James
Boyd
was born on November 1, 1861, in Hopkinsville,
Kentucky. His parents were John Wilson Boyd
(18341911) and Virginia M. ("Jenny") Bowles
Boyd (18401917). After attending school in
Kentucky, he headed west.
By around 1885,
Boyd and Lingo Clothiers were operating
in a primitive rural setting near the Red
River north of Denison, Grayson County, Texas.
Two years later, in 1887, Jim was a partner
(with Rufus
S. Wootton
and J.
William Hayes) in Wootton & Company, purveyors
of clothing, boots, shoes, and hats at 200
West Main Street in Denison. Jim was living
at the same
address. His situation remained unchanged when
the Denison City Directory was published in
1891.

1000 block West
Gandy Street, ca. 1891.
View looking at
south side of street. House with tower at right,
at 1030 West Gandy, corner of Tone Avenue,
belonged briefly to James Boyd, downtown store
owner.
Then his brother
and his wife lived there. More recently,
apartments replaced the Boyd house, but now those
also have disappeared.
Source: Detail of
Thaddeus Fowler's 1891 Bird's-Eye Map of Denison,
courtesy of "Texas Bird's-Eye Views" website from
Amon Carter Museum.
Learn more at http://www.birdseyeviews.org/zoom.php?city=Denison&year=1891&extra_info=
By 1893, James Boyd had
left Wootton and Company and, in partnership
with Levi Lingo, formed Boyd and Lingo ("clothiers,
hatters, and gents furnishers") at 230 West Main Street
in Denison. Three years later, the Denison City
Directory listed two of Jim's brothers as store
employees: Richard G. Boyd, salesman; and Edward
L. Boyd, traveling salesman. All three brothers
were rooming at 607 West Main Street, while Levi
Lingo lived at 916 West Sears Street.
Around
1904,
James Boyd bought out Levi Lingo's interest in
the Boyd and Lingo clothing store. For the next
22 years, he operated the business under his own
name "James Boyd, Gents' Outfitters."
James Boyd
Clothing House, corner of Rusk Avenue.
Source: "Industrial Denison" (1909).
Courtesy of
Carol Shaffer.
Note porthole
windows and painted sign on Rusk Avenue side
of building.
With a
magnifying glass, I can see "Boyd" painted
on the two light globes on either side of
the store.
Upstairs,
signs read "Agency, Hartford Fire Insurance
Co.," "Royal Insurance," "German Insurance,"
"--kins & Caroner, Inurance & Real
Estate." The masthead at the roofline
reads "Kerby."
|
"Interior of
James Boyd's Clothing House, Main Street and
Rusk Avenue."
Robinson,
Frank M., comp. Industrial Denison. [N.p.]:
Means-Moore Co., [ca. 1909]. Page 40.
Located at
230 West Main Street |
Around 1914, the store
moved to 328330 West Main Street. It figures
prominently in a 1916 panoramic photograph by
Kelley Studio.
James Boyd's
Gents Outfitters, 328-330 West main Street.
South side of street, view to east.
One half of a panormaic photo by Kelley Studio,
1916.
"No Clothing Fits Like Boyd's."
James
was
sophisticated in emerging retail sales
techniques. He always advertised a great deal in
local newspapers and national trade
publications. According to his obituary:
Mr. Boyd was a prominent
figure in the retail clothing business in Texas
and for more than 40 years made Denison the
principal scene of operation. Throughout all of
North Texas and Southern Oklahoma, the James Boyd
sign was a familiar feature on every highway. His
business covered a large territory and the strict
integrity of the man early in life earned for him
the high esteem of all who knew him....
As a retail clothing
dealer, Mr. Boyd was known throughout the state,
having served at one time as president of the
Texas Retail Clothiers Association. He also was
a former director of the State National Bank.
The deceased also was a member of St. Luke's
Episcopal Church, the Masons, Chamber of
Commerce, and Rod and Gun Club.
James Boyd sign on
north side of M. T. Mathes Livery Stable.
131 North Rusk Ave, SW corner of Woodard
Street. Photographer unknown.
Collection of Grayson County Frontier
Village.
|

