Andrew Fox
Platter
Frances
"Fannie" Waples Platter
At
the
beginning of the town of Denison, Texas,
several families arrived from Chillicothe,
Missouri, founded businesses,
intermarried, and flourished. Their family
names were Leeper, Lingo, Platter, and
Waples. Here we will explore the
activities of Andrew Fox Platter and his
immediate family.
The
family
background of A. F. Platter is set forth
in a book by Rev. David Edwin Platter, A History of the Platter
Family, from About Year 1600 to the
Present Time (Cleveland, OH:
Self-published, May 1, 1919). It is
available online.
Andrew
was
born in Bainbridge, Ross County, Ohio, on
September 17, 1850. He was one of nine
children born to Andrew Platter
(1798–1875) and Hannah Decker (1810–1879).
After the Civil War, the parents moved
their family to Chillicothe, Livingston
County, Missouri. Shortly after 1875, the
son, Andrew Fox, was in Denison, Grayson
County, Texas, which had been founded in
1872 by the Missouri-Kansas-Texas
Railroad.
Before
1872,
Sam Hanna and Joe Owens founded a grocery
company at Colbert's Ferry on the Red
River to supply workers who were building
the MKT Railroad tracks south toward
Texas. After the railroad crossed the Red
River and arrived at the new town of
Denison, they built a small building
there, at 100 East Main Street (southeast
corner of Houston Avenue). In 1874, they
built a larger building next door at 104
East Main Street. By 1876
(some sources say 1878), Andrew F.
Platter and Edward H. Lingo had joined
Hanna and Owens as partners. Lingo,
Hanna, and Owens later left the firm,
leaving Platter as its sole operator.
The 1880 Census showed Andrew Fox
Platter living in nearby Sherman, Texas.
Also living there was Frances "Fannie"
Waples (1857–1947), who had moved to
Sherman from Chillicothe with her parents,
Edward Bredelle Waples (1814–1898) and
Nancy Graves Waples (1830–1890). "Mr. A.F.
Platter, of the firm Hanna, Platter &
Lingo, of Denison, will be united in the
holy bonds of wedlock, Wednesday the 19th,
with Miss Fannie Waples, of Sherman - Gainesville
Register (The Sunday
Gazetteer, December 16, 1883, pg.
1) The ceremony took place at the
home of Mr. E.B. Waples on S. Travis St.,
performed by Rev. Mr. Shelton of the
Methodist Church, according to the
ritualistic forms of the church.
After the ceremony, the honored
couple, guests partook of an elegant
supper, followed by an hour of visiting
before the couple left on the north bound
train for their future home. (The Sunday
Gazetteer, Sunday, December 23,
1883, pg. 4)

Waples-Platter
&
Co.
104 East Main Street
Advertisement in Denison City
Directory, 1887-88.
In
1885,
Andrew Fox Platter formed a
partnership with his new in-laws, Edward
B. Waples and his two sons, Col. Paul
Waples (1850–1916) and John Graves
Waples (1850–1912). This was
Waples-Platter Grocer Company. That same
year the firm built a large,
elegant warehouse on the 104 East Main
Street property near the railroad tracks
in Denison. The company became one of
the largest wholesale grocery firms in
the Southwest, with salesmen covering
five states.
Waples-Platter
Building.
104 East
Main Street
ca
1895
Built in 1885 as headquarters
and warehouse of an agricultural
wholesaling firm whose salesmen
covered five states. After World War
II, the company relocated to Fort
Worth, where its successor firms are
still in business. The architect of
this building was P. Lelardoux. Is
that a clock on the roof? A loading
dock was added on the left (east,
track side) after this photo was made.
Source of photo: "Art Work of
Grayson County" (1895), fig. 3.3(a).

