Governor Charles Nathaniel Haskell
by Leonard D. McMurry

Charles Nathaniel Haskell was Oklahoma's first Governor. He was born March 13, 1860, in Putman County, Ohio. He was educated as a lawyer, admitted to the Ohio Bar in 1881, and began practice in Ottawa, Ohio. In 1901, he moved to Muskogee, Indian Territory, where he added to his law practice the promotion of railroads. He was a leader in the Oklahoma Constitutional Convention in 1906. After his term as Governor, from November 16, 1907 to January 9, 1911, he engaged in the oil business. He died July 5, 1933, and is buried in Muskogee.
The Artist
Known
as Oklahoma’s own “Michelangelo,” Leonard McMurry was born
to a family of prominent cotton farmers in the Texas panhandle. McMurry moved
to Oklahoma in 1955 and then lived in Stilwell and Oklahoma City. Under the teachings
of sculptors Carl Mose and Ivan Mestrovic, McMurry perfected his craft. His
magnificent sculptures of Oklahoma icons can be seen across the state including
the ‘89er statue on Couch Drive in Oklahoma City and the Praying Hands that grace the
lawns of Oral Roberts University.
In accordance with Oklahoma’s Diamond Jubilee celebration in 1982, McMurry
was commissioned to sculpt busts of 21 past Oklahoma Governors. The
Hall of Governors exudes Oklahoman’s pride in her past legislative guardians.
Regarding his works, McMurry states, “Each piece must have a soul, a
living quality that’s far more important than just physical representation.
A piece has to have guts: the strength, power, and dignity, that makes it a
monument.” McMurry has accomplished that very feat within the grandiose
Hall of Governors in which visitors may come face to face with naturalistic
representation of Oklahoma leaders.
Governor Charles Nathaniel Haskell by Leonard D. McMurry
is located in the Hall of Governors on the second floor of the Oklahoma State
Capitol and can be viewed daily from 8:30-5:30.
