Paul Nesbitt | |
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Speaker of the Oklahoma House of Representatives | |
In office 1917–1919 |
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Preceded by | A. McCrory |
Succeeded by | Tom Waldrep |
Member of the Oklahoma House of Representatives |
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In office 1915–1919 |
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Personal details | |
Born | April 3, 1872 Milford, Iowa |
Died | July 22, 1950 Talihina, Oklahoma |
Nationality | American |
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse(s) | Ida May Corber |
Occupation | doctor, newspaperman, politician |
Paul Nesbitt (1872-1950) was an American politician, who served as Speaker of the Oklahoma House of Representatives. He also served as a secretary for Governor Charles N. Haskell and as a Cabinet member for Governor John C. Walton. Educated at Chicago Medical College, he was a doctor and newspaperman before his entry into Oklahoma politics.
Nesbitt died July 22, 1950, in Talihina, Oklahoma.
Nesbitt was born April 3, 1872, at Milford, Iowa, the son of James and Evaline Nesbitt. His father was a first lieutenant in the United States Army and his grandfather was an Irish immigrant who served under George Washington in the American Revolutionary War.
Growing up in Nebraska, he was educated at Chicago Medical College and practiced medicine in Vinton, Iowa, El Dorado Springs, Missouri, and finally in Watonga, a town in Oklahoma Territory, in 1899. Nesbitt briefly owned the Watonga Herald. He abandoned his practice in 1904 and went to St. Louis, Missouri, to apprentice as a cub reporter and later worked for the Joplin Globe.
In 1906, he returned to Oklahoma to direct the publicity campaign for the Democratic candidates wanting to serve as delegates to the Oklahoma constitutional convention. He did not support the nomination of Charles N. Haskell in the Democratic primary, but ended up serving as secretary for Oklahoma's first governor. and helped carry the state seal from Guthrie, Oklahoma, to Oklahoma City in 1910.