Indian Pioneer History Project for Oklahoma
Date: April 8, 1937
Name: Edmond Frantz (White)
Post Office: Enid, Oklahoma
Residence Address: 108 1/2 N. Independence
Date of Birth: January 16, 1860
Place of Birth: Roanoke, Ill.
Father: Frantz
Place of Birth: Roanoke Co. Virginia
Information on father: buried at LeFlore, OK
Mother: Gish
Place of birth: Roanoke Co. Virginia
Information on mother:
Field Worker:
Merrill A. Nelson
Interview 1209
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image taken from http://www.crossroads.odl.state.ok.us/ |
Biography of Mr. Edmund Frantz
(White)
Enid, Oklahoma
My father and mother were both from
Roanoke Co. Virginia. My mother
who belonged to a family by the name of Gish came with her
parents to Illinois when she was twelve years old. My father's
people came when he was twenty-one. They were married in
Illinois. I had nine brothers and sisters. One, John, died in
infancy. All the others except one are still living. Their names
in order of their birth are William D., who died just this last
September; myself; Edmund H; John, previously mentioned; Lulu
V.; Minnie S; Frank O. (former governor of Oklahoma) now in the
oil business in Tulsa; Walter P, who is in the brick business
with me in Enid; Orville G., also in the oil business in Tulsa
and M. J. in the insurance business in Enid.
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Frank Frantz 7th Governor of Oklahoma Territory,
born May 7, 1872, in
Roanoke, Illinois,
the son of Henry J. and Maria Frantz. While in Enid, Frantz would meet and marry Matilda
Evan of Oklahoma City. Their union would produce five
children.
After leaving office, Frantz would move to Denver,
Colorado where he would remain for six years. In 1915,
Frantz would return to Oklahoma to live in Tulsa,
becoming the head of the Land Department of the Cosden
Oil Company. At the age of 68, overcome with health
issues, Frantz would experience his final conscious
thoughts on March 8, 1941, in Muskogee, Oklahoma. Frantz
would be transported to back to Tulsa where, on March 9,
1941, he would die in his own home.
image taken from Wikipedia.org Nov 2009 |
I moved to Wellington,
Kansas, June 29, 1883. I came there from Illinois Weeleyan U. at
Blomington, Ill. I lived in Wellington continuously until the
opening of the Cherokee Strip. I was cashier in the bank there,
in the Wellington National Bank. Then I went into the hardware
business, with implements and lumber. All the boys were in the
firm and we continued this business when we came to Oklahoma,
but the members of the family from that time separated and lived
in various places. I married Miss Murphy in San Diego
California, September 1891. We had two children, Maurine, the
eldest who has an art studio in the same building where my
office is. Also a son, Edmund D. Frantz who was gassed in the
World War. He has been affected for about 12 years from the
effects of his term of war service. It is said that our family
is distantly related to Chief Justice Marshall -- most of the
male member of the family bearing some resemblance to that
character.
Myself and William D. Frantz
made the run. We settled at Medford and at Enid, having stores
in both places.
On Sept 16,1893, we chose a
place 6 miles West of Coldwell as starting place to make the
run. We were not really in the race in one way as we had a
caravan of twenty five wagons loaded with stock with which to
start in business. Frank wanted a farm but the rest of us were
land poor. Our land on the border going down so low in value due
to the proposed opening of Oklahoma that we could not give it
away.
The sight of that opening
day is a never to be forgotten one. We stood on an elevated
section and there we could see in both directions a thick line,
which I would estimate at over a hundred thousand all around the
strip begin moving forward. Thousands registered at Orlando and
Caldwell. There were 30,000 on the town site of Enid 6 hours
after the run. The streets (if such they might be called as
there were crowds of people wandering over them and no road work
just prairie) were crowded.
Like an invading army we
watched the black line until it disappeared across the horizon,
thinning and breaking up as it went. Men paid $1000 for a horse
to make that race. There were a million people in the state
almost at once. While older states had taken 50-75 years to
reach that figure. It was the same on the south border as on the
north. We paid ten cents for a cup of water. To water horses,
they charged ten cents a bucket. Men made money digging wells
and selling the water. We got a lot for $155 where the Oklahoma
State Bank is now. Later I sold it for $15,000. I have a lot
west of Broadway and Independence about 1/2 a block. It was
worth at one time $12,500. I got it about the time of the run
for $100.
My father-in-law John Murphy
brought a horse sulk tied a big bag of oats under the seat and
started. The ground was rough. He had a race horse, and thereby
lost a farm. He could not get horse quiet till someone
staked his claim. We saw the horse raring to go, about four or
five miles away. He never did get out of that sulk tile we came
in the wagon. We put him in a wagon and went on to Medford. Old
Ben was the name of that horse. We staked town lot in Medford.
