from the Standard
History of Kansas and
Kansans by William
Elsey Connelley (Page
1532):.
Ralph Chester Dixon.
While many of the
successful men
represented in this
publication have found
their work as farmers,
cattle men, merchants,
bankers and in the
professions, Ralph
Chester Dixon has
directed his energies
practically along one
line since leaving
"college and has made a
notable success as a
fruit grower and
horticulturist in the
vicinity of Arkansas
City. He has a splendid
fruit farm three miles
northwest of the city,
and is one of the
leading commercial apple
growers of the state.
Mr. Dixon is a native of
Kansas, born at Caldwell
August 5, 1875. His
people have lived in
America for a number of
generations. The Dixona
caine originally out of
Ireland and were
colonial settlers in
Maryland. Until the
Civil war the Dixons
were slave holders. .Mr.
Dixon's grandfather,
Benjamin Harrison Dixon,
was born near Church
Creek, Maryland, in
1812, grew up and
married there, and then
came West and settled
near St. Joseph,
Missouri. He was there
before the railroad, and
St. Joseph was chiefly
important as a river
town and a supply point
for the West. He
acquired a large estate
and became a shipping
contractor, sending
freight across the
plains to the Rocky
Mountains and further.
He owned slaves, and
early in the Civil war,
because of that fact and
because of his
pronounced Southern
sympathies, was driven
out of Missouri and went
to the vacant prairies
of Nebraska. He died at
Caldwell, Kansas, in
1884. He married Aurelia
Wilcox, who died near
St. Joseph, Missouri.
Five of the children of
these grandparents are
still living, namely:
Charles B., a farmer
near Ponca City,
Oklahoma; Sarah B., who
lives at Alham- bra,
California, widow of Dr.
James Shepard, who was a
physician; Alma is the
wife of Dr. M. B. Vawter,
a dentist at Alhambra,
California; Carrie
married H. H. Davidson,
a shoe merchant at Los
Angeles, California; and
Dorcas resides in
Arkansas City, the widow
of William Stewart, a
farmer.
N. J. Dixon,
father of Ralph C., was
born near St. Joseph,
Missouri, in 1842. He
grew up near that city,
and as a youth he
enrolled in an
organization of
Confederate soldiers,
was captured early in
the war, and soon
afterwards paroled. He
went with his parents to
Nebraska, was married at
Fall City in that state,
and took up his active
career as a merchant. In
1871 he removed to
Caldwell, Kansas, where
he was the pioneer
merchant, and also
served as the first
mayor of the town. He
subsequently held the
office of county
commissioner of
Sumner County. He
died at Caldwell in
1879. Politically he was
a democrat.
N. J. Dixon
married Julia A. Leaf.
She was born in England
in 1849, but was brought
to America
when one year old by her
parents, who settled in
Michigan and afterwards
in Missouri. She died at
Caldwell, Kansas, in
1879, tiie same year as
her husband, and her-
two younger children,
Benjamin Harrison and
Julia A., aged
respectively two and one
year, died at the same
time as the result of an
epidemic of typhoid
fever. The only two
children to grow up were
James L., who died at
Arkansas City at the age
of nineteen, and Ralph
Chester.
Ralph C. Dixon was
educated at Drury
College in Springfield,
Missouri, and Kemper
Military School at
Boonville. He was
graduated in 1895, and
since that year has been
engaged in the fruit
business at Arkansas
City. Mr. Dixou's fruit
farm comprises 400
acres. It is chiefly
devoted to apples, and
during the ordinary
season he is one of the
chief shippers of fruit
from this point. He and
his family live on the
farm and he gives it the
closest of his personal
supervision from early
spring until the crop is
gathered in the fall.
His winter home is a
modern residence,
complete in all details,
which he built in 1917
at the corner of North B
Street and Chestnut
Avenue in Arkansas City.
Mr. Dixon' is closely
allied with the
interests of Arkansas
City, is a member of its
Commercial Club and a
director in the Security
National Bank. He is a
democrat and is
affiliated with Crescent
Lodge No. 133, Ancient
Free and Accepted
Masons, Bennett Chapter
No. 41, Royal Arch
Masons, and Arkansas
City Lodge No. 956,
Benevolent and
Protective Order of
Elks. He married in
1906, at Arkansas City,
Miss Marie Ware,
daughter of J. M. and
Sarah (Adams) Ware. Her
father is now living
retired at Lawton,
Oklahoma.