Ira A. Lee, M. D.
Among the well known medical men of Western Oklahoma is Dr. Ira A.
Lee, of Erick, a member of an early colonial family of English origin
which was founded in the colony of Virginia and which gave to this
country the great Confederate leader, Gen. Robert E. Lee. Doctor Lee
first came to Indian Territory in 1905, and with the exception of two
years in Arkansas has been engaged in professional labors here ever
since, having steadily advanced to a position where his talents are
recognized as being of an order entitling him to be classed among the
skilled and thorough devotees of the science of medicine of this part
of the state. He was born in Ohio County, Kentucky, December 31,
1875, and is a son of John W. and Polly J. (Stidum) Lee.
Robert Lee, the
grandfather of Doctor Lee, was born in 1811, in Virginia, one of a
family of six sons, whose descendants are to be found all over the
South and Southwest. Robert Lee was married in Virginia to a Miss
Elum, also a native of the Old Dominion, and after several years they
removed to Ohio County, Kentucky, settling as pioneers on a
plantation, where for many years the grandfather followed farming and
stock raising. In later life he removed to Kansas, where his death
occurred in 1881, the grandmother having passed away in Kentucky.
Robert Lee served valiantly as a soldier of the Confederacy in a
Kentucky volunteer infantry regiment during the Civil war, and lost
an arm at the battle of Shiloh, this
terminating his service. He was the father of five children, as
follows: John W.; Elizabeth, who died in Ohio County, Kentucky;
Hardin A., who was a physician and surgeon and met an accidental
death in Indiana; Eliza Jane, who died in Ohio County, Kentucky; and
Armina, who resides in Daviess County, Kentucky.
John W. Lee was born
in Virginia, in 1840, and was a small boy when taken by his parents
to Ohio County, Kentucky. There he learned the trade of stone mason,
which he followed for a number of years, although later his attention
was almost entirely devoted to the vocation of farming. When he
retired from active labor he removed to Magazine, Arkansas, in 1905,
and there made his home with his son, Ira A., and died in 1910. He
was a democrat, but not active in public life, his activities therein
being confined to the performance of the duties of good citizenship.
Mr. Lee married Miss Polly J. Stidum, who was born in Ohio County,
Kentucky, in 1848, and they became the parents of two children: Dr.
Ira A., and Hardin R., who is a mechanic and resides at Erick,
Oklahoma.
Dr. Ira A. Lee
received his early education in Ohio County, Kentucky, where he was
graduated from the high school in the class of 1893. Securing a
certificate as a teacher, he entered upon a career in educational
work, and from 1893 until 1897 was principal of the country schools
in Ohio County. During this time he had become interested in the
study of medicine, and finally entered Louisville (Kentucky) Medical
College, which he attended two years. Subsequently he became a
student at the Kansas City Eclectic Medical University, where he was
graduated in 1905, with the degree of Doctor of Medicine, and his
first practice was at Magazine, Arkansas, where he remained for only
a short time. In 1905 he came to Indian Territory and practiced two
years, then returned to Arkansas for a like period. In 1909 he
settled permanently at Erick, Beckham County, Oklahoma, and this
flourishing little city has continued to be the scene of his
professional activities and successes, his offices being now located
in the First State Bank Building. He carries on a general medical and
surgical practice and is regarded as a learned practitioner, skilled
in diagnosis, and as a careful and steady-handed surgeon. He holds
membership in the Beckham County Medical
Society, the
Oklahoma Medical Society, the American Medical Association and the
Southwestern Medical Society, and keeps himself thoroughly informed
with regard to the constantly advancing standards of his calling. He
is a democrat, but has not entered into public life, preferring to
devote himself wholeheartedly to the duties of his rapidly increasing
practice. His fraternal affiliation is confined to membership in
Magazine (Arkansas) Lodge, Ancient Free and Accepted Masons.
In 1897, in Ohio
County, Kentucky, Doctor Lee was married to Miss Nellie B. Martin,
daughter of William H. Martin, a farmer of Ohio County, Kentucky, and
four children have been born to this union: Myrtle, born October 21,
1901; Robert, born July 1, 1903, and Mabel, born March 8, 1906, all
attending public school at Erick; and Fitzhugh, born in June, 1910.
Doctor Lee is a citizen who has at all times been willing to support
measures for the public welfare and through a high
order of citizenship has won and retained the regard of his
fellow-townsmen.