OKGenWeb
  Oklahoma Genealogy
 
   OKGenWeb Indian Pioneer Papers
   About 
Copies  Copyright  Index  Search  Submit  Transcribers
 
A B C D E F G H I J K L M Mc N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Indian Pioneer History Project for Oklahoma
Date: February 15, 1937
Name: Susan Riley Gott
Post Office: Muskogee, Oklahoma
Residence Address: 505 South 12th Street
Date of Birth: 1857
Place of Birth: near Fort Gibson, IT (transcriber)
Father: John McNary Riley
Place of Birth:
Information on father:
Mother: Nancy Ivey
Place of birth:
Information on mother:
Field Worker: Ms. Ella Robinson
Interview #:

Civil War Experiences of a Cherokee Woman

My grandparents were Betsie Merrill Riley, and John N. Riley. They were married in Georgia and came to the Indian Territory with the Cherokees during the immigration in 1838. My parents were John N. Riley, Jr. and Nancy Ivey Riley.

On their arrival to the territory my grandfather first settled near Park Hill on what was known as the Shelton place. My grandfather died there after a few years, and my mother with her children then moved to a home six miles east of Fort Gibson, Oklahoma. My grandparents were prosperous citizens at the beginning of the war. My grandmother owned a fine, well-improved farm house. She had numerous slaves and plenty of fine stock.

At the beginning of the war, in order to save as much of the property as possible, she, in company with her grandson John Jordan left for Texas taking her stock and some horses belonging to my mother. They managed after numerous delays to reach their destination. I was born in 1857, in the house formerly occupied by Eliza Ratchiff, who was killed by a Creek Indian boy. My father had previously bought the place from Mr. Ratcliff. The prints of Mrs. Ratcliff’s bloody hand were on the door when we lived there, and we children were always afraid that something like that might occur again.

At the beginning of the war my father was undecided for sometime as to which side of the conflict he wanted to join. He wanted to be true to his own people, and on the other hand did not want to fight against the Union. However, he joined the Northern forces and fought with them as long as he lived, which was only a few months when he was killed in battle. He had been home for only one visit. My mother felt that she had better stay at home and try to protect her home and stock instead of emigrating to Texas as so many of the Cherokees were doing at this time.

It perhaps was an unwise decision. While we were not molested in any way by either army, we were harassed and robbed by the “Pin Indians”. The Pins were an organization, composed principally of fullbloods whose sole business was to steel and pilfer all one had in the house and kill and drive off ones fat stock whenever they wanted it for food. The “Pin Indians” were not connected with either army although they are supposed to be known as loyal Indians and to be aligned to the Northern cause. They took their name from a little pin they wore, signifying their membership in this order. Not only did the Pin Indians take what fat stock they wanted but the United States Army stationed at Fort Gibson, also helped themselves to any beef cattle they wanted.

My mother lost heavily through them. She put in a claim for the cattle against the United States Government and several years after received pay for them. The women belonging to the Pins were just as bad, if not worse, than the men, as they ransacked the house. When the men made a raid, they ate all the food and drank all the milk they found. Once my mother had secured from source, material for a dress for herself. When she heard the Pins coming, she quickly rolled the dress which she was making at the time in her apron and picked up her baby and held him in her arms to hide the bundle under her arm.

As food was becoming scarce, with no crops being raised and stock being killed it was quite a problem to get a little food from day to day. I well remember my mother getting some corn from some source for bread. She would boil the corn on the cob until it was soft enough to grate, then she would grate it by hand on a home made grater, and that was what we had for bread. A grater was made by driving a nail in a piece of tin, just far enough to make a rough hole. When the tin was well covered with such nail holes it was beat and nailed to a board.

Before my grandmother left for Texas she had her old faithful negro servant take her prized possessions from the house and pack them in boxes and bury them. As she did not live to come home, and the old negro died, the things were never found. All of her hand woven counterpanes, quilts, table linens, and her silverware were buried.

As it was unsafe for a family to live alone in a house, everyone moved in with someone else for protection and company as there were no men left in the community. One old faithful negro man was left by my grandmother and he was of great help to us. My mother took us children and went to live in the home of Mrs. Mary West. Then she moved at the earnest request of Mrs. Lizzie Thompson, to live in Mrs. Thompson’s home.

The last raid that the Pin Indians made on my mother’s home, they killed one of her prize peafowls that she took such pride in. They decorated their hats with the feathers. The neighbors looked after one another as one family shared all they had, be it ever so little. My mother did washings for the U. S. Soldiers and received a little money that way, which she carefully spent for things that she could not provide.

The wild varmints had increased with such rapidity and become so numerous and ferocious that we children always managed to get the wood and water before sun-down for we could always see foxes and wolves skulking around in the dark.

Once a large grey fox came up on our back porch in search of food, and we had no shutter on the door, we did not sleep very comfortably that night. They made nightly raids on the chickens and finally in desperation, mother put the chickens in a vacant run attached to the house, and in that way, we managed to keep them. I will never forget how I suffered from the fright. When my mother and the other woman in the house, had to go to Fort Gibson to buy a little food and I would be left alone with the younger children, and when they would return they would find us all crying together just from fright.

When John Jordan, my mothers nephew, came back from Texas where he had gone with our grandmother he gave my grandmother’s home to my mother as her part of the property. He bought her a horse and three milk cows, and with a beginning like that, we were able to make a small crop and a fine garden. Again we had a variety of food, and plenty of it. That was at the end of the War.

It was several years after the close of the war, that the schools were reopened, and there were no church services held for a long time. Brother Using, a Methodist circuit rider from across the Arkansas line at Evansville, was one of the first ministers to hold services in our community.

Many things have occured through the years of my long life that have occupied my memory, but nothing will ever erase the memory of the terrible days we lived through during those four trying years.

My mother lived to the age of 65. I was married to John B. Gott in 1873 and am the mother of 12 children, eight of whom are living. I lived in the house where I was married until I moved to Muskogee. I still own a part of the home place, and my daughter, Mrs. Margurite Huckleberry owns a part.

Comment of transcriber:  Note the mention of the grandparents John N. Riley and Betsie Merrill Riley in the first paragraph of the interview. Interviewee has mixed the grandparents on both sides. The John N. Riley cited is a John Riley, son of Samuel Riley, and father to John McNary Riley, interviewee’s father. Interviewee’s maternal grandmother was Elizabeth (Merrell) Ivey, not Riley. I could also speculate that the Lizzie Thompson cited in this interview was the widow of Nelson Riley, also a son of Samuel Riley who likely died prior to 1851. Lizzie Thompson’s mother was a Nancy Merrell.

Transcribed and contributed to OKGenWeb by Gerry Lehmann" < gerrylehmann@earthlink.net >, June 2003.

OKGenWeb Notice: These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or presentation by any other organization or persons. Presentation here does not extend any permissions to the public. This material may not be included in any compilation, publication, collection, or other reproduction for profit without permission.

The creator copyrights ALL files on this site. The files may be linked to but may not be reproduced on another site without specific permission from the OKGenWeb Coordinator, and their creator. Although public information is not in and of itself copyrightable, the format in which they are presented, the notes and comments, etc. are. It is, however, permissible to print or save the files to a personal computer for personal use ONLY.
 


© All Rights Reserved

Updated:  08 Apr 2008