Tobin Family
PATRICK HENRY TOBIN

In
the year 1872, Patrick Henry Tobin took up his
residence in Denison, and here he has since been
identified with the business activities of the
city in a creditable manner and withal, most
successfully. He is now manager and treasurer of
the Denison
Crystal Ice Company,
though previous to his association with this
company, in 1894, he was otherwise identified
with various business enterprises.
Mr. Tobin was born on March 22,
1851, in West Rutland, Vermont, and is a son of
Patrick and Margaret (Morrissey) Tobin. The
father came from Ireland when but a boy and
first located in Canada. He came over into
Vermont in early manhood, later moving to
Kentucky and still later to Missouri, where in
Clinton County he was engaged in farming
activities for a number of years. He died in
1889 in his Clinton County home in Missouri.
Nine children were born to
Patrick and Margaret Tobin - seven sons and two
daughters, and Patrick Henry Tobin of this
review was the eldest of the family. As a small
boy during the war period and as a youth during
the years of reconstruction, Patrick Henry Tobin
did not grow up in a time when the youth of his
station received any great advantages. He had
practically no education, and what he knows of
books he has learned since coming to manhood.
His first real work in life was Railroads, and
after he had served the usual apprenticeship as
a fireman and machinist, he was promoted to the
post of engineer, and he was employed in that
capacity as one among the first men to run into
Denison over the M. K. & T. Railroad, making
his initial trip on December 25, 1872. He
remained in the employ of the M. K. & T. R.
B. until 1882, at which time he went to Old
Mexico, in the employ of the National Mexican
Railroad as
master mechanic, and he was there employed in
that capacity for ten years. In October, 1890,
he returned to Denison and here became
interested in the cotton business. He later
transferred his interest to the ice business,
and, as has already been stated, he is now
{1914} manager and treasurer of the Denison
Crystal Ice Company at Denison, Texas; his other
interests being the presidency of The Durant Ice
& Light Co., at Durant, Oklahoma.
Always an active and energetic
man, Mr. Tobin has not enjoyed a vacation since
he became established here in business and he is
now endeavoring to arrange his affairs so that
he will be able to retire from his present
position and take a long needed vacation from
his duties. The business under his management
has taken on surprising proportions, and the
Denison plant has a daily capacity of 100 tons,
while that of the Durant plant is about 50 tons
daily. Mr. Tobin is not tied hard and fast to
any particular political faction, but when he
votes he considers the man and the office and is
guided by his unbiased judgment. He has given
service to the city as a councilman and was
president of the city council for a number of
years, proving the quality of his citizenship in
no uncertain terms during that time. He also
gave worthy service as a member of the school
board for some years, and was a member of the
Board of Regents of the Agricultural and
Mechanical College at Bryan, for six years. He
is an executive member of the Chamber of
Commerce, and fraternally is identified with the
Knights of Pythias, as well as being an honorary
member of the Brotherhood of Locomotive
Engineers. He is a member of the Catholic
church.
On October 31, 1879, Mr. Tobin
was married at Denison to Miss Jessie Cameron, a
daughter of John Cameron, for some years engaged
in the hotel business in Denison as proprietor
of the Cameron House, one of the first hotels in
the city. Three children were born to Mr. and
Mrs. Tobin. Mary, born in Denison, Texas, is the
wife of a Mr. George Williams, a mail agent.
Miss Margaret, born in Toluca, capital of the
state of Old Mexico, lives at home, and James C.
Tobin, born in the city of Old Mexico, is
associated with his father.

