[Return to introduction]JOHN CELUMMr. Celum’s home place consists of seventy-five acres under a high state of cultivation and is devoted to alfalfa and fruit. The finest crops of the former raised in the country are here produced. In his horticultural pursuits he makes a specialty of the pear, which reaches its greatest perfection there through the combination of soil, water and climate. He also raises apples, grapes and other fruits and high grades of vegetables, principally tomatoes, celery and onions. His ranch at present receives its supply from what is known as the community ditch owned by the neighboring farmers, but will come under the big government ditch when it is completed. It is due to such men as Mr. Celum coming in as pioneers and experimenting with crops and developing the country that it enjoys its present prosperity. He is careful and practical in all that he does, and his labors have been attended with a high measure of prosperity which will be fully augmented in course of construction has been carried forward to completion. Mr. Celum was married to Miss Hattie Butler and they have the following children: A. T., William, Frances, Samuel and Albert. B. B. Paddock, History and Biographical Record of North and West Texas (Chicago: Lewis Publishing Co., 1906), Vol. II, p. 590. |
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