Advertisement
James Boyd,
"No Clothing Fits Like Ours"
Denison Daily News
25
June 1913 |
Late
in
the store's life, its stock was moved to the
Madden Building at 331 West Main Street, where
the business operated under the name "James
Boyd, Incorporated." On January 1, 1926, Jim
retired from the business, which became known as
Boyd & Lackey.
On February 10, 1898,
Jim married Sarah "Sallie" Shallenberger
(18671941) in Chicago, Illinois. She had moved
to Denison with her parents, Major and Mrs. S.
S. Shallenberger, in the early days when her
father, a civil engineer, helped build a
railroad from McAlester, Oklahoma, to Little
Rock, Arkansas. The family settled in Denison,
where a Mrs. Shallenberger (probably Sallie's
mother) taught at the new Educational Institute
during its first two years of operation,
18741875. This school was the first free,
graded public school in Texas. Sallie's obituary
states that she received her schooling in
Denison and later attended college at Boston,
Massachusetts. However, Sallie is not listed in
existing records for graduates of Denison's
Educational Institute.
By
1900,
James and Sallie Boyd were living at 522 West
Gandy in Denison. Thaddeus Fowler's 1891
"Denison Bird's-Eye Map" depicted a fine
two-story home at 1030 West Gandy Street. This
was the home where Jim and Sallie lived in
1908.

A year later, they had
moved to 1105 West Bond Street, where they lived
until Jim's death in 1927. In 1910, the Census
reported that Sallie's father, Samuel L.
Shellenberger, a civil engineer, was living with
them.

1105 W. Bond
Photograph courtesy of Dr. Mavis Anne Bryant
ca 2000
James
Boyd, 66, Pioneer of City, Dies Suddenly
(Denison
TX
Herald, June 5, 1927)
James Boyd, aged 66
years, pioneer business man of this city, died
suddenly at his home, 1105 West Bond street,
Friday night shortly after 10 o'clock. His death
was attributed to heart failure.
Early in the
evening Mr. Boyd, accompanied by his wife,
drove to the Hotel Simpson to fill a business
engagement. Returning, Mrs. Boyd stepped over
to a neighbor's and in a very few minutes
entered her home and discovered her husband
prostrate on the bathroom floor. When he
failed to answer, a physician was summoned,
who, after examination, pronounced life to
have been extinct for only a few minutes.
For several years Mr.
Boyd's health had not been of the best and it
was for that reason, largely, that he decided to
retire for all business pursuits a year and a
half ago. However, for the past few months, in
fact, ever since he withdrew from business
affairs, he seemed to have gained strength and
was quite active about his home and other
matters to which he devoted his attention. His
sudden passing, therefore, was a severe shock to
the entire citizenship as well as his family.

Prominent Figure
Mr. Boyd was a prominent
figure in the retail clothing business in Texas
and for more than 40 years made Denison the
principal scene of operation. Throughout all of
North Texas and Southern Oklahoma, the James
Boyd sign was a familiar feature on every
highway. His business covered a large territory
and the strict integrity of the man early in
life earned for him the high esteem of all who
knew him.
He was born in
Hopkinsville, Ky., November 1, 1861, where he
received his education. At the age of 25 years
he came to Denison and engaged in the retail
clothing business with Will Hayes and R. Wootton
at 206 West Main Street. A few years later he
became associated with Levi Lingo, now deceased,
in the building now occupied by the National
Bank of Denison. Subsequently, Mr. Boyd acquired
the Lingo interest and continued the business
under his own name for 22 years.
During all these years
the business continued to grow and expand, and
feeling the need for larger quarters, the stock
was moved to the Madden building at 331 West
Main street, where the business was incorporated
under the name of James Boyd, Incorporated. On
January 1, 1926, he retired from business, being
succeeded by Boyd & Lackey.
Mr. Boyd was married to
Miss Sallie Shallenberger in Chicago, Ill., in
1892, his bride being a former Denison girl.
Following the marriage they returned to Denison
and established their home, and have since
continuously resided here.

Known Throughout State
As a retail clothing
dealer, Mr. Boyd was known throughout the state,
having served at one time as president of the
Texas Retail Clothiers Association. He also was
a former director of the State National Bank.
The deceased also was a member of St. Luke's
Episcopal Church, the Masons, Chamber of
Commerce, and Rod and Gun Club.
Surviving are his widow,
Mrs. Sallie Boyd; two brothers, E. L. Boyd and
R. G. Boyd, of Denison; and a sister, Mrs. R. M.
Meacham of Hopkinsville, Ky.
Funeral services
will be held at St. Luke's Episcopal Church
Sunday afternoon at 5 o'clock, with Rev.
Charles Harris Jr., rector, officiating.
Interment will be in Fairview cemetery.
Funeral arrangements are in charge of
Short-Murray, funeral directors.

From 1914 on, Sallie
spent every summer in Battle Creek,
Michigan, for health reasons. She died there in
September 1941.