Indian Pioneer Papers - Index
Indian Pioneer
History Project for Oklahoma
Date: July 6, 1937
Name:
W. T. Baker
Post Office: El Reno,
Oklahoma
Residence Address (or
location): 401 South Foster
Date of Birth: 27 Jul
1849
Place of Birth: Tennessee
Father: Bryant H. Baker
Place of Birth: 1816
in Mass
Information on father:
Died when he was 78 years old
Mother: Marta (Erie)
Baker
Place of birth: Lee Co.
VA
Information on mother:
mother died when she was 77 years old.
He doesn't remember her
birth date or the date of her death.
Field Worker: Mrs. Nora
Lorris, El Reno
Mr. W. T. Baker was born
on the 27th of July in 1849, in Tennessee, and came to Iowa "when I was
a little bit of a kid."
His father, Bryant H.
Baker, was born in Mass., in 1816 and was seventy-eight years of
age when he died.
His mother, Mrs. Marta
(ERIE) Baker, was born in Lee County, Virginia, and was seventy-seven years
of age when she died.
Before Mr. Baker came
to Oklahoma he ran a huckster's wagon in Iowa (he grew up in that state).
He drove a pair of mules, and had a sort of grocery on wheels. He would
buy corn, oats, hay, etc., and trade or sell these to get groceries and
other supplies to trade and sell to the farmers and other customers. He
sold calico, jeans, coffee, and sometimes tobacco but he said they did
not allow them to sell tobacco much and he did not always handle that commodity.
A friend of his ran a
grocery store and he got his supplies from this friend.
In Civil war times he
drilled some, but the war closed before he got to go. He and Ella M. ALGER
were married on election day, when Grant was elected. There were eight
children by this marriage, five boys and three girls. Four of his children
are still living.
In 1890 he came to Oklahoma
from Iowa. He and his father-in-law came here in a covered wagon. He bought
a relinquishment from a man by the name of John BRISTEL, and filed on it.
This place was located two miles north and two east of Union City, Oklahoma
and the only improvement on it at the time of purchase was a sod dugout,
one of those half and half affairs. He and his family lived on this farm
for seven or eight years. One of their sons died here.
Mr. Baker plowed and planted
some cotten [cotton] the first year after he got this farm and later planted corn
and wheat; he also raised hogs and cattle. He said, "we picked up until
we were well fixed." He bought land, two claims in Canadian County, and
also one farm out by Gracemont in Caddo County, which he deeded to one
of his sons, who is now living on it.
As to the improvements
that he put on his farm, he built a frame house, one room of which 16 by
16 feet, a kitchen 14 by 14 feet and an up-stairs - two rooms up-stairs
and two rooms down stairs. He stated that it did not cost him much as he
could get good dimension stuff for $14.00 per thousand square feet. He
built a barn 40 by 40 with a driveway through it, horses on one side and
graneries [granaries] on the other. He also built chicken houses and other out-buildings.
About 80 or 90 acres were broken out while he had the place.
The only building that
he remembers being here in El Reno when he came here in 1890 was a barn
in the middle of a block belonging to Sam PEACH. Soon there were saloons
and other buildings.
He used to run a blacksmith
shop in Union City and has also been a carpenter. He built Jack GIBSON's
house here in El Reno and has done lots of other carpenter work here in
town. He used to work on the railroad and worked in what they call "the
cut" west of town. he plowed and his son drove a team. He worked for Jim
and Frank Baker at Shawnee, as Blacksmith, when they were building
"the east west railroad, in 1891 or 92." "they were good bosses, lots of
sport."
Mr. W. T. Baker made a
point on a plow share out of a rasp and they called it "uncle Billy's needle
point."
A Mr. Ted FOSTER was another
one of his railroad bosses.
He was here in El Reno
when the land drawing took place in 1901, and two of his sons registered
but failed to draw farms.
He has seen lots of Indians,
but knew none of them intimately. He knew one by the name of "old Crow",
another by the name of "White shirt" and another by the name of "old Jim."
"Old Jim was a good hearted old fellar" Mr. Baker stated.
He remembers a Mr. Lon
WHIPPLE who was thrown from his horse and got his neck broken. His neck
was straightened and put in a plaster cast. and the man got well.
His first wife died in
1930 and he later married a woman by the name of Susie SLIMP, who also
died two years later.
He owns the little home
where he now lives at 401 South Foster but has deeded all his farms to
his sons.
S
ubmitted to
OKGenWeb by Larry Baker market@primemart.com
March 1999.