Indian Pioneer Papers - Index
Indian Pioneer
History Project for Oklahoma
Date: February 14, 1938
Name:
Eliza Whitmire
Post Office: Estella,
Oklahoma
Date of Birth:
Place of Birth:
Father:
Place of Birth: Georgia
Information on father:
Mother:
Place of birth:
Information on mother:
Field Worker: James Carselowey
Vol. 75
Eliza Whitmire
Ex-slave woman
Estella, Oklahoma
Giving her experience
on the removal of the Cherokee form Georgia and other experience of Pre-War
days
My name is Eliza Whitmire.
I live on a farm, near Estella, where I settled shortly after the Civil
War and where I have lived ever since. I was born in slavery in the
state of Georgia, my parents having belonged to a Cherokee Indian of the
name of George SANDERS, who owned a large plantation in the old Cherokee
Nation, in Georgia. He also owned a large number of slaves but I
was too young to remember how many he owned.
I do not know the exact
date of my birth, although my mother told me I was about five years old
when President Andrew Jackson ordered General Scott to proceed to the Cherokee
country, in Georgia, with two thousand troops and remove the Cherokees
by force to the Indian Territory. This bunch of Indians were called
the Eastern Emigrants. The Old Settler Cherokees had moved themselves
in 1835 when the order was first given to the Cherokees to move out.
The Trail of Tears
The weeks that followed
General Scott’s order to remove the Cherokees were filled with horror and
suffering for the unfortunate Cherokees and their slaves. The women
and children were driven from their homes, sometimes with blows and close
on the heels of the retreating Indians came greedy whites to pillage the
Indians’homes, drive off their cattle, horses and pigs, and they even rifled
the graves for any jewelry, or other ornaments that might have been buried
with the dead.
Divided Into Detachments
The Cherokees, after being
driven from their homes, were divided into detachments of nearly equal
size and late in October, 1838, the first detachment started, the others
following one by one. The aged, sick and the young children rode
in the wagons, which carried the provisions and bedding, while others went
on foot. The trip was made in the dead of winter and many died from
exposure from sleet and snow, and all who lived to make this trip, or had
parents who made it, will long remember it, as a bitter memory.
Settled Near Tahlequah
When we arrived here from
Georgia my parents settled with their master, George Sanders, near Tahlequah,
or near the place where Tahlequah now is located, for at that time the
capital had not been established. I well remember the time when a
commission of three men were selected from the Illinois Camp Ground to
look out the location for a capital and when the date was set to meet at
a big spring, where the present town of Tahlequah now stands, there were
only two of the commissioners present. They waited and waited for
the third man to come, but finally gave him up and selected the site, on
account of the number of springs surrounding the town. I remember,
too, the great Inter-Tribal Council, which was held in Tahlequah in the
year of 1843, under the leadership of Chief John ROSS. My mother
assisted with the cooking at that gathering, while my duty was to carry
water to those at the meeting, from the near –by springs. About ten
years after we arrived in the Indian Territory I witnessed the erection
of the four little log cabins to house the officers of the Cherokee Government.
I have seen a dashing young slave boy acting as coachman for Chief John
Ross drive him in from his home, near Park Hill, and let him out at the
Capitol Square, where he would spend the day, at the little log cabins,
then the seat of government of the Cherokee tribe. The old square
was first surrounded by a rail fence, at that time, and many horses could
be seen tied there while their owners spent the day in the new Capitol.
I remember a few years after we arrived there, the Major General Ethan
Allen HITCHCOCK came here from Washington to hold a conference with Chief
John Ross and the Cherokee people, with reference to a new treaty, seeking
to pay the Cherokees for their loss and wrongs during their removal form
Georgia. This meeting was held under a big shed errcted in the center
of the square, and was attended by a large number of people. Chief
John Ross addressed the audience in English and Chief Justice BUSHYHEAD
interpreted it in Cherokee. The Government agreed to indemnifiy the
Indians for their losses but I am told that they now have claims filed
in the court of claims for some of this very money.
Moves to Lawrence, Kansas,
Before the Civil War
Immediately before the
Civil War broke out, between the states, George Sanders moved
to Lawrence, Kansas, taking all of his slaves with him, and remained there
until the war was over, and the slaves were set free. I well remember
the time when the Confederate guerilla under the leadership of Quantrill
burned the city of Lawrence in 1863. After the War was over my father
built the first bridge across the Kansas River, near the city of Lawrence.
After he completed the bridge he moved back to the Indian Territory, and
settled on the place where I am now living. We received allotments
under the Dawes Commission, and I allotted on the hold homestead, my father
having died long ago.
Knew Cherokee Bill
Cherokee Bill, famous
Indian outlaw, who once roamed the Indian Territory was well known to me,
and was captured on Big Creek, not over fifteen miles from my place.
