Indian Pioneer Papers - Index
Indian Pioneer
History Project for Oklahoma
Date: July 31, 1937
Name:
F. W. Keith
Post Office: Muskogee,
Oklahoma
Date of Birth:
Place of Birth:
Father:
Place of Birth:
Information on father:
Mother:
Place of birth:
Information on mother:
Field Worker: Florence
L Phillips
They lived in the John
Kettle Settlement, two miles east of Briartown. Some of the settlers
there were; Thom SUNDAY, John WICKETT, (unreadable), Buzzard FLOPPER, Freeman
KEITH, Chas. MCCLURE, Henry MCCLURE, Bob MCCLURE, Bill MCCLURE, Bill PHILLIPS,
Ellis BROWN, Frost SKIMMER, and Tom STARR. These families moved into
the Kettle Settlement about 1880.
They hunted and fished,
killing game such as. . . deer, turkey, prairie chicken and squirrels.
Wolves were plentiful too, they came to the cabins at night.
The McClures were from
Georgia, “Southern Gentlemen,” about one-eight Cherokee. Freeman
Keith’s mother was a McClure. Bill Phillips was English, Cherokee
and Spanish. He married Jossie McClure, sister of the above mentioned
McClure brothers.
There was a little log
school-house there in 1880 and the log house is still standing on Ruth
Starr’s allotment. It was there, Indian pastors held services.
The Indian pastors had
no interpreter and those that attended did so with devotion. The Indians
came to church in different dress. Some came with Indian costumes,
especially the men. The women wore large shawls and no head dress.
Just before time for services
to begin you could see the Indians coming from all directions. The
men with bows and arrows, some with single barrel rifles, some with knives
in their belts, some with blow guns made from large canes through which
arrows were blown by the mouth. Their songs in the Indian language were
beautiful, the Indians singing all parts in perfect harmony. After
church services were over, they went quietly home.
The Indian baptismal rites
were always held at the slough - a beautiful pond. Some of the Indians
came on foot, some in wagons, some drifted quietly down in canoes to the
place where the rites were being held. During the first baptizing
Keith attended it gave him a thrill. John KETTLE, old and gray, came
paddling silently around a bend in his dark brown canoe in Indian dress
and gay feathers. He stopped about fifty feet from where they were,
resting his chin on his clasped hands. After the rites were over,
he paddled on his way as silently as he came.
Their amusements were
corn-stalk shooting and dances, stomp dances and the old puncheon-floor
dancing. The puncheon floor dance was called such because the floors
of the cabins were made of split logs flat or split sides planed down and
turned uppermost. Two would step out facing each other, standing
on one puncheon. Then the music started, which more often was minus
a violin but composed of the pans which they beat with a stick and everybody
kept time to the dance by hand-clapping. The steps were something like
the steps to the old break down music, and some of the Indian stomp dance.
They had to dance up and down, back and forth, never passing each other
on the puncheon.
The South Canadian River
was the boundary lines between our settlement and the Choctaw Nation.
Their drinking water
was hauled or carried from a large spring near the settlement, which was
later named the McClure Springs.
Kettle was an Indian prophet,
prophesying many things that later came true.
Isaac MONEY was our first
postmaster living at what is now Briartown, Oklahoma, and about two and
one-half miles west of the Kettle Settlement.
Uncle John WEST, father
of Ellis and Dick West of Muskogee, was the first United States Marshall
at Briartown near the Kettle Settlement and Bill West, his brother was
deputy.
During those times the
law breakers of Canadian District were tried at Webbers Falls. When the
white people broke the laws, they were taken to Fort Smith, tried and punished
or released. When an Indian of the Cherokee Nation was found guilty
by trial, he was sentenced and sent to Tahlequah to be imprisoned.
When put to work, they were put in the chain gang.
The Old Buffalo Trail
runs near our settlement, through what is known as Uncle Tom Starr’s place.
The trail is visible, coming from the west on down across the Canadian
River.
There was a salt ground
known as Deer Lick and a salt spring northwest of our settlement.
There the Indians boiled the water down, getting salt for home consumption
and the deer lick furnished plenty of salt for the cattle.
The Kettle Ferry was the
only ferry known then where you crossed to the Choctaw Nation. This
ferry was owned by John KETTLE, near the settlement. The ford, known
as Rocky Ford was at the Kettle Ferry where the water was low. There
was another ferry about a mile from the Kettle Ferry known as the Hoyt
Ferry, owned by Babe HOYT, a Choctaw. Many people were drowned at
these ferries and Rocky Ford.
The ceremonial grounds
were on top of Briartown Mountain. There is a large cleared place
on top. In the center stands a lone tree. There the Indians
met from miles around to hold their secret business and for ceremonial
affairs. The Ke-too-Wah Society was led by Tom Starr.
The most valuable timber
near our settlement was walnut.
The trading posts for
Briartown was Fort Smith and Webber Falls.
Oxen were used in those
days to plow the fields and for travel. The McClures owned some horses,
mules and oxen.
Wolves were a menace during
that time, killing hogs, calves and young colts. They ran in packs
and were dangerous to man. Doors and windows had to be securely barred
at night to protect human life.
The Indians received payments
from the Government during that time known as “bread money.” The
payments were not to exceed $10.00 per head.
The politics were the
National and Downing Party.
The mail was brought to
the settlement by carrier on horseback.
Transcribed for OKGenWeb by Wanda
Elliott <jwdre@intellex.com> October
1999.
Additional information
submitted by Karen West Sanchez <dksanchez@earthlink.net>, March 2001
In regards to this interview about the Kettle Settlement and the lawmen that
lived there - there is mention of "Uncle John West, father of Ellis and
Dick West of Muskogee". His brother, the deputy was not named Bill - his
name was Franklin Pierce West. He is the man responsible for killing Sam
Starr. He was also killed by Sam at the same time - December 17, 1886 at a
Christmas party in Whitefield.