Indian Pioneer Papers - Index
Indian Pioneer History Project for Oklahoma
Date: December 16,
1937
Name: Mr. W. E.
Blevins
Post Office: Pauls Valley,
Oklahoma
Residence Address:
Date of Birth: July 28, 1862
Place of
Birth: Arkansas
Father: W. H. Blevins,
Information on
Father: born in
Tennessee
Mother: Mary Bene Grisham,
Information on Mother: born
in Tennessee
Field Worker: Maurice R. Anderson
Interview
#9471
I was born 1862 in Arkansas and came to the Indian
Territory in 1880 when I was only eighteen years old.
I had been raised on a cattle ranch in Arkansas as my
father owned a large cattle ranch in the early days and always had from a
thousand to fifteen hundred head of cattle on the ranch all the time.
After I was old enough to ride a horse, I would help take cattle to the
market. My father would drive cattle to Kansas, crossing through the
Indian Territory in the Choctaw Nation and west and north.
In the early
days there were but a few cattle trails and most of the drives we made my
father would have the men keep the cattle in the open country as best they
could where there would be plenty of grass. I remember on one trip we
were about forty days making the trip to Kansas and we hit a cattle trail
after we crossed the Canadian River west of Johnsonville and went a little
east I believe of where Norman in now. That was before there was any
Oklahoma City.
In 1880 I came to where McAlester is now and went to
work on Colonel McALESTER's Ranch. There was one store at McAlester and
the post office was in this general store. Mr. McAlester owned this
store and I believe he was also postmaster.
In those days it was no trouble to get a job on a ranch
if you were a good cowhand and if you were a tender foot they would make a
cowhand out of you in a short while.
I worked on the McAlester Ranch
three years and every week or so the Choctaw Indians would have a big stomp
dance of some kind. The white people were always welcome, but I never
did see any white people take part in the dances. I have gone to lots of
their dances but never took part in any of them. There would be a big
fire and the Indians would dance around this fire in a large circle singing
and stomping. These dances usually lasted two or three days at a
time.
The Indians then in that part of the country were very
funny people, especially the full bloods. They didn't farm much, only
raised four or five acres of corn and a few acres of cotton. The Indian
women would do the farming and about all the men did was hunt and fish
At cotton gathering time as soon as the women picked a sack full they would
put the sack of cotton on a mule or a pony and take it to the gin. The
three years I worked on the McAlester Ranch I never did see an Indian man
working.
After the big fall round-up in 1883, I left the McAlester
Ranch and went back to Arkansas and lived in that state until 1905. At
that time I came back to the Indian Territory and settled on a farm near
Elmore City in the Chickasaw Nation and farmed around there for several
years. I now live in Pauls Valley.
Submitted to OKGenWeb by
Brenda Choate <bcchoate@yahoo.com> November 2000.