Age, Biography and Wiki
Who is it? | Actor, Producer |
Birth Day | January 14, 1915 |
Birth Place | Wetumka, Oklahoma, United States |
Age | 105 YEARS OLD |
Died On | March 14, 1997(1997-03-14) (aged 82)\nLubbock, Texas |
Birth Sign | Cancer |
Occupation | Saddlemaker; Rancher; Dickens Town Council member |
Spouse(s) | Second wife, Grace Adeline Roberts Cannon, previously Grace Wheeler (married 1957-his death) |
Children | Daughter from first marriage: Leanora Cannon Houwen Stepsons: Kenneth and Bill Wheeler |
Parent(s) | Charles Ira and Mattie Snodgrass Cannon |
Net worth
Charles Weldon, a renowned actor and producer in the United States, is expected to have a net worth ranging from $100,000 to $1 million by 2024. With a stellar career in the entertainment industry, Weldon has built a name for himself through his exceptional performances and contributions as a producer. His talent and dedication have propelled him to great heights, enabling him to accumulate impressive wealth throughout the years. As a highly respected figure in the world of film and television, Charles Weldon's net worth represents the financial success he has achieved through his artistic endeavors.
Biography/Timeline
Cannon was the last of nine children born to Charles Ira Cannon (1871–1920) and the former Mattie Cordial Snodgrass (1870–1956) on a working ranch in Afton in Dickens County in West Texas. He was given his unusual nickname as a child by his father. As a teenager, he learned boot and saddlemaking techniques to help the Cowboys obtain a proper fit on their horses. He also worked on other ranches in Arizona, New Mexico, and Nevada, as well as Texas.
Cannon, who outlived all of his siblings, died in a Lubbock hospital at the age of eighty-two. He was a former two-term member of the Dickens Town Council. He was Methodist. Survivors included his second wife, the former Grace Adeline Roberts, then Grace Wheeler (July 11, 1908—February 14, 2000), whom he married on April 22, 1957, in Santa Fe, New Mexico; a daughter, Leanora Cannon Houwen, then of Santa Maria in Santa Barbara County, California, but who later returned to Dickens; two stepsons, Kenneth Wheeler of Hobbs, New Mexico, and Bill Wheeler of San Antonio, eleven grandchildren, nineteen great-grandchildren, and one great-great-grandchild. Cannon also had an older sister named "Grace". Charles and Grace Cannon are interred at Dickens Cemetery.
Charles Weldon Cannon, known as Tooter Cannon (January 14, 1915 – March 14, 1997), was a widely recognized manufacturer of boots and saddles in rural Dickens, Texas.
He broke horses for the U.S. government during World War II at El Reno in Canadian County, Oklahoma. After the war, he operated two leather goods businesses in Tulsa, where his clients included the city police. In 1949, he returned to Dickens County and settled in the Spur community. He relocated his shop to Dickens in 1968. After 1970, he concentrated exclusively until his death on saddlemaking. His Tooter Cannon Saddles were prized by ranchers and rodeo riders because they were designed to fit the contour of the horse's back. A Tooter Cannon saddle or a pair of his boots is usually passed down within families. It is rare to find anything made by Cannon for sale on the open market. His work is found in a number of private collections. Customers often waited for Cannon to fill their orders, rather than finding other available saddlemakers.