OKGENWEB NOTICE: These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or presentation by any other organization or persons. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material, must obtain the written consent of OKGenWeb State Coordinator. Presentation here does not extend any permissions to the public. This material can not be included in any compilation, publication, collection, or other reproduction for profit without permission. Files may be printed or copied for personal use only. ===================================================================== HENRY W. NOAH Vol. 3, p. 980-981 The career of Henry W. Noah has been one which from his youth has been filled with interesting experiences. A buffalo hunter in the days when the great herds roamed the western plains, an Indian fighter on the frontier, a deputy sheriff of Woods County and a deputy United States marshal at a time when such position, to say the least, were not sinecures, he is now passing his declining years in peace and contentment on his farm, which bears the picturesque name Noah's Deer Park, located four miles east of Alva. Mr. Noah was born April 18, 1849, on a farm in Covington, Kenton County, Kentucky, and is a son of George W. and Harriet H. (STEVENSON) Noah, the former of whom was descended from German stock, while the latter was of English descent. In 1851 the family moved as pioneers to Harrison County, Missouri, being the third family to settle in that community, and there George W. Noah built a small home for his family and engaged in agricultural pursuits. He continued to farm and raise stock during the remaining years of his life and passed away in 1871, Mrs. Noah having died two years before. Henry W. Noah was but two years of age when his family moved to Harrison County farm, and there he was reared amid pioneer surroundings. His educational advantages were somewhat limited, owing to the unsettled condition of the country, but for a time attended a little log schoolhouse and made the most of such opportunities as were granted him. In 1872 he joined a party of buffalo hunters engaged in securing hides for the demands of the trade that soon exterminated the American bison, and while thus engaged more than one encounter with the hostile Indians. In 1874 Mr. Noah went to Sumner County, Kansas, and located on Government land, located twelve miles southwest of Wellington, there continuing to be engaged in agricultural operations until 1882. He next moved to Barber County, Kansas, where he turned his attention to the raising of cattle on the open range, and in 1886 consolidated with the old Eagle Chief POOL, with which he was identified until 1889. Mr. Noah disposed of his interests in Kansas in 1893 and made the run for a homestead at the opening of the Cherokee Strip in Oklahoma in which he was successful in the securing of a property in the Salt Fort Valley, four miles east of Alva. Here he now has one of the valuable farms of Woods County developed through his energy, industry and good business management. This property, well improved for general farming, is named, as noted, Noah's Deer Park, for the presence of a finely- situated natural park, well stocked with deer. He also has been successful in the raising of peafowl, English pheasants and various strains of American fowl, as well as thoroughbred. Aberdeen cattle, a black beef cattle, hornless, with short necks, and legs and short, wide head. His buildings are substantial in construction and his improvements are of the best, so that his property presents an attractive appearance and is one of the show spots of the locality. In his youth Mr. Noah was known as a crack shot with the rifle, and advancing years do not seem to have dimmed his eye or unsteadied his hand in this particular. Shortly after coming to Woods County, when this locality was filled with rough characters from all over the Southwest, Mr. Noah was appointed a deputy sheriff, and his courage and perseverance in tracking and bringing to justice lawbreakers won him an appointment as United States deputy marshal for Oklahoma, a position which he retained from 1893 until 1897. Mr. Noah was married in 1870 to Miss Eliza HALL, a former schoolmate in Missouri, and they are the parents of two daughters: Harriet M. and Maggie M. Typed for OKGenWeb by: Earline Sparks Barger, December 16, 1998.