Indian Pioneer Papers - Index
Indian Pioneer History Project for Oklahoma
Date: April 13, 1938
Name: John C. Starnes
Post Office:
Residence Address: Pauls Valley, Oklahoma
Date of Birth: March 8, 1861
Place of Birth: Missouri
Father: J. K. Starnew
Place of Birth: Tennessee
Information on father:
Mother: Millie Coffman
Place of birth: Tennessee
Information on mother:
Field Worker: Maurice R. Anderson
Interview #10446
I was born in 1861 in
Missouri. I settled on a farm near Mangum in 1888 and built a dugout.
Mangum at that time was only a cow camp. Just a small place with a few
stores.
After settling there I hauled
freight for the stores there and have helped drive cattle from there to
Kansas, in which way I made money so I could improve my farm.
Mangum then belonged to Texas
or Texas claimed that part of the country but later it was taken over by the
Government and became part of the Indian Territory.
I improved my farm and lived
there about eight years when I sold out and came and settled on a farm I
rented from Amos Waite on Rush Creek near Pauls Valley.
Then Pauls Valley was nothing
but a mud hole but it was the trading point for many miles around, people from
as far east as old Stonewall coming to Pauls Valley to do their trading.
The Federal Court was
established at Pauls Valley in 1895. I remember in the first term of
court held here there were about fifty men sent to prison at Leavenworth,
Kansas. These men were driven down the street like a bunch of cattle and
loaded on the train.
The main street in Pauls
Valley then was called Smoky Row. There were no brick buildings then,
only wooden shacks and there were eating places and many gambling places.
There was not very much
cattle stealing then but here was plenty of horse staling. I lost
several good horses that I never heard tell of again.
The first telephone system
was established in Pauls Valley about 1899 and Cam Gault was in charge of it.
There had been a telephone line run from Pauls Valley to Center before that
date. After the railroad was built through Pauls Valley it became a
shipping point for the little inland towns and that was why the telephone line
was built from Pauls Valley to center so the merchants could call up and find
out if their freight had come in. Before that they had to come to Pauls
Valley and sometimes stay three or four days waiting for it to arrive.
A place called McGee then
located about two miles north of where Stratford in now was a nice little town
in the early days. After the branch railroad line was built from Purcell
through where Stratford is, the town of McGee died and there is nothing there
today.
According to the old settlers
who lived around here when I came here, old Cherokee Town was a nice little
place having a hotel, two stores and a blacksmith shop, and the stageline that
went through here had a barn to keep their horses in, as the horses that were
worked on the stage were changed at Cherokee Town, but after the railroad was
built through this country, Cherokee Town died and there is nothing there
today only part of the old rock ford.
There was still a lot of deer
and turkey in this country when I came here.
Corn was the main crop raised
then. It was very cheap but the cattlemen who had large feeding pens
along the river would buy all the corn we would have to sell and this land was
very rich then. I have raised from seventy to one hundred bushels to the
acre.
After settling a Pauls
Valley, I married Maggie Austin, the daughter of L.C. Austin, one of Pauls
Valley's early pioneer farmers.
Transcribed for OKGenWeb by
Brenda Choate.