Indian Pioneer Papers - Index
Indian Pioneer History Project for Oklahoma
Date: December 21, 1937
Name: Mr. E. V. Arnn
Residence: Pauls Valley, Oklahoma
Date of Birth: March 26, 1866
Place of Birth: Arkansas
Father: J.W. Arnn, born in Arkansas
Mother: S.C. Arnn, born in Arkansas
Field Worker: Maurice R. Anderson
Interview #9500
I was born in 1866 in Arkansas. I came to
the Indian Territory in 1900 and settled at Howe in the Choctaw Nation and
went to work making ties and braces for the coal mines and worked at this two
years. In those times I had to work at anything I could get to do to make a
living, as I had a large family to feed. I have worked many a day for 50 cents
but then you could buy a sack of flour for 75 cents and there was lots of wild
game and wild hogs. I always had plenty of meat to eat and there were berries,
plums and all kinds of wild fruit and we would can everything we could get so
in this way we always had plenty to eat, but money was hard to get.
While I would be working in the woods
making ties, my wife and children would do the farming. We would raise a small
patch of corn and have a garden and during gardening season my oldest son
would sell vegetables to the coal miners and in this way we managed to make a
fair living.
Churches and schools were very few in that
part of the country then. There was a school house about five miles from where
I lived but my children did not get to go more than half the time as I would
have to pay $1.50 for each child so my children received very little schooling
until after the free schools were established.
I lived in a Choctaw Indian neighborhood.
Those Indians only raised small patches of corn and the Indian women did the
farming and about all the Indian men did was to hunt in the winter and fish in
the summer as those creeks and the river were full of fish.
The Indians lived like most of the white
people in that part of the country except you very seldom saw a stove in one
of their log houses or half dugouts as they cooked over fires out in the yards
in the summer and in the winter they would cook over a fireplace in the houses
made out of rocks. Nearly all the Indian homes that I have visited had what
was called dutch ovens to bake their bread in. The Indians were all very
friendly and would load you anything they had. Most of them were just poor
people but there were a few who were large cattle owners. These were the
mixed-breed Indians. Most cases the father was a white man. The full-bloods
just lived from one day to the next. They did not try to lay up anything for a
rainy day, just so they had all they wanted to eat at one time they seemed
satisfied.
I have attended many of the Indian dances
and was always welcome. They seemed to enjoy themselves and I have seen them
go through a certain dance all night long. One of them would beat a tom-tom
while the men and women would go around and around in a circle, stomping their
feet and singing. It was worth your time to see them play ball. They wouldn't
wear anything but breech-clouts and each man would have some kind of an
animal's tail hanging down behind him fastened to the breech-clout and I have
seen them hit each other over the heads with the sticks they used to throw the
ball with and if one got knocked out another player would take his place.
In 1903 I moved to a place near Calvin and
settled on a small farm and was living on that farm when the Indian Territory
became the state of Oklahoma in 1907. I now live in Pauls Valley.
Submitted to OKGenWeb by
Brenda Choate.