Indian Pioneer Papers - Index
Indian Pioneer History Project for Oklahoma
Date: February 10, 1938
Name: J. A. Stokes
Post Office:
Residence Address: Pauls Valley, Oklahoma
Date of Birth: September 22, 1866
Place of Birth: Mississippi
Father: John Strokes
Place of Birth: North Carolina
Information on father:
Mother: Mary Ann Wells
Place of birth: Mississippi
Information on mother:
Field Worker: Maurice R. Anderson
Interview #9968
I was born in 1866, in
Mississippi, and came to the Indian Territory in 1890, locating first at
Thackerville in the Chickasaw Nation.
I had been raised on a farm
back in Mississippi, although I had taught school for a few years in that
state before coming to the Indian Territory.
After settling at
Thackerville, I went to work on a farm and had started my first crop in the
Territory when a man named Luther Mikler, whom I had known back in
Mississippi, came to me and wanted me to take over the school at Thackerville.
There wasn't much of a school
at Thackerville then. They would have trouble with the teacher and were
unable to keep a teacher, as there were several boys going to that school who
made it very hard for a teacher to stay. Mr. Mikler told me just what I
would have to contend with and said if I would take the school, he would see
that my crop was taken care of. So I took over the school and being a
young man and very husky, I decided I would teach the boys who had been
breaking up the school a lesson. I found out that it wasn't so
much the boys fault that they couldn't keep a teacher.
I was to receive $1.00 per
month from each scholar who attended, but it was very little I received while
I was teacher, and if Mr. Mikler hadn't worked my crop for me, I would have
been broke at the close of the school.
I finished teaching there
that year, then I quit and went to work as bookkeeper for Bridges and Davis,
who were in the general merchandise business.
There were no saloons at
Thackerville but the men would go to Gainesville, Texas, and get their whiskey
and on Saturday there would be plenty of drunken fights. Every man
who wanted to, carried a pistol but I never saw anyone get killed.
While I was working there on
Saturday nights, we would have several robberies. There was a train that
came from Gainesville at about ten o'clock on Saturday night and men who had
been in Texas after whiskey and who came in on the ten o'clock train would get
held up and robbed of what money and whiskey they had. Several
farmers had also been robbed after selling their cotton in Texas and while
bringing the money home. We only had United States Marshals in that time
and they were few. One night R.J. Nichols, one of our early day settlers
at Thackerville, was robber of quite a sum of money after he had sold some
cotton in Texas and before reaching home, he was held up and his money taken,
but this didn't stop him. He unhooked one of his horses from the wagon
and followed the robbers to their hide-out and as soon as he had located it,
he came to town and organized a posse. There were ten or twelve or us.
The robbers hide-out was over
on the Decker farm, so we rode over there and stopped in front of the house,
and R.J. Nichols went to the door and knocked. The men ran out the
back door and escaped, but after getting the door open we found several
pallets made down on the floor and one woman in the house. It turned out
that it was an old man and his four sons who had been doing the robbery, so we
made a hangman's noose out of a rope and gave it to the woman and told her
that was what her husband and sons were going to get if they were there the
next night. That put a stop to our robberies at Thackerville.
The store I was working at
burned down in the fall of 1892 and I moved to Davis and went to work for
Ellis and Ferguson as clerk in their general store.
I worked for them until 1906,
at which time I moved to Pauls Valley and took the job of managing the retail
store for J.C. Penny and Company, and worked at this until 1928.
I still live in Pauls Valley
where I have lived since 1906.
Transcribed for OKGenWeb by
Brenda Choate.