ca1926
Back
row,
left to right : Helen Tobin, unknown, Ebby
Woodmansee, Toppy Woodmansee, Cecil Margaret (Tobin)
O'Connor holding her daughter, Patricia "Pat"
O'Connor,
James "Jim" O'Connor, holding his son,
James "Jim" O'Connor of Dallas, Texas
Front
row,
left to right : William Henry Tobin,
holding unknown child, James "Uncle Jim" Tobin,
Mary Frances (Tobin) Downey of Missouri,
Pat H. Tobin, David Tobin, George Tobin
The
family is one possessing a generous mixture of
Celtic blood, and it is a fact in which they
have a considerable pride, though they regard
their American citizenship as a matter of
premier consideration. The family has been
residents of Denison since 1890. Though he has
been a visitor or resident in no less than
twenty-eight states in the Union, Mr. Tobin
declares staunchly for Texas, and is well
content to maintain his residence here for the
remainder of his days.
By 1938 there were no Tobins listed as living in
Denison. (1938 City Directory)
Two brothers also reside in this state: David
lives at Ft. Worth, and is there employed as a
conductor on the T. P. B. B.; Dennis Tobin is
located at Whitesboro, where he is in the
service of the M. K. & T. R. R. as an
engineer.
Source
: History of Texas
and Texans, by Francis White Johnson and Ernest
William Winkler, 1914
Photo by Mitchell
Denison,
Texas
PATRICK H. TOBIN, who is
associated with the directorate of many corporate
interests of Denison and is now manager and
treasurer of the Denison Crystal Ice Company, was
born in West Rutland, Vermont, in 1851, and in early
manhood came to this city, since which time he has
been closely identified with his interests. His
parents were Patrick and Margaret (Morrisey) Tobin,
both of whom were natives of Ireland, but their
marriage was celebrated in Quebec, Canada. The
father died in 1896 at the age of seventy-four
years, having long survived his wife, who passed
away in 1869. In their family were nine children, of
whom seven are yet living, namely: Patrick H. and
Denny.
Patrick
H. Tobin acquired just a plain education while
learning his trade, which was learned principally
at the Northwestern shops in Chicago, and when
twenty-one years of age, came to Denison, arriving
here on the 24th of December, 1872. He was at that
time working on the Missouri, Kansas & Texas
Railroad, which entered Denison on that day.
He
continued in the employ of the railroad company
for eleven years in the capacity of engineer, and
he was one of the first engineers to make the trip
over this road. In 1882 he went to Mexico and was
master mechanic for the Mexican National Railroad
in the city of Mexico for eight years, and then
returned to Denison and went into the cotton
compress business.
During the early years of
his residence here, Mr. Tobin purchased property
and still retains possession of it. In 1890 Mr.
Tobin engaged in the compress business with others
under the style of the Denison Compress Company,
being manager of the plant until 1904. In December
1894, he purchased an interest in the Denison
Crystal Ice Company, which had been organized in
1888. He bought his stock of C. W. Dowley, who was
then and is still president of the company. He is
likewise a director in the State National Bank of
Denison.
Mr. Tobin was married in Denison in 1879,
to Miss
Jennie Cameron, a native of Canada, and they have three
children: Frances,
Margaret
and James
C. The
first named was born in Denison and the others
in Mexico. Mr. Tobin has served as councilman
for the First Ward for several terms and for
three terms acted as president of the city
council, during which time his championship of
progressive public measures proved of practical
benefit to the municipality. His political
allegiance is given to the Democracy.

Charter Committee, Denison,
Texas, 1907
They
were
revising the charter of the city government: E. H.
Hanna, J. F. Hayes, W. S. Pearson, J. T. Suggs Sr.,
E. F. O'Heren, C. W. Chapman,
J. T. Butler, Robert Rosbottom, Patrick H. Tobin, W.
H. Halton, George F. French, and N. H. L. "Nat"
Decker.
He stands today as a
splendid example of the self-made man, whose
strength of character, laudable ambition, and
unremitting diligence constitute the basis of
success. Coming to the Southwest in the humble
capacity of a railroad employee, he is today
classed with the representative and substantial
citizens of Denison, and analysis of his life's
work shows that his success has been acquired
through honorable means that many might follow and
which ultimately lead to prosperity.
[Source: B. B. Paddock,
History and Biographical Record of North and
West Texas (Chicago: Lewis Publishing Co.,
1906), Vol. I, pp. 618-619.]
