Samuel Morton Burke
Biography & Obituary
"Stroke of Paralysis
Fatal to S. M. Burke Who Suffered the Attack While at Work Friday"
"Samuel Morton Burke was born at Geneva, Indiana on the 5th day of
May, 1864 and departed this life at Cortez, Colorado, on the 15th
day of February, 1935, at 6:45 in the evening at the age of seventy
years, nine months and ten days.
He leaves surviving him his wife, Beatrice E. Burke, his son Charles
M. Burke of Cortez, his daughter, Mable E. Son of Idaho Springs,
Colorado, two sisters Grace Ellis Titus of Macon City, Iowa, and
Lidda Shrimp of Portland, Indiana, and one brother, Ralph
Burke of Gallup, New Mexico, all being present except the two
sisters who were unable to come.
His boyhood days were spent at
Geneva
on the banks of the
Wabash
where he received his education and grew to manhood in that great
wooded country. At the age of twenty-one in the year 1885, he felt
the lure of the west and moved to Hugo in the eastern part of
Colorado where he made one of the first homesteads in that section.
Later he moved to First View,
Colorado,
a town near the
Kansas
line and it was there he learned telegraphy under the tutelage of
the station agent at that place. His first positions in this line
were the pioneer cow towns of the west, when every fall thousands
of long horned
Texas
steers were driven from the Panhandle through Kit Carson to
Dodge City
for shipment accompanied by cowboys for years.
After five years of this interesting western life, he moved to
Wiona,
Kansas,
to accept the position of telegrapher and dispatcher at that place.
It was there he met Beatrice E. Murray then teaching at Wiona High
School, and it was there he was married to her in the year of 1890,
Forty-five years ago. their son, Charles was born at Wiona. In 1891
the family moved to
Durango,
Colorado,
where he was employed at the
Durango
station for a short time. He was then given the position of
dispatcher at Ridgeway where he remained for a year, moving from
that place to Rico to take charge of that station as agent which
position he held for some nine years, during the boom days of that
famous mining camp. It was there that their daughter, Mable was
born. After the slump came to Rico, he accepted the position of
agent at
Mancos,
Colorado,
remaining there until 1907 moving then to Cortez where he was
engaged with the R.R. Smith Mercantile Co.. In 1910 he was elected
to the office of
county
Clerk
and Recorder of
Montezuma
County
on the Republican ticket to which office he was elected for eight
successive terms. In 1927 he was appointed to the office of
Secretary of the Montezuma Valley Irrigation Company which
position he filled until the very last.
We only need listen to the recounting of his life's history to
understand why it was that his friends were numbered only by the
number of his acquaintances. The free, broad, expanding life of the
West as he dealt with men who were shippers, when applied to his
open and generous nature, developed a character that was especially
attractive to men.
Yet there was no man more modest or retiring. He was ambitious to
perform his service in the best possible manner and when this was
done, he wanted to go home. He was possessed of that rare quality of
being able to enjoy those simple , beautiful things that are near at
hand and are found in one's own dooryard. The most interesting place
to him was his home, cutting the grass, doing his chores, sitting in
his congenial living room, listening to the radio, and in the summer
on his front Porch watching the evening fade into darkness of the
night. He cared not for that which was glamorous. a distinguished
man with a kindly nature and all the children and all the dogs of
the neighborhood were his friends. His last act was a smile and a
wave of the hand and a "thank you" to his friends who carried him in
and laid him down. He was a gentleman in every instinct. His trail
was straight and true. With this record there need be no fear of the
sting of death."
This bio is from the "Montezuma
Valley
Journal" Cortez,
Montezuma County,
Colorado
Thursday
February 21, 1935 Number 42
Contributed by Sarah Beattie

Site Updated: 30
September 2009
Martha A Crosley Graham
Rights Reserved: 2009