He was reared near Ft. Gibson, and was a mulatto, his fatheer having
been a soldier at Ft. Gibson, and his mother was a negro. He had
two brothers, Luther and George GOLDSBY. Luther was at one time a
porter at he Cobb Hotel in Vinita. He was light enough to be a mixed-breed
Cherokee Indian but made no pretence of being other than a negro.
Cherokee Bill was bad from the time he was a young man. He started
first with the Cook Gang, which was pretty much of a terror in the Indian
Territory at that time. During the latter part of the 80’s or the
early part of the 90’s, while he was with this gang, they pulled several
train robberies and killed a great many people. During the early
part of their career these men robbed stage coaches and gradually became
worse, until they engaged freely in train and bank robberies and often
killed their victims. At one time, while Cherokee Bill was with them,
it was said they had planned to rob the Vinita Bank, which at that time
was located on the corner now the present site of the Cobb Hotel.
The robbery never occurred however and it was never really known, whether
they intended doing this.
Spinning and Weaving
Going back now, before
the Civil War, when our master lived on a farm down near Tahlequah, I will
tell you something about spinning and weaving. Every farm home, or
most of them owned an old time spinning wheel and during slave times it
was the duty of the slave women to do the spinning and weaving, and many
and old Indian woman, who was used to having slaves to do this work for
them learned the art and did this for themselves and for their entire family,
after we were set free. The Indian masters owned large flocks of sheep.
The negro men did the shearing, and the women washed the wool, carded it
into small bats and sorted it for quality, then spun it into threads, or
yarn. The finest quality was woven into goods to be used for the best clothes,
such as dresses and men’s clothes. The next quality was woven for
undergarments and clothes for the slaves. The very coarsest was knit
into socks, and that was a job of itself, for socks were woven out so fast,
that it required all the extra time in knitting. The old spinning
wheel could always be heard until late at night, buzzing and whizzing,
as two of the slaves worked to make the thread to be used in the next day
for weaving. The women were always vying with each other to see who
could make the smoothest and best thread.
Cotton
The South is noted for
its great cotton fields. Acres and acres were planted in this product
and the slaves, both men and women, were required to wrk in the fields.
It was hard work too, as the weather was always hot while it was growing
, and the picking came in the fall of the year, and all were required to
pick cotton. A lot of this was done by hand by the women folks and
it was a slow and tedious job, then it was carded and spun into cloth,
by the same method as was used in making up the wool. The cotton
cloth was used for so many things that wool could not be used for, that
someone was always spinning and weaving. “Linsey”was woven from goat’s
wool, and it was used for the coarsest cloth, as it was very warm, and
hard to wear out. “Jeans Cloth” was made from cotton, with a small
mixture of wool to give it warmth. This was the most durable of all
hand made goods.
Dyeing
All hand made goods were
dyed at home. We made excellent yellow dye from the inside bark of
the oak tree. Indigo was bought to dye blue. Different shades
were made, according to the dye used. Green was made form a mixture
of the blue and yellow dyes. Red was made from venitian. This
could be mixed with blue to make purple. A very pretty design could
be made by tying strings around the goods ever so often and wherever the
string was tied the goods would not dye, making a sort of pretty model
design. All sewing was done by hand, and some of the slaves were
very apt at this art and were usually kep busy at that trade.
Indian Masters Were Kind
While these old slave
days were trying, and we went through many hardships, our Indian masters
were very kind to us and gave us plenty of good clothes to wear and we
always had plenty to eat. I can’t say that I have been any happier
and contended, since I was free, than I was in those good old days when
our living was guaranteed, even though we had to work hard to get it.
Looking back over the time I have spent, since slave days, can see
that the colored race have had many ups and downs since bieng put on their
own footing, and I believe that a great manyh of them would have fared better
had they had their masters to feed them. It is true that there were
a few hard masters, and I have heard of a few who whipped their slaves
unmercifully, but they were few. Most of us slaves fared well and
many of them did not know what to do when set free, and they had a hard
time getting a start in life. Some of the slaves went back and worked
for their old masters for several years, rather than to try and make a
living, after being set free. The slaves, who belonged to the Cherokees
fared much better than the slaves who belonged to the white race, for the
reason that the Indian slaves who had left the states could come right
back to the Territory and settle on Indian land, and when allotment came
they gave us an equal right with them in land drawings. The United
States Government forced them to do this, I have been told.
Journalist’s Note:
This interview with this old slave woman was taken at a Homecoming in Vinita,
in 1935, when we were seeking to find the oldest person at the gathering.
We figured that she was a hundred and two years old at the time, having
been born possibly in 1833. I have heard since that she was dead
hence my old notes on her. James R. Carseloway
Transcribed for OKGenWeb by Samuel
Ford <samford@worldnet.att.net>
July 1999.