Indian Pioneer Papers - Index
Indian Pioneer History Project for Oklahoma
Date:
February 17,
1937
Name: Mr. Albert
Rennie
Post Office:
Residence Address: Pauls
Valley, Oklahoma
Date of Birth: January 3, 1863 ?
Place of
Birth: Ontario, Canada ?
Father:
Information on Father:
Mother:
Information on
Mother:
Field Worker: Maurice R. Anderson
(This interview on microfilm at the OU Western History
Collection is very faded and the first page is unreadable. The other
pages are very hard to read. If you have a clear copy of this interview
please send it so this interview may be completed. We start this reading
at the bottom of page 1)
A herd of cattle were driven from the vicinity of
White Bead Hill north and crossed the South Canadian River at or near the old
Arbuckle crosing. They were driven north past old Shawnee town and then
on past Sac and Fox Agency, where the trail lead northeast to Red(?)
Fork.
The shipping pens had not been completed at Red(?)
Fork and it was necessary for Mr. Rennie to hold the herd o the grass waiting
for the workmen to finish building them. While he was waiting another
herd of cattle arrived from the Whistler Ranch at Sac and Fox
Agency.
A storm on the night before the day they were to ship
stampeded both herds. Rennie's herd scattered. As it was a two or three
day job to gather them up, Mr. Rennie surrendered his first place to the
Whistler herd which was shipped first. Rennie's herd shipped over what is now
the Frisco to past St. Louis and sold through DALEY, MILLER and O????ANY,
commission agents. Mr. Rennie was gone from home on this trip three
months.
In 1885, Albert Rennie bought up 660 head of fat hogs
from the Bead (?) pens and drove them from White Bead hill to Lehigh.
Lehigh became a shipping point after a branch line was built there from Atoka,
Oklahoma. He had to wait shipment for ten days and feed these hogs
shelled corn which was shipped from Denison, Texas. There was a strike
on the ??aty railroad at this time and that was their railroad he was to ship
over.
The town of Whitebead was name after an old Indian
woman, who lived in a double log house on the hill and wore a string of white
beads around her neck, so that was why they called that place White Bead Hill,
according to early settlers.
Mr. Rennie said, Whitebead Hill started to building up
in the early seventy's, so it was in the seventy's that Major HERLON set James
Rennie up in the mercantile business. Their store was in this double log
house, where this old Indian woman lived. I think she was a Caddo
Indian. James Rennie worked up a good business there. Later he
built a frame store on the hill and from time to time he added __?__ on to
this until his building was __ feet long and 50 feet wide, well stocked with
general merchandise that would invoice around $40,000.00. He sold in
1894 to ?.?. STOWS(?) and John S. MYERS. G.C. ?OOKE, son-in-law of
Major Herlon was clerking for James Rennie at the time the sale was
made. James THOMPSON, a farmer who lived across the Washita River from
Whitebead Hill, furnished the money for a mercantile store and G.C. ?ooke ran
this store for him. The lumber for these buildings was hauled from
?.?. SCRATCHES plaining mill at Stoke, Oklahoma. The saw mill was at
Stringtown, north of Atoka on the ?, ?. & T. Railroad. It was in
1887 that the first trains came through Pauls Valley,
Oklahoma.
William S.(?) RANDOLPH owned a hotel at Whitebead
Hill. Jessie MOORE, his daughter had held the office of clerk of the Supreme
Court of Oklahoma. Riley BANDY(?) owned a boarding house at Whitebead
Hill, and he was a partner of ?.?. BAKER(?) in the livery
business.
White Bead Hill grew to be a large village; hotel,
blacksmith shop, carpenter shop, livery barn, a cotton gin was built there and
operated by Mr. BLANCH(?), later by ??? ?ARRY. The church that was built
there was the Methodist Church and conducted by J.C. HOWELL. Today
Whitebead is just another one of Oklahoma's ghost towns.
April 22, 1889, Albert Rennie and others made the run,
from the south bank of the South Canadian River. Mr. Rennie was on
horseback and located the town of Noble, Oklahoma. He was elected Mayor
and was also elected the first postmaster. He also was postmaster at
White Bead Hill. He was post master at both places at the same
time.
Mr. Rennie and several others had previously looked
over the country to be opened in 1889 and he decided that Noble would be a
very good location for a town because the Canadian river is narrow at that
place and this insured it would be easy to bridge the river
there.
However; when the bridge was built across the river it
was put at Purcell, probably in order to make the Saloons in Lexington more
accessible to the citizens of Purcell.
On May 2, 1890, United States Court was
established at
Muskogee in Indian Territory now Oklahoma. Having jurisdiction over the
Indian Territory in 1891, the territory was divided into three tri?ical
division with the honorable James M. SHACKELFORD holding court at Muskogee
Division , south McAlester division two, Ardmore division three. The
United States Clerks office at Ardmore being opened by Hon. ?.?. MATTHEWS,
and ?ownson M. FOSTER at South McAlester. Deputy ?uncer ?? NELSON
?? Muskogee. Albert Rennie was sworn in as citizen of the United States
and was appointed to the practice of law by Judge Shackelford of
Muskogee.
Mr. Rennie opened his law office at Purcell, Indian
Territory in 1890, afterwards he was appointed by Judge Shackelford as U.S.
Commissioner at Wewoka, Indian Territory. He took up his residence at
Ardmore, Indian Territory in 1892.
In 1893, Mr. Albert Rennie married Miss Laura Matthews
of Ardmore, a daughter of Hon. ?.?. Matthews. In 1895, they moved to
Pauls Valley, Oklahoma where a branch of the U.S. Court had been
located. Mr. Albert Rennie was secretary of the first republican
territorial organization and he always retained an important position on the
committees. His excellent ability as an organizer and his thorough
understanding of the ??? of the work have made him a leader and his influence
is widely and beneficially felt.
Mr. Rennie, attorney-at-law, now lives in Pauls Valley
where he has resided since 1895.
Submitted to OKGenWeb by
Brenda Choate <bcchoate@yahoo.com> November 2000.