Grayson County TXGenWeb
 




Peggy Munson Wilcox
1926 - 1978
Wilson Edison Wilcox
1919 - 2010



Dallas Morning News
November 26, 2010

DENISON --- Wilson Edison "Bill" Wilcox, 91, passed away on Monday, November 22, 2010 at his residence in Denison, TX. For the family visitation, Bill will lay in state, from 2:00 pm until 4:00 pm, Sunday, November 28, 2010 at the family home, 1201 FM 1753, Denison, TX 75020. Funeral services will be held at 10:00 am, Monday, November 29, 2010 at St. Luke's Episcopal Church, 427 W. Woodard St., Denison, TX 75020 with Father Robert McBride officiating. Interment will follow at Fairview Cemetery, Denison, TX. Pallbearers for Bill will be John Wilcox, David Wilcox, Aidan Wilcox, Harry Smith, Peter Munson, Ben Munson IV and Felix Munson. Honorary Pallbearers are Dr. Emmett Essin, David Munson, Ben McKinney, Robert Boyd, Richard Munson, John Munson, Leighton DeTora, David Munson Jr., Charles C. Munson, John K. Munson, Thomas McNutt, Ray McNutt, Herman Ringler, Jerdy Gary, Roy Renfro, Luther King, David Dowler, Dr. Bill Balch, Keith Hubbard, Paul Brown, Dr. John Saunders, and Judge Horace Groff. Wilson Edison "Bill" Wilcox was born in McKinney, Texas in 1919 three months after Armistice Day and the end of the Great War. His parents, Jessie Alice Stiff and Gilford Isaiah Wilcox, named him for two great men of the era - President Woodrow Wilson and Thomas Edison. He was the youngest of eight children in his family. He attended schools in Sherman, Texas where his father was publisher of the Sherman Democrat. At the age of twelve he started working at the newspaper helping set type in the composition room and reporting on fire, police and courthouse news. He later covered Franklin Delano Roosevelt's second inauguration for the newspaper in 1937. Bill enrolled in the University of Texas, majoring
in Business Administration and after college attended George Washington University Law School in Washington, D.C. He later earned his master's degree in business at Southern Methodist University. While attending law school in Washington, D.C. Bill served on the staff of Speaker of U.S. House of Representatives and congressman for the 4th Congressional District of Texas, Mr. Sam Rayburn. After the attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941 President Roosevelt requested a Joint Resolution of Congress to declare war against Japan. Mr. Rayburn told Bill: "I want you to run over to the Library of Congress and find out the wording for
how we declare war against an Imperial Power, we don't know the exact wording we need for the Resolution
of War." Bill returned with the wording and in the afternoon of December 8, 1941 Congress passed the Joint Resolution and President Roosevelt delivered his famous "Day of Infamy" speech declaring war on the Imperial Government of Japan. Soon after the start of the War Bill left law school and his position with Mr. Rayburn and enlisted in the Navy serving as an officer in Naval Intelligence in New Orleans. He later spent 30 months in the South Pacific Theatre and on the escort carrier Shipley Bay. He was discharged with the rank of Lieutenant Commander and returned to Texas in 1946. Upon his return to Sherman in 1946 Bill purchased and managed KRRV radio station in Sherman and Denison and pursued business interests with his older brother, George Henry Wilcox of Sherman. In 1947 he married Peggy Munson and the couple moved to Denison.
