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JAMES WILLIAM ZEVELY,
one of Muskogee's leading lawyers and citizens, is well
known throughout Oklahoma, and beyond its confines, even
to the nation's capital. Since 1903, Mr.
Zevely has been associated with Muskogee 's affairs.
Though Missouri is his native state and the scene of his
early successes, his allegiance and interest are now
those of a loyal Oklahoman.
The Zevely family is of Moravian origin and its early
history is connected with the development of Salem,
North Carolina. Mr. Zevely 's
father, Thadeus Zevely, was born in that
locality and while still a lad was brought West by his
parents, who settled at Linn, in Osage County, Missouri.
There Thadeus Zevely grew to manhood, was
educated and entered upon a career in law, which was
continued throughout his life, save for the interruption
incident to his entering the Union army at the time of
our sectional differences in the early '60s. His
wife was Mary Miller Zevely, a lady
of Scotch line age and a native of Tennessee.
Mr. Zevely was born at Linn, Missouri.
His childhood and early youth were given to the usual
educational exercises of the American boy, with the
vocational variation of a few years spent in a printing
office. As a printer's "devil," he gained his
first knowledge of that line of activity and for two or
three years edited a newspaper which had been bought by
his father and an uncle and which was known by the
doughty name of ''The Unterrified Democrat.''
The studies of James W. Zevely, begun in the Linn
public schools, were supplemented first by a course in
the German School at Her man, Missouri, and later by a
two-years' collegiate course in the Christian Brothers'
School at St. Louis, Missouri. He was secretary of
the Missouri State Labor Bureau at Jefferson City, which
position he held for two years. This was followed
by an appointment by the Supreme Court of Missouri to
the office of state librarian, which position he held
for ten years. While serving as state librarian he
was admitted to the bar, in 1886, and later he took a
course of lectures in the College of Law of the
University of Virginia. When Ex-Governor
Francis became a member of the President's cabinet,
as secretary of the interior, he appointed J. W.
Zevely as special inspector for that department.
Mr. Zevely went to Washington and began
the duties of his position in 1896, continuing in the
service for seven years. In the spring of 1903 he
resigned the position and resumed the practice of law.
Mr. Zevely 's first association as a
lawyer in Muskogee was with Mr. J. M. Givens,
their partnership beginning in 1903. Later Mr.
Edgar Smith entered the firm, that connection
being cut short by the death of the latter. When
Mr. R. W. Stoutz entered the firm, the legal
establishment became known as Zevely, Givens
and Stoutz. The firm has an excellent reputation
among the legal fraternity of Muskogee County and the
State of Oklahoma.
The democratic party has long included Mr.
Zevely among its faithful sons. Both in
Missouri and in Oklahoma he has served as a member of
the state central committees. His extensive
activities and valuable services in public affairs have
won him many staunch friends at the state capitals and
also at Washington.
Mrs. Zevely is a daughter of Missouri and
before her and Mr. Zevely have two
promising children, Jane Clay Zevely
and James William Zevely, Jr.
Mr. Zevely 'a home was established in 1908
and both he and Mrs. Zevely are counted
valuable acquisitions to the life of Muskogee and its
environs.
* Source: A Standard History of Oklahoma by
Joseph B. Thoburn, Publ. 1916 - Page 1485
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