Then coming on to Enid, he bought land for $1000 and formed a
partnership with Angus Corroll, Bough King. Later Robinson took
his place. This is the Carroll, Bough Robinson Wholesale house
we have today. Bough had a store at Kingfisher, Carroll at Okla.
City and Murphy at Enid by combining they could do wholesale
business. Murphy also started a National Bank.
H. H. Chapman came right at
the first. His original business was banking and then he went
into lumber finally into oil. His brother Robert is still in the
lumber business. Fred ____ brother died. He was cashier in
the 1st National Bank. About 1900, in the early days of
the town, the Frantz boys built a hotel. This was the biggest in
the state. It had 40 rooms. All six of us boys were in on it.
About the same time we got
interested in railroads, something that never brought us in any
money. We build a road from here to Guthrie. We secured the
charter, sold stock, contracted and build the line. We were
undecided whether to run the road to Guthrie or Oklahoma City.
Oklahoma City men and other thought it moonshine. Later a road
was built from here to Kiowa which with connections reaches
Denver. This was financed by the Mississippi Valley and Trust
co. One road The Blackwell road N. L. Peck of Blackwell,
Oklahoma organized, secured the right of way, owned the town
sites, had the subsidies. To connect with the road we had to pay
the M.V. Trust Co. $500 a mile or $35,000, besides what we lost.
We made on the property we owned. Now we had an in and out road
to Enid. It was our ambition therefore to make Enid a railroad
town. We organized the Ark Valley Railroad. I went in with Col.
H. E. Havens, also J. B. Lindon, County Treasurer and we
organized in connection with the Ar Valley townsite Co.
We also organized here in
connection the Enid Right of Way and Townsite Co. in connection
with the Denver, End and Gulf. The Arkansas Valley townsite Co.,
was headed by "Grist Mill Jones of Oklahoma City. It went from
Blackwell to Enid. Now we wanted a line from Tulsa to Enid. Then
on west to Avard. The Frisco has it now. The Union Trust Co. of
St Louis financed and we let the contract to Johnson Bros., of
Quincey, Ill.
When we were to build the
Guthrie line Mr. J. B. Lindon, the County Treasurer and I went
to St. Louis. We were green boys from the country, but we went
to see Mr. Yoakum, President of the Frisco. He was son-in-law to
the widow King, who had $1,000,000 acres in Texas. "Would you
operate a line to Enid if we build it?" we asked. " I will show
you something if you want to gaze behind the scenes", he said.
He pulled back another map or curtain and there before our eyes
was a map with a red line, straight from Tulsa to Enid, showing
he had already planned a route that way. Mr. Yoakum called up
Mr. West of the St. Louis Union Trust Co. and caught the
president before he left. We went over to the Trust Co. He
loaned us the money on condition we let the contract to Johnson
Bros. of Quincey, Ill. We boys were set on fire. Now we had
connections to Perry and Pawnee as well as in the other
directions. The Rock Island was up in the air.
My father-in-law who did
considerable shipping over the Rock Island was met by Mr. Lowe,
solicitor for the Rock Island and H. Thompson another
representative and they tried to persuade him to get me to drop
it. "He's already building it", said my father-in-law. This was
the line to Oklahoma City with which we connected at Guthrie. I
was in truth going ahead and that only on the verbal word of the
M.V.&T. Co. Later I got the contract I had promised them I would
build also and did not want to go back on my word. Thompson
could get considerable money had we stopped. But we were going
too far to stop. We had been without a depot too long. We had to
get off in the mud. I tried to make money for the railroads but
never consented to become an official of them or of any
political post.
As I said N. L. Peckham was
promoting a line at Blackwell. This line had already gone from
Winfield, Kans., to Blackwell. Where next! Many wanted it to go
to Perry. We went to St. Louis, promised $25,000 cash out right
the Mississippi Valley and Trust Co., and the road was brought
to Enid. This was done by making a bond issue of $40,000 ___ by
vote diverting twenty-five thousand dollars of it to railroad
purposes. we might all have been out in the penitentiary for
this but it came out all right.
We gave the water works
contract to a friendly man by the name of Mueller. He put down a
well, turned over twenty five thousand dollars worth of bonds to
use, we turned them over to Peckham of Blackwell. The money was
deposited in the First National Bank of Winfield, the night
before the election. This was the Blackwell, Enid and
Southwestern, which is still operated. The money got into proper
hand just as the engine whistled inside the city limits.
