After his service as a private in the
United States Army during
World War I, Turner was a dealer in real estate, principally in
Oklahoma,
Florida and
Texas. By 1928, He organized the Harper-Turner Oil Company and established the 10,000 acre Turner Ranch at
Sulphur, Oklahoma; but he maintained a residence in Oklahoma City where he served on the local school board from 1939 to 1946. Turner fought and won a bitter campaign battle in 1946 against Tulsa County prosecutor Dixie Gilmer to win the gubernatorial election. His term as governor of
Oklahoma was from January 13, 1947, to January 8, 1951, during which the State Highway Department and the State Planning and Resources Board were reorganized; the Oklahoma Turnpike Authority was established; a Board of Regents for State Colleges was created; and segregation in higher education was ended in the state. Turner and the Oklahoma Legislature produced a budget in his first year that increased appropriations by $29 million over the previous two years while reducing the income tax by a third. From July 14–18, 1949, he appeared on several radio and TV programs in New York City, including
Toast of the Town, to promote his single, "My Memory Trail", released on the Beacon Music label. Turner appeared as himself in the 1951 film,
Jim Thorpe – All-American. ==Death and legacy==