115 West
Gandy Street
The 1917 City Directory indicates this home belonged
to Patrick H. Tobin and wife Jessie Cameron Tobin,
which was completed in 1886.
He was the engineer who brought the first MKT train
into Denison on December 25, 1872. Subsequently he
became a highly successful businessman.
In 1917, his main job was as manager of the Denison
Crystal Ice Company, located two blocks away at
115-121 East Woodard Street.
Photo by Mavis Anne Bryant, August 2010.
In 1926 Patrick
H. Tobin was alderman in Denison and, acting as
Police Commissioners, along with him were Joseph
Martin Crumpton and Walter S. Hibbard.
On December 25, 1932, P. H.
Tobin was the guest engineer of Texas Special
408 that rolled into Denison to commemorate his
famous trip 60 years earlier. In 1872, at
the young age of 25, Mr. Tobin was the
engineer of the first train to
enter Texas from the north crossing the Red
River into Denison. A Dallas
Morning News newspaper article
dated Dec. 26, 1932, tells of that
adventure. Stamped in ink on the back
of the photo is "DEC 25 1932: and written in
pencil is "Pat Tobin ret. to Mr. T. Williams."
Katy Deaths: P.
H. Tobin
Members of the Katy
family were deeply grieved at the news of
the death, August 17, of P. H. (Pat) Tobin,
84, of Denison, pioneer Texas railroader,
industrialist and for many years beloved
city commissioner and civic leader of
Denison. Mr. Tobin was the engineer of the
first Katy train to enter Texas in 1872 and
during Christmas week of 1932 he again
piloted a Katy engine into Denison in a
sixtieth anniversary celebration of the
event.
His death followed a prolonged illness and
was preceded only a few months ago by the
death of his wife. Surviving are two
daughters, Mrs. Margaret Woodmansee, wife of
E. B. Woodmansee, Katy transportation
inspector, of Denison, and Mrs. George E.
Williams of Denison; four brothers; and a
sister.
A native of Vermont, Mr. Tobin came west as
a young man and in the early 1870s became a
member of the construction company building
the Katy southward through Indian Territory.
This company was headed by the late John
Scullin, railroad builder and pioneer St.
Louis steel magnate. The Katy train that Mr.
Tobin piloted into Denison that distant day,
53 years ago, was the first railroad train
to enter Texas on any railroad from the
North.
For many years Mr. Tobin was connected with
the Katy, quitting railroad service to enter
the ice manufacturing business. He was the
patentee of a re-icing car, which the Katy
used at Denison and Parsons for many years.
He established a number of ice manufacturing
plants in Oklahoma and Texas, including the
Denison Crystal Ice Company. He was its
active manager and remained manager after
its acquisition by the Southern Ice Company
until his retirement a few years ago. In his
later years he was well known for his civic,
church and philanthropic activities.
Mr. Tobin was a member of the board of
regents of Texas A&M College for several
years. He was identified with Denison city
affairs, serving a long period as
commissioner and in other official
capacities. During his active work for the
city he helped build Randell Lake, the
present source of Denison's water supply. He
also established the first cotton compress
in Denison and in other Texas cities.
Mr. Tobin was a member of the company
operating the first refrigerator cars on the
railroads in the Southwest. He built a cold
storage plant at Denison which is one of the
largest in the country, and larger than
those in most cities the size of Denison.
Only a short period of Mr. Tobin's life was
spent away from Denison, and that was in the
earlier days when he aided with the
construction of the Mexican National
Railroad and later was master mechanic of
that company at Mexico City.
Funeral services were held August 19, at his
Denison home with Rev. B. J. Deeny, Catholic
pastor, officiating. A city-wide tribute was
paid the veteran city father, including
closing of the city hall during the funeral.
[Source:
MKT Employees Magazine,
September 1935, page 18; courtesy of Red
River Railroad Museum, Denison, Texas]

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