"Dick" a gambler, with a big stone in his cravat that looked
like a thousand dollars but may have only been paste threatened
to arrest. He said he would put us all in the port: "Here's a __
you send to the pen for the good of the town I shouted." Quickly
I had gone around to all the business men and got 50 to 60
signatures that they would stand with me if worst came to worst.
"We the undersigned authorized the city council to spend
$25,000 of the water works bond to divert to the best line" said
the paper they all signed. I was just a country boy and maybe I
ought to have stayed there; anyway we rot the roads in to Enid.
We had a store where Athey's bank is now and we lived in a
shack behind the store. My brother was the Osage agent at
Pawhuska. Later he became territorial governor. We sold hardware
and implements. One thing we sod by the barrels was shoe last so
that people could repair their own shoes. They would get a
couple of dollars for at load of wood or cut it in two for a
dollar and a half a load. They they would take it out in
hardware.
The natives lived on Kafir Corn [once popular sorghum grain]
out on the claims. They made it into hot cakes and corn cakes.
Times were hard. Nevertheless when this state came into the
union it was free of debt. You have heard of Dennis Flynn and
his securing free homes. Today, the state chamber of commerce
estimates the indebtedness at $225,000,000. 4 percent of the
people have the money and 80 per cent owe the debt. Thousands of
farmers and business men are losing out now but with a good
crop, and a good price things may be better, soon. Another
report shows 5,000,800 college and high school men out of jobs.
Machinery in doing the work. That is why there an so many
strikes and lockouts. The total debts of the United States are
$250,000,000,000. Four percent of the people have the money and
80 percent are owing this debt.
We started a broom factory. This is the way it started. Most
of the town was east of the square. I saw some loads of hay-like
stuff on wagon. "What is this?" I asked. "Broom Corn". said the
owner. "What do you get for it?" I asked. Twenty Dollars a ton
is all they will pay. Gillespies on the east side of the square
(there was a little rivalry between the sides), who made an
offer was watching me. "Well drive across the square and I'll
give you more for it." Before I set a price, I found out that it
was worth eighty dollars a ton. "I'll give you twenty-five
dollars a ton for it." "That's a deal" said the owner.
So I found myself with forty tons of broom corn which I
stored in a livery barn. The other members of my family backed
me up in my purchase, father and my pardoner said, "Buy all you can
in Enid and Medford." I held that broom corn two years and
doubled. If I had held it one month longer I would have made a
one hundred percent profit.
Here is how I started a brick plant. This was in 1894 It is
still operating. I think it is about our best businesses now,
because nearly all the money goes for labor. I had no experience
in the brick business but as the President of the Chamber of Commerce, I vas anxious to bring in new
businesses. I sent samples to the various companies and they
said that our clay would make bricks. They even sent me sample
bricks, and estimate the cost of a brick plant.
No we have a plant turning out 25,000 to 30,000 bricks
a day. We buy the gas, electricity and oil here in Enid to run
our plant. I hove run it continuously for forty years.
One of the first brick buildings was a bank built by Murphy on
the north corner of Broadway and Independence Sts This is the
American National bank. The Post Office was in
an ell building around this bank. The Post Office was formerly
in 1895-96 on the-south side of the square but it was moved about
five or six timers. Finally we got it located on the square.
The first court House was a little to the North of the present
structure.
We named our store Frantz Mamoth Hardware Store. It was just
a sheet iron building where the Athey Bank is now. The Garfield
County bank was a lot or two west of the N. E. ?iz ed? from some
other bank. The present Central National Bank is the Bank of
Enid reorganized. The Bank of Enid used to occupy the same site.
Kress brought the first real racket store in Enid, in 1910,
coming later Woolworth paid $1,200.00 per year for twenty years
for their present site. L. A. Faubein had a grocery store on the
northeast corner of the square where Montgomery Ward is now.
He was elected mayor and devoted his time to politics so that
his business went broke.
On the Southwest corner of, the square on Laineis Gensem
Brothers. They were George; Billy and Fred. They are all dead
now. There were many saloons here then. I have shown the
location of some of these buildings on a map. We had nineteen
saloons here at one time.
The first man to be buried in Enid was chinaman. He, Was
killed by an officer. It is not certain whether or not he was
guilty of anything he could not talk English well
enough to be thoroughly-understood. There were two cemeteries
then, one three-fourths of a mile from town , Southwest and the
other one mile southeast of town.. All the bodies. were later
removed to the cemetery north of town.
We belong to the Presbyterian church. We were among the earliest members, bringing our letters from Wellington,
Kans. I have two
nephews, Frank Rarey, and Walty Frantz in the government service
in. Washington.
Walter and Orville, my brothers are both baseball players and
both have made remarkable records in the game.
THE END
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