Indian Pioneer Papers - Index
Indian Pioneer History Project for Oklahoma
Date: June 23,
1937
Name: Mr. Shade
Flowers
Post Office: Pauls Valley,
Oklahoma
Residence Address:
Date of Birth: 1872
Place of
Birth: Missouri
Father: James Flowers
Information on
Father:
Mother: Mary Johnson
Information on Mother:
Field Worker: Maurice R. Anderson
Interview
#4611
I was born in 1872 in Missouri. I came to the
Indian Territory in 1892. My uncle was living at Dougherty in the
Chickasaw Nation. I was living with my father and mother in Texas at the
time.
My uncle wrote and said he would give me a job if I
would come to the Territory, so I saddled up my horse and rode through to
Dougherty.
My uncle lived on a small farm. I helped him
farm and when we got the crop laid by we started in catching wild
horses. There were lots of them on Rock Creek, north of
Dougherty. We built a log corral with wings extending one on each
side and we would drive the horses into the corral and break them to ride or
sometimes just break them to lead and then we would sell
them.
I have sold horses for two to three dollars a
head. Some days we would catch five or six horses at one time and some
days we wouldn't have very good luck and would only get two or three. I
have sold horses to Noah LAEL at Wynnewood for two dollars a
head.
When I first came to Dougherty there was only one
store there.
My uncle, Levi FLOWERS and I started a small ranch.
We sold out our cattle in 1895. We had over five hundred head
when we sold out.
I moved on Rock Creek north of Sulphur and leased a
small place. I had to pay five dollars a year for a ten year lease.
I have sold corn for ten cents a bushel.
There was plenty of game at that time and if any one
went hungry, it was his own fault. I always had plenty of meat hung up
in the smoke house. There were plenty of wild hogs. If a hog
didn't have a mark on it, it was counted wild and anyone could kill
it.
I have made a good living hunting in the winter.
There were lots of coons, wolves, and now and then you could find a bear and
there were a few deer still in this country at that time.
There was one store at Sulphur then. I would buy
my supplies at this store. The nearest mill then was Mill Creek.
I would take corn to the mill there.
There wasn't as good farming land on Rock Creek as
there was around Pauls Valley. I moved to Pauls Valley and went to
raising corn, cotton, and wheat and I have made a hundred bushels of corn to
the acre and a bale of cotton to an acre.
I now live three miles south of Pauls
Valley.
Transcribed and submitted
by Brenda Choate < bcchoate@yahoo.com
> November 2000.