This description of the
Waples-Platter Grocery Company was
written around 1908:
Extensive
premises are utilized in each city
[Denison, Fort Worth, and Dallas],
including immense warehouses, which are
necessary to hold the immense stock of
goods carried, which includes everything
in the line of groceries and table
delicacies. . . . Their line of
specialties includes the celebrated
Wapco Brand, of which they are sole
proprietors. Some idea as to the immense
business transacted by the house may be
gleaned from the fact that fifty
traveling salesmen efficiently cover the
territory of Texas, Oklahoma, New
Mexico, and Colorado. . . .
Officers are:
Paul Waples, Prest.; John G. Waples,
Vice-Prest.; A. F. Platter, Vice-Prest.;
R. W. Lewin, Treasurer; H. C. Platter,
Secretary, A. P. Foute, Asst. Secretary;
J. M. Hanna, Asst. Treasurer. (Source:
“Denison, the Texas Gateway: A Busy,
Progressive City with Golden
Opportunities” [N.p.: N.d. (ca. 1908)],
p. 8)

1201
West Sears Street
Home of
Andrew Fox Platter
Source :
Robinson, Frank M., comp. Industrial
Denison, Means-Moore Co., ca1901.
pg. 106

Waples-Platter
Grocer Co. Letterhead 1915, showing A. F.
Platter as vice-president
Courtesy of Nikki Gail Burleson McKay
The 1925 Denison City Directory
showed A. F. Platter in two key
positions; he was president of both the
Waples-Platter Grocer Company and the
State
National Bank. A descendant summarizes
what happened to the family business
during these years: "The company had
originally been more of a mercantile,
but as it grew, divisions were separated
out, such as Quarles Lumber, etc. They
eventually ended up with 11
divisions—two food manufacturing, Ranch
Style and Great Western Foods, one
wholesale food distribution, White Swan
and a few others.... The companies were
eventually sold off because there wasn't
anyone who could or wanted to run them,
as the senior members of the family grew
older."
In 1929, the White Swan
operations were moved from Denison to
Dallas, and most of the rest of the
company moved to Fort Worth. Andrew
(known as "Fox") Platter retired from
the firm at this point.
Remaining
in
Denison, "Fox" devoted himself to
his beloved Lawn Farm Dairy, later
called Oak Farms. It was located on
what is now State Highway 91,
running from Denison to Lake Texoma.

Lawn
Farm Dairy
outside of Denison
Rural retreat of Andrew Fox Platter
Platter had a passion for
Jersey cattle and maintained a fine
herd. He was a director of the American
Jersey Cattle Club. In 1936 Paul
Platter, A. F. Platter’s son, sold
several of the Jersey herd to Howard
McCarley so he could carry on at the
Lawn Farm site. Lawn Farm Dairy served a
large portion of Texas and Oklahoma for
many years. In August 1955, it became part of the Oak Farms
Dairy Group. Aside from a stone grain
silo, the Good Times Lounge at 2520
Texas Highway 91 occupied the last
building that formed part of the dairy.
A dilapidated two-story Victorian house
has been demolished.

"The
Old Andrew Platter Home just before the
railroad on Highway 91 North."
1997
Subsequently the home was demolished.

Andrew Fox Platter died on
December 24, 1932. His wife Fannie
survived him, passing away on December
13, 1947. Both were buried in Fairview
Cemetery in Denison.
Between
1891 and 1895, perhaps when they moved
from Sherman to Denison, Andrew
and Fannie Platter built a fine home at
1201 West Sears Street in Denison.

Home
of A. F. and Fannie Platter
1201
West Sears Street
Source:
"Industrial Denison" (1909), p. 106.
Robinson, Frank M., comp. Industrial Denison. [N.p.]:
Means-Moore Co., [ca. 1901].
Heavily
illustrated with photographs.
Later
they
moved
across the street east to 1129 West
Sears, in a dramatic domestic shift from
Victorian to Craftsman style. That is
where Fannie lived until her death. The
couple had two children, both of whom
lived very long lives.

Lingo-Platter
House
1129 West Sears Street
Built in 1914
for E. H. Lingo, president of Lingo-Leeper
Lumber Company.
Subsequently the house was owned by A. F.
and Fannie Platter, one of the founders of
the Waples-Platter Grocery Company.
He was the
brother of Ann Eliza Platter (Mrs. E. H.)
Lingo.
Later this
was the home of the daughter of A. F. and
Fannie Platter Berenice Waples
Platter Andrews, widow of
Vice-Admiral Adolphus Andrews. Platter
descendants owned the house until 1966.
This is
Denison's best example of the
Carpenter-Craftsman architectural style.
Children of A.F.
Platter & Fannie Waples
Bancroft
1887 - A F Platter
