Indian Pioneer Papers - Index
Indian Pioneer
History Project for Oklahoma
Date: February 24, 1938
Name:
Charles William Scheihing
Post Office: Guthrie,
Oklahoma
Residence address:
R. R. #6
Date of Birth: December
10, 1865
Place of Birth: Wurttenburg,
Germany
Father: John Scheihing
Place of Birth: Germany
Information on father:
Mother: Dorothy Monk
Place of birth: Germany
Information on mother:
Field Worker: Mildred
B. McFarland
pages 395-397
I was three years of age
when my parents brought me to America from Germany. Father bought a farm
near Burlington, Iowa. We lived there until 1891 when I decided to come
to Oklahoma. It had been opened two years then. I bought a relinquishment
from Mr. Ward RICHEY five and a half miles south and a half mile west of
Guthrie.
There was a little one
roomed log cabin and a well on the place. We did not bring anything with
us except some bedding. There was an old rusty stove in one corner and
we patched it up and made it do. I made a table, bed and corner cupboard
out of old boards and logs. Our chairs were old stumps of trees. We bought
a team of horses and a plow. I got about ten acres of land cleared the
first year. I planted it in oats and Kaffir corn. The first three years
were failures. We raised enough from our garden to barely keep us alive.
We had nothing for months except sweet potatoes and cornbread. When these
things gave out we ate boiler Kaffir corn. I would cut wood all one day
and haul it to town the next. Sometimes I received $1.50 and other
times 75 cents for a load of wood.
I always had to take groceries
in pay.
I made the children a
cradle of a dry goods box with barrel staves for rockers. One winter it
was so cold that we almost froze to death. Our babies’ feet froze and as
they had no shoes we wrapped their feet in gunny sacks. [The children were
Heinrich William (Henry William), born in Burlington, IA, 31 Dec 1890;
and Ada Louise, born in Guthrie, OK, 13 May 1893.]
The Indians never bothered
us - only to sell us wild turkey and deer meat.
There was a little log
schoolhouse about one and a half miles from our place. We attended church
every Sunday at the Lutheran Church in Guthrie. We always drove in a covered
wagon.
Ma helped me in the fields
every day. We would take our two children with us, making a bed for them
in the wagon. The second year we harvested fifty bushels of peanuts. My
wife baked bread and washed and ironed for two bachelors who lived close
to us. The money they paid her kept us in groceries for a while. We have
worked hard for what we have and have gone through many hardships, but
have been very happy.
[The log cabin Grandpa
Scheihing mentioned in the second paragraph above is still standing.]
Submitted by Dr.
Ned H. Benson <nbenson@stjohnschurch.org>
10-1999.