Indian Pioneer History Project for Oklahoma
Date: September 14, 1937
Name: Mr. Joe Ward
Post Office: Spiro, Oklahoma
Residence Address:
Date of Birth: September 15, 1855
Place of Birth: three miles east of old Scullyville
Father: Jerry Ward
Information on Father: a full-blood Choctaw
Mother: Eliza Ward
Information on Mother: a full-blood Choctaw
Field Worker: Gomer Gower
Joe Ward was born some three miles
east of old Scullyville (sic) on September 15, 1855, and has
lived his entire life near the place where he was born.
His father, Jerry Ward, a full-blood Choctaw, served as Sheriff
in the new Choctaw Nation before County and District
sub-divisions were made.
His mother, Eliza Ward, also a full-blood Choctaw, was brought
from Mississippi with her family in 1833, landing at Fort Coffee
on the Arkansas River.
Unscrupulous white men from the states would congregate at
Scullyville for the purpose of taking the money of the Indians
away from them after a payment had been made to the Indians by
the Federal Government. On one of these occasions, two white
men had been found fleecing the Indians outright and were placed
under arrest by Sheriff Ward who proposed taking them to Fort
Smith and turning them over to the Federal authorities. Just
before starting for Fort Smith, he left the two men seated in
the buggy for a moment while he stopped into a close-by store
for a plug of chewing tobacco, taking his Winchester with him.
On coming out of the store he saw that both men were running
away and had succeeded in reaching a point some two hundred
yards from him. A short distance further they would have
reached brushy swamp land where they could have possibly evaded
re-capture.
The sheriff commanded them to stop and upon their continued
running, he quickly took aim and in turn killed both these men.
This episode served to convince everyone that Sheriff Ward was a
man whose office must be respected and the practice of stealing
from the Indians was reduced to a minimum as a result.
The soil in the vicinity of Scullyville, a loose sandy loam, was
particularly adapted to raising of sweet potatoes and these,
together with a patch of corn, composed the principal crops.
Their cattle provided them with beef and milk and butter in
abundance. Shooting matches would be held at intervals in which
a beef animal would be the prize. The entrance fee for the
match would be based upon the value for beef of the particular
animal and the number of contestants entering the match. Thus;
if ten men entered the contest and the animal was worth twenty
dollars, the fee for each contestant would be two dollars. The
winner would be given his choice of both quantity and whichever
part of the beef he chose; however, none of the contestants
would be permitted to go home empty-handed, regardless of their
inferior marksmanship. This sport, together with Indian Ball
games, pony racing and hunting were the usual diversions, all of
which were enjoyed in the true Indian fashion. The Indians
scoffed at the carefully prepared race track of the white men
and preferred a level place on the prairie on which to match the
speed of their ponies.
The stakes would often be a calf, or saddle or mayhap the ponies
themselves. There were no periods of training of the ponies
such as was the custom of the Whites. When a race was arranged
the Indians would merely agree upon the terms, select a suitable
stretch of ground and the race would be run wholly upon the
merits of the ponies.
Many of the Choctaw Indians still feel resentful of the
proceedings which took the Indian laws away from them and
substituted the laws of the white men. They feel keenly the
loss of their tribal existence which they enjoyed as freely
before the division of their lands and regret the absorption of
the Choctaws, once a proud and happy tribe, into the white race.
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