Indian Pioneer Papers - Index
Indian Pioneer History Project for Oklahoma
Date: August 10, 1937
Name: J. E. Suggs, Jr.
Post Office:
Residence Address: Wynnewood, Oklahoma
Date of Birth: 1861
Place of Birth: Texas
Father: L. S. Suggs
Place of Birth: South Carolina
Information on father:
Mother: Martha Traylor
Place of birth: South Carolina
Information on mother:
Field Worker: Maurice R. Anderson
Interview #8294
I came to the Indian
Territory in 1890 and settled at Wynnewood in the Chickasaw Nation. I
went to work for W. H. Swinford, who owned a dry goods store at Wynnewood.
There were just a few houses
at Wynnewood at that time. The land on which the largest part of the
town stands now was in corn at the time I came here.
Pauls Valley and Wynnewood,
at that time, were trading points for people for miles around, People
from as far east as Old Stonewall did their trading at Wynnewood. I have
kept the store open some nights until midnight waiting on people from
Stonewall who would get into Wynnewood late and would want to start home that
night.
During the summer when it was
hot, people from far off would travel at night.
There was a little town about
five miles south of Wynnewood called Washita, where there were two stores, a
blacksmith shop and a few houses. I have heard old settlers say that the
little town called Washita did a good business before the railroad came
through this part of the country. That was before they started building
Wynnewood.
John Walner was the first man
to put in a store at Wynnewood. He owned a store at Cherokee Town about
four miles north of Wynnewood. After the railroad came through, Cherokee
Town was done away with.
The Masons at Pauls Valley
bought one of the buildings and moved it to Pauls Valley. John Walner
moved his store to Wynnewood and the name of the post office at Cherokee Town
was changed to the name of Wynnewood.
It was called Wynnewood for
two surveying engineers who surveyed the railroad through here.
When I came to Wynnewood
there was lost of corn and small grain raised, but very little cotton.
It was in 1893 that the first big cotton crop was raised. There
were about three thousand bales ginned at Wynnewood. Corn was selling
from ten to fifteen cents a bushel and cotton was about five cents a pound
after it was ginned.
There was a regiment of
Chickasaw Militia which would come around once a year and charge five dollars
for a permit to live in the Indian Territory.
I was a good friend to John
Walner and he was a United States Marshal and the Indian police were at
Wynnewood. So he told me how to keep from paying the whole five dollars
a year. He said, "When the militia come around just pay them one
dollar and get a two month's permit. They will not come back again until
the next year." Mr. Walner said that it did not make much
difference as the Government did not get very much of the money anyway.
Before the court was
established at Pauls Valley, court was held at Paris, Texas.
There were several killings
in the early days at Wynnewood and in that day and time if we saw that there
was gong to be a killing, we would walk off so that we would not have to be a
witness, but when John Walner killed Bill Lewis, I did not have time to get
away and had to be a witness to the killing. That was when the court was
being held at Pauls Valley. John Walner was later killed by his nephew,
Bob Walner.
Jimmie Gardner, Matt Wolfe
and Noah Lael were big cattle owners when I came to Wynnewood.
I now live at Wynnewood,
where I am the Justice of Peace.
Transcribed for OKGenWeb by
Brenda Choate.