Malouf Abraham, Sr., also known as Oofie Abraham (July 26, 1915 - May 30, 1994), was a Lebanese-American businessman who made a fortune in oil and natural gas in the Texas Panhandle and served two terms from 1967 to 1971 in the Texas House of Representatives as a Republican at a time when the chamber had a heavily Democratic majority. A native and a resident of Canadian in Hemphill County, Abraham amassed his fortune by leasing mineral rights throughout the eastern Panhandle counties adjacent to Oklahoma.
Video Malouf Abraham Sr.
Background
Abraham was the son of Nahim Abraham and Alia Abraham (1885-1979), resourceful immigrants from the village of Kafarakab in Lebanon who came to the United States through Ellis Island in New York City. The senior Abrahams first lived in Amarillo but then launched in 1913 a department store called the "Fair Store" in Canadian. They lived frugally in the back of the store until 1938, when they purchased what is now the fourth-generation Abraham family home.
Abraham graduated from Canadian High School when he was 14 and attended Texas Tech University in Lubbock for three years thereafter but did not graduate. With an older brother, he got involved in a variety of business ventures and ended up with oil and gas holdings, besides owning and operating a restaurant in Canadian and selling insurance.
Abraham served stateside in the United States Army for only eight months in 1945, having been exempt from overseas duty because he had three young children.
Maps Malouf Abraham Sr.
Political life
Abraham was elected in 1953 to two two-year terms as mayor of his native Canadian, a non-partisan position. He unseated Mayor Jess Lindley, and he was elected again in 1955. Early in 1955, he fought unsuccessfully for the adoption of a city manager government; voters rejected the plan in a special election, 310-206. Abraham threatened to resign after the rebuff but quickly changed his mind when prompted to do so by key supporters. He did not seek a third term in 1957, and the office passed for one term to L. B. "Curly" Owens. In 1959, Abraham sought a comeback in the office but was defeated by his only opponent, political newcomer, Bill Bartlett.
Twelve years later in 1967, Abraham entered the Texas House of Representatives as a Republican member from then District 84 (later District 79). He succeeded the Democrat Fritz Thompson (1905-1994) of Borger in Hutchinson County, which was moved from District 84. In addition to his own Hemphill County, Abraham represented Gray, Hansford, Lipscomb, Ochiltree, Roberts, and Wheeler counties. Phil Cates, a Democrat from Shamrock in Wheeler County, was elected to succeed Abraham, who vacated the seat after two terms.
Abraham's state House tenure corresponded with the administrations of Governors John B. Connally, Jr., and Preston Smith. In the legislature, Abraham was particularly known for "economy in government." Each year of his service, he spent less on his office staff and maintenance than any other lawmaker. His former state House seat, now No. 88, is held by[ [Rockefeller Republican|Moderate Republican]] Ken King of Canadian, a close friend of the Abraham family who defeated the conservative Jim Landtroop of Plainview in Hale County in the 2012 Republican runoff election.
In 1970, Abraham relinquished his House seat to run, unsuccessfully, for the District 31 Panhandle seat in the Texas State Senate vacated by the 30-year incumbent Grady Hazlewood, an Amarillo Democrat. Abraham trailed the Democrat Max Sherman of Amarillo, 33,637 to 37,593 ballots. "He did me a favor and sent me back home to make some money," said Abraham of his loss by some 4,000 votes to Sherman. The political defeat was indeed viewed as a blessing by the Abraham family, recalled his son, Malouf Abraham, Jr., M.D., a retired allergist and patron of the arts from Canadian. It was after the lost election that Abraham's oil and natural gas business skyrocketed. After his legislative years, Abraham continued to follow political developments and was a delegate to numerous Republican National Conventions. He and several family members journeyed to Washington, D.C., in 1981 for the first inauguration of Ronald W. Reagan.
Philanthropy
Money is like manure. If you spread it around, it does a lot of good. But if you pile it up, it just stinks, the Oofie Abraham dictum, recalled in 2003 by state Representative Warren Chisum of Pampa, Texas
Like most of his other family members, Abraham was a noted philanthropist. He established endowment funds at West Texas A&M University (earlier West Texas State College) in Canyon and at Texas Tech. He established a scholarship fund through the Amarillo Area Foundation that has since benefited numerous Panhandle students who study agriculture in larger and smaller institutions, such as Clarendon College in Clarendon (which two of Abraham's grandsons attended) and Frank Phillips College in Borger in the far northern part of the Panhandle.