After selling the radio station, Bill became Vice President of Citizens Bank of Denison. He and Peggy had two sons, John and David, and raised their family in Denison. In 1961 he joined Roy Goodman Company as Vice President of R.S. Goodman Company. The company built electrical transmission lines and substations across the Southwest. In 1977 Bill retired from active business responsibilities. His wife Peggy died the following year in 1978. In retirement Bill pursued many interests including traveling and spending time with his grown sons.
In 1987 he married Doris Boyd and together they continued to live in Denison and enjoyed traveling together
as well as pursuing various civic activities. Bill served on numerous corporate boards over the years including Citizens National Bank, Texas America Bank, Munson Realty Company, Nueces Minerals Company, Denison Cotton Mill, and the Team Bank Advisory Board. He was a Charter Member of the Grayson County College and served on the Board of Trustees of the College for many years. Bill chaired or served on the boards of many local civic efforts over the years including: Grayson County Red Cross, Grayson County Crippled Children, Denison Girls Club, District Chairman and Board of the Denison Boy Scouts, Holy Family School in McKinney,
the Redfern School for Dyslexia, St. Luke's Episcopal School, the Board of the Denison Hospital Authority, the Denison Rotary Club where he was formerly president, Chairman and Board Member of the Grayson County Child Welfare Board, the Texas Bar Grievance Committee, and the Grayson County Appraisal District. He was an active member of the St. Luke's Episcopal Church where he had served as a member of the Vestry. Before joining St. Luke's he had been a member of the First Presbyterian Church in Denison where he taught Sunday school for many years. Bill served for many years on the Board of Texoma Medical Center, the Texoma Medical Center Foundation and the Regensberger Foundation. In 1980 Bill and his two sons donated the Peggy Munson Trauma Center at Texoma Medical Center. When Texoma Medical Center began efforts to build the original Reba Ranch House, Bill became very involved in the project to see the Ranch House come to completion. In 1997 Bill was recognized as a Laureate in the Texoma Business Hall of Fame. He was awarded an Honorary Doctorate in Humane Letters by Austin College in 2000 for his contributions to the community over the years. One of Bill's guiding principles in life was his belief that all we will ever have some day is what we give to others. Bill leaves behind his wife Doris of Denison; his son John Wilcox of Dallas, Texas; his son Dr. David Wilcox, and his wife Charlotte Pierce, as well as their two children, Aidan Wilcox and Lillian Wilcox of Arlington, Massachusetts; and Robert Boyd of Allen, Texas. In addition, Bill leaves behind an extended network of family members, grandchildren, nieces, nephews, great nieces and great nephews who loved him dearly. The family wishes to thank Robin Baio, Teresa Stokes, and Sue Withers for the loving care and comfort they provided Bill during the past several years. A very special thanks is extended to Allie Alexander, Harry Smith and Steve Golston for the many years of support, assistance and joy they brought to Bill and his family. In lieu of flowers donations may be made in Bill's memory to the Bill Wilcox Scholarship Fund at the Grayson County College Foundation, 6101 Grayson Drive, Denison, Texas 75020. Arrangements are entrusted to the care and direction
of Bratcher Funeral Home, 401 W. Woodard Street, Denison, Texas 75020. For further information, please call the funeral home at (903) 465 - 2323.



