Indian Pioneer Papers - Index
Indian Pioneer History Project for Oklahoma
Date: April 10, 1937
Name: Mrs. Amanda (James) Smith
Post Office:
Residence Address: Pauls Valley, Oklahoma
Date of Birth: October 8, 1895
Place of Birth: Calhoun, Indian Territory
Father: Ellis James
Place of Birth: Choctaw Nation, Indian Territory
Information on father:
Mother: Sealy Mackey
Place of birth: Choctaw Nation, Indian Territory
Information on mother:
Field Worker: Maurice R. Anderson
Interview #1108
I am a full blood Choctaw
Indian. My mother had her own mall and mortar for beating corn. I
used to help her fix "Tomfullah". She would beat the corn in
the wooden mortar and after fanning the husks out of it until it was clean she
would soak as much as she thought she would need and put meat in with it and
boil it. We used pork meat. Then we would put some of the corn in
a stone jar with water over it and set it close to the fireplace and let it
sour. This was called 'sofka'.
My mother made some of our
medicine. If we were sick, she would use a paste made of persimmon and
flour baked for a laxative and give us a small amount when needed. For
colds or croup, she would use broom-weed roots boiled and take the juice and
sweeten it with brown sugar or honey to suit the taste.
I remember one time, my
sister and two brothers and I built a big fire and caught some dry land
terrapins, roasted and ate them. As they tried to crawl off we would
throw them back on the fire with a stick. When they were roasted we
would take the hull off and eat the meat. I don't know why we did this.
My mother always had plenty on the table to eat.
I didn't get to go to school
much. The little schooling I did get was after 1907 when we moved to
Pauls Valley. I went to Klondike school five miles southwest of Pauls
Valley.
I don't know much about my
tribe and I never asked my mother about the Indian customs. I have heard
my older Indian friends tell about the old days and what they did and the
things they saw. If what they say is true, I know that they had a hard
life.
I have always had plenty of
clothes to wear and plenty to eat. I grew up in and around Pauls Valley.
I married Mr. H.W.
Smith, a white man, in March 1913. We have lived either in Pauls Valley
or on my homestead, six miles southwest of Pauls Valley ever since we were
married.
Transcribed for OKGenWeb by
Brenda Choate.