Indian Pioneer Papers - Index
Indian Pioneer History Project for Oklahoma
Date: September 24, 1937
Name: Mr. Dixie Smith
Post Office:
Residence Address: Wynnewood, Oklahoma
Date of Birth: 1860
Place of Birth: Chickasaw Nation, Indian Territory
Father: Bonnie Smith
Place of Birth: Mississippi
Information on father:
Mother: Nancy Robb
Place of birth: Choctaw Nation, Indian Territory
Information on mother:
Field Worker: Maurice R. Anderson
Interview #4613
I was born at a place near
where Durant is now and I located in the Chickasaw Nation in 1860. My
father was owned by Mr. Jim Colbert who was a Chickasaw. My mother was
owned by Serena Robb, a Choctaw. My parents both died when I was
one year old, according to my grandfather on my father's side.
My first remembrance of
things was in 1865 right after the War.
My grandfather and
grandmother stayed on this big farm and farmed for themselves until I was
eight years old. I remember one morning we all loaded into one wagon, my
grandparents and two other families named Harper and Allen. We
camped about a mile south from a log store called Cherokee Town, located on
the Washita River in the Chickasaw Nation. We camped by a big spring and
my grandfather and Mr. Harper and Mr. Allen went to hauling logs to build
houses with and in about ten days they had three log houses built with dirt
floors. They covered there log houses with logs first, then they took
dirt and put on top of the logs.
There were several big
springs within two miles around and there were about three to four hundred
Comanche and Kiowa Indians camped at these springs and there was one log store
at Cherokee Town owned by John Sherley. This store was called a
trading post for the people who lived around here.
The first year I was here I
only saw one white man. There were several negroes living around on the
prairie, but most of the people whom I saw were Indians and before I found out
what kind of Indians they were I called them the blanket Indians as they
always wore blankets around them and had on beaded moccasins. There were
many Cherokees living around Cherokee Town, who were lighter in color than the
Comanches and Kiowas.
According to Mr. Sherley,
Cherokee Town was named for the Cherokee Indians who didn't want to fight and
took refuge here on the Washita River where John Sherley built the first
store. This store was at Cherokee Town before we came. It was an old
store and from the look of the logs I would say that it was about fifteen
years old when I came here in the latter part of 1868.
There was a Government man
who issued meat and other things to the Cherokee, Comanche and Kiowa Indians
at Cherokee Town when I came here. My grandfather was part Chickasaw and I
could speak the Chickasaw language. I would go to the Comanche camp and
try to talk to the Comanches but I couldn't understand their language.
They talked with their hands quite a bit.
I have cooked meat over the
same fire with the Comanches. They would have long sticks sharpened at
one end and they would put these sticks through pieces of the meat and hold
them over the fire until the meat got hot enough for the blood to ooze out,
then they would eat it. I would roast my piece of meat until it was
done.
Roasting and cooking outside
the house was not new to me as my grandmother did all our cooking out in the
yard over a home-made fire place. My grandfather dug out a small pit and
walled it up with clay and this is what my grandmother used for a stove for a
long time.
Grandfather did some farming.
He had about three acres of corn and the second year we lived here he put in
some wheat. The nearest mill was at Cyrus Harris' place at old Mill
Creek, about thirty miles from here. Mr. Harris also owned a wheat
grinder.
In the winter time
Grandfather and I would hunt. We would kill coon and deer and take their
hides to Dension, Texas, and we would take deer hams too. We sold deer
hams for 25 cents each and thought that was a good price. The
reason my grandfather would take our furs to Denison, Texas was so that he
could get a keg of whiskey.
We could have sold our furs
at Caddo, but this was in the Indian Territory and there was no whiskey there.
We had to watch out for the United States Marshal when we started back home
from Denison. Grandfather would put the keg of whiskey in the bottom of
the wagon, and stack what groceries and things we had bought on top of it. We
were stopped by the United states Marshals several times but they never
searched the wagon. They wold say, "Have you got any 'likker' with
you, negro?" and Grandfather would shake his head and the marshals would
go on and we wouldn't be stopped any more on that trip.
The first freight wagon came
from Caddo to Fort Sill in 171. There were two wagons and two white men
and they were driving four yoke of oxen and they came within about fifty yards
of our house. I don't know what they were hauling, but they had
both wagons loaded and in about two weeks they came back by and from that time
on every now and then there would be a wagon train, sometimes with five or six
wagons in a line, and in about four months after this first wagon went by our
house, one day a stage coach came by which had four horses hooked to it and
the driver was sitting up on top. And they carried the baggage on top
just like the busses do today.
I went to school at Fort
Arbuckle for two years, 1874 and 1875. The Government had a mission
school there and I boarded there. I don't know whether my grandfather
had to pay for me going to school or not.
I hauled freight from Caddo
to Fort Sill in 1876. I drove five yoke of steers and the wagon train I
was with had twenty wagons in it.
Mr. John Batchels had the
contract from the Government to carry the mail on his stage. I have seen
Mr. Noah Lael drive up and down this stage line in his buggy, shoeing horses
and before he died he was the richest man in this part of the country.
He worked hard and he was a good manager. He married the daughter of
ex-Governor Harris.
I helped Mr. Bill Guy haul
freight for two years. I drove one wagon and Mr. Guy drove the other
wagon. Later he was made Governor of the Chickasaw Nation. Mr. Guy
used to tell me jokes an sing songs around our camp fire at night while we
were on one of these drives.
I knew Frank and Jesse James.
They were at one time working with the Oklahoma Territory freight outfit and
one day while I was at Cherokee town, I heard the United States Marshall was
looking for them and the next time the Oklahoma Territory outfit came by,
Frank and Jesse James were not with it. They had left this part of the
country.
I helped lay the railroad
from the place where it crossed Rush Creek near Pauls Valley to Purcell.
The crew working north beat the crew working south to Purcell by the length of
two rails. I was standing there when the big railway officials
came up in their carriage driving four white horses and watched them drive the
silver spike. This was on the fourth day of May, 1887.
The next day I came back home
and went to fencing up land around here and building log houses on this land.
I wrote to some of my friends in Louisiana and had them come out here and farm
for me. At that time you owned all the land you could fence.
In 1895, Zach Allen and I
built a school for negroes. It was a boarding school in a two story building
with a basement and it cost us $3,000.00. We got four white women
to take charge of it and it was called Bethesda Mission.
I now live within one mile of
the place where my grandfather settled when we came here. The old stage
line is still visible in places and it used to pass within about a hundred
yards of the house where I now live, which is about two miles northeast of
Wynnewood.
At one time I was worth
$100,000.00, but today I live off the old age pension check and whatever money
I can make farming.
Transcribed for OKGenWeb by
Brenda Choate.