John Gilford Wilcox
1954 - 2012


The Herald Democrat
June 17, 2012

John Gilford Wilcox departed this life on June 13, 2012 after a brief illness. John was born on August 31, 1954 in Denison, the oldest son of Mary Margaret Munson Wilcox and Wilson Edison Wilcox. John grew up in Denison, and attended St. Stephen's Episcopal School in Austin. While at St. Stephen's John received the Bishop's Medal for outstanding academic achievement in his senior year, and his work as a young artist drew the attention of faculty as well as fine art galleries in Austin. John attended Colorado College in Colorado Springs where he earned a bachelors of fine arts and completed commissioned work for the College's Packard Hall of Art and Music. Thus began John's long career as an artist working in acrylics, oils and a variety of other mediums.
John worked at the Fort Worth Modern Art Museum (now the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth) during the late 1970s. There he met and worked with the well known artists Robert Rauschenberg, Frank Stella, and Dan Flavin. During the 1980's, John moved to New York and exhibited his work with Fawbush Gallery in New York City and Barry Whistler Gallery in Dallas. John's contemporaries in New York included Joan Nelson, Don Powley, and Kiki Smith.
Returning to Texas in 1990, John worked out of a studio near Fair Park in Dallas. He spent most weekends near Denison, painting and enjoying the family home on Lake Texoma. He continued to exhibit his work with Fawbush and Whistler. As his work began to receive more attention, his pieces were shown at the Drawing Center in New York, the Weatherspoon Art Gallery at the University of North Carolina, The McKinney Avenue Contemporary in Dallas, and Artpace in San Antonio. John's work is included in the permanent collection of the Dallas Museum of Art, the Museum of Fine Arts Houston, The University of North Carolina, as well as many important corporate and private collections.
A true artist's artist, John's iconic, often obsessively detailed paintings and drawings were filled with wonder and earned critical acclaim in the "New York Times," "Art in America," "The Dallas Morning News," and "The Dallas Observer." Well-known artist and friend James Magee of El Paso wrote of John's passing, "Truthful art is biography. The more intimate the better. John Wilcox's Yellow Painting (2001), was ostensibly an abstract image of a bed in a pointillist style, entitled: "Eternal Rest From a World of Damage: A Psalm of Mistakes Turning into a Miracle". However, this work and John's body of work as a whole, was an act of meditation of the highest order. I last saw John, in fact, lying in his bed. Nearby there was no water rising, no iron vise closing slowly, only John listening quietly to those around him. He seemed at peace, always precise; and at that moment, he appeared to be drifting through a door into another world, not unlike the line work of his finest pictures – abstract, rigorous, metaphysical, but still referencing the Light about him."
John's friendship, creative spirit, and devotion to art will be missed and will carry on through his work. Missed too will be his deep reverence for the Spiritual as well as his wonderful joy, sense of humor, and love for friends, acquaintances and family. John was a member of the St. Luke's Episcopal Parish in Denison.
John is survived by his brother, Dr. David Wilcox and David's wife Charlotte Pierce as well as John's niece and nephew, Lillian Wilcox and Aidan Wilcox of Arlington, Mass. Other immediate family includes Doris Boyd Wilcox of Sherman and Robert Boyd of Allen. John leaves behind numerous wonderful, devoted friends as well as aunts, uncles, cousins and extended family members who loved him dearly.
The family wishes to thank VNA Dallas for their loving attention to John through their hospice and home sitters program. The support of dear friends through the last months was also a tremendous comfort for John. A very special thanks is extended to Allie Alexander, Harry Smith and Steve Golston for the support, assistance and joy they brought to John.
Services for John will be held at 10 a.m. on Wednesday, June 20, 2012 at St. Luke's Episcopal Church in Denison, with the Very Reverend Don Perschall presiding. Interment will be at Fairview Cemetery in Denison. Pallbearers will be: David Wilcox, Aidan Wilcox, David Dowler, Will Boston, Dirk Rogers, and Harry Smith. Honorary Pallbearers will be: Robert Boyd, Barry Whistler, James Magee, Tommy Jones, Greg Davis, Don Powley, Michael Sullivan, Jim Fiscus, Jim Oseland, Robert Levers, David Munson Sr., Peter K. Munson, William B. Munson IV, Richard Munson, John D. Munson, Felix T. Munson, Leighton DeTora, John Pomeroy, David Munson Jr., Charles C. Munson, John K. Munson, Thomas McNutt, William Munson, and Dr. Michael Schlesser.
The family will have visitation from 5 -7 p.m. on Tuesday, June 19, 2012 at 425 Thompson Heights Drive, Denison, Texas on Lake Texoma.
In lieu of flowers donations may be made in John's memory to either: The John Wilcox Contemporary Art Exhibition Fund at the Dallas Museum of Art, attention Libby Camp, Dallas Museum of Art, 1717 North Harwood St., Dallas, TX 75201 or the Resource Center of Dallas, 2701 Reagan Street, Dallas, TX 75219.
Arrangements entrusted to Bratcher Funeral Home, 401 W Woodard St., Denison, TX 75020, 903-465-2323.




Fairview Cemetery
Susan Hawkins
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