Indian Pioneer Papers - Index
Indian Pioneer History Project for Oklahoma
Date: April 23,
1937
Name: Mr. O. J.
Denson
Post Office: Wynnewood,
Oklahoma
Residence Address:
Date of Birth: 1859
Place of Birth:
Georgetown, Texas
Father: R.K. Denson,
Information on
Father: born in
Alabama in 1824, Stockman and Farmer
Mother: Rebekah Thermond Denson,
Information on Mother: born in Arkansas in 1827
Field Worker: John
Daugherty
Interview #1303
My name is O. J. DENSON. I was born in
1859 in Georgetown, Texas. My parents were R. K. Denson and Rebekah
Thermond Denson. My father was born in Alabama in 1824. When he
was a child his parents moved to Mississippi and here he was reared.
Mother was born in Arkansas in 1827. I have five brothers and seven
sisters.
Father was a farmer and stockman until he moved to
Georgetown, Texas. Here he ran a hotel.
I was married in 1880 to Sarah OWENS who was born in
St. Louis, Missouri in 1861. I am the father of nine children; three
boys and six girls.
I had a brother living near Springer, so I decided to
move there too, in 1894. We came in covered wagons. My
brother-in-law was in one and I in the other. Our families were with
us. It took us thirteen days to make the trip.
Our first home was a log cabin with two rooms.
It had a dirt floor and was heated with a fireplace. We lived one mile
south of Springer on Buzzard Creek. We had to haul our water from
a dug well a mile away.
I raised cotton and livestock. I lived here two
years and moved close to Cumberland Hill on the Washita on Governor Ben
BURNEY's place. He was a full blood Choctaw and one of the finest men I
ever knew.
I hadn't lived here long until I discovered we were in
a settlement of desperadoes and cattle thieves. I was watched
constantly. I could never ride away without being shadowed and they
would come to my house at night and peek in to see what we were doing. I
later found out that they thought that I was a government spy. One
woman asked me if I was there to get her husband. He had committed a
crime in the east and moved here to escape punishment by law. I lived
here two years during which time I raised cattle, hogs and corn.
I had many friends among the full bloods, some of them
being Governor Ben Burney of the Chickasaws, Thomas and I. Hunter PICKINS,
John BROWN and his wife, Frank and Ben COLBERT, and George
HOLLAND.
One day I was feeling rather discouraged. The
thieves were stealing all I had and I was sitting on a log whittling when some
one rode up behind me. It was a full blood named Pickins. I just set
there and so did he for what seemed to me many minutes. At last he got
down off his pony and came and sat on the log with me. I spoke to him
but he only grunted. He sat there for a long time and a last said,
"Mebbe so see cabin over there". I nodded. "Mebbe so move there and stay
as long as you like". So I moved to Tom Pickin's place, which was a log
house with a dirt floor and no chimney. so I built a cat chimney with
sticks, dirt, ashes and grass. The frame was built by putting four
posts, one at each corner of the chimney. It was latticed with split
sticks from top to bottom. Then cat tails consisting of dirt, grass,
ashes mixed with water are hung on to each lattice and plastered on the stick
inside and out.
I lived here for four years and moved to Pauls Valley
where I lived until my wife died, and since then I have lived with my son
Finis near Sulphur.
My grandfather made an agreement with the United
States Government to move the Choctaw Indians to Boggy Depot near Durant, over
the Trail of Tears, in 1838. I have heard my father tell of the terrible
suffering and many deaths along the Trail of Tears.
My mother's grandfather named PENNINGTON was reared
among the Indians of Mississippi. He was so well thought of among them
that they held a Choctaw Cry at his grave when he died.
Submitted to OKGenWeb by
Brenda Choate <bcchoate@yahoo.com> November 2000.