The Abrahams gave generously to the Young Men's Christian Association and the Edward Abraham Memorial Home, a nursing facility named for one of his brothers, and the Little House Day Care Center, all in Canadian.
Abraham was also a gambler. A familiar face in Las Vegas, Nevada, Abraham was recruited by the casinos, who sent Lear jets to Canadian to take him to the gambling tables. His friend Harold Courson tells of taking trips with Abraham to Las Vegas and Lake Tahoe in which Abraham would stuff thousands of dollars in bills into his boots.
Five generations of Abrahams
Abraham was married to the former Iris Lewis (March 13, 1918 - November 4, 2001), a member of a pioneer Canadian, Texas, family whose roots in Hemphill County date to the 1880s. In addition to Dr. Abraham, the couple had a second son, Bill Ed Abraham (born 1945) of Dallas, and a daughter, Betty Abraham Cooper (born 1942) and husband, Mert Cooper, of Canadian. On his death, Abraham was survived by two older brothers, businessmen Naceeb L. Abraham (1907-2000) and Tom Abraham (1910-2007); eight grandchildren, and four great-grandchildren.
The grandchildren include the three sons of Dr. Malouf Abraham, Jr., and his wife, the former Therese Browne, originally from Mount Airy, North Carolina. Therese was like her father-in-law, the mayor of Canadian; she served in the position (though the Abrahams are all Republicans) from 1981 to 1991. The sons are Eddie Christopher Abraham (born 1965), Salem Abraham (born 1966), and Jason Abraham (born 1969). Dr. Malouf Abraham worked in his last years in business with the three grandsons.
Salem Abraham is a businessman, entrepreneur, and a futures trader in Canadian. Like the other Abraham children, he graduated from Canadian High School. He then went to Notre Dame University in South Bend, Indiana. He and his wife, Ruth Ann (born 1967), have eight children, who are the fifth generation of Abrahams to claim Canadian as their home. He is a member of the Canadian Independent School District board. Eddie and Jason Abraham and their families reside on large ranches in Hemphill County. The Canadian area is considered unlike most of the Panhandle Plains geographically because it is more hilly and has more trees than do the surrounding counties.
Abraham's Texas legacy
On Abraham's passing, the Texas House paid tribute through a resolution introduced by area lawmakers David Swinford of Dumas and Warren Chisum of Pampa. The legislators described Abraham as "a man of extraordinary vision and energy who consistently used his unique talents and intelligence to better the world around him; his presence will be deeply missed by all who were privileged to know him, but his rare generosity of spirit will live on in the many good works he leaves behind."
In 2000, the Amarillo Globe News included Abraham among the "100 Most Influential People of the Panhandle of the Twentieth Century." Shortly before his death, the Panhandle-Plains Historical Museum in Canyon designated Abraham a "Living Legend."
To show his sense of humor, the Abraham family placed in his coffin a bottle of Jack Daniel's black label; a Malouf Abraham, Inc., pen, which he gave away everywhere he went; a wooden nickel, which became his campaign token during his legislative days, and a pack of cigarettes and a lighter. Abraham and his family are interred at the Edith Ford Cemetery in Canadian.
On July 4, 2003, Malouf and Iris Abraham were honored posthumously at the dedication of Sunset Park in Canadian. At the entrance to the park is a giant spur sculpture by Kerry Westbrook. Warren Chisum, then the state representative from the district, spoke at the ceremony. He jokingly recalled the "Oofie Abraham dictum" -- "Money is like manure. If you spread it around, it does a lot of good. But if you pile it up, it just stinks".
Former Canadian Mayor George Arrington spoke warmly of the Abrahams: "This park, like everything Oofie and Iris ever did, is a product of unselfish, dedicated hard work...It's not what you get out of life but what you put back that matters." The inscription on the bronze plaques at the base of the spur sculpture reads: "If the Lord loves cheerful givers, He certainly loved Iris and Oofie. They gave generously with joy."
References
Source of the article : Wikipedia