant, July 2010
|

|