Indian Pioneer Papers - Index
Indian Pioneer History
Project for Oklahoma
Date: February 25, 1936
Name: Homer C. Davis
Residence address or location: Pauls Valley, Oklahoma
Date of Birth: 1879
Place of Birth: Texas
I was born in 1879, in Texas and came to
the Indian Territory in 1895, with Father and Mother. We settled on a farm in
the Chickasaw Nation, near Elmore.
Pauls Valley was where my father brought
his cotton to have it ginned and the old grist mill east of Pauls Valley was
where he would have to bring corn to have it ground.
At that time there were only two stores at
Elmore. Mr. Jim GIBSON owned one of the stores; he later established the first
bank at Elmore. The country then was very thinly settled around Elmore, people
living around there farmed and raised cattle. There were no fences; it was
open range and cattle could graze anywhere. We had four head of mules and
three good milk cows when we moved to the Indian Territory. My father had been
farming near Gainesville, Texas, before we moved to the Indian Territory.
There were plenty of turkeys in the part
of the country where we settled at that time. I have seen as high as fifty in
a bunch and the prairies were covered with cattle. My father raised cattle and
would buy cattle and fatten them and then bring them to Pauls Valley and sell
them to some bigger cattleman. A Mr. BYARS at Pauls Valley was a large cattle
owner and Mr. Sam GARVIN owned a large ranch west of Pauls Valley. There were
no large ranches around where we settled, what few people lived there then
were farmers, but raised some cattle. People then tried to raise what they had
to live on. My father would only make about two trips a year to Gainesville,
Texas, for what things we had to have. The first year we farmed he hauled his
cotton to Gainesville to market, but after that he always sold it at Pauls
Valley. I have helped him haul many a wagon load of corn to Pauls Valley. The
cattlemen here then would buy all the corn anyone had to sell. Everything was
cheap in those days. Corn worth about fifteen cents a bushel and cotton would
only bring about $25.00 a bale.
I guess everybody settling in this country
in the early days made a good living. There was plenty of wild game and there
was no cause for anyone to go hungry. You could raise from fifty to one
hundred bushels of corn to the ears and not half farm it. We didn't have but
one turning plow and a Georgia stock to farm with when we settled here and
Mother and I dropped the corn by hand. We moved back to Texas in 1904, I now
live in Pauls Valley.
Transcribed for OKGenWeb by DAdreeemer@aol.com
April 2001.