Indian Pioneer Papers - Index
Indian Pioneer History Project for Oklahoma
Date:
November 22,
1937
Name: Mrs. Betty
Young
Post Office:
Residence Address: Maysville,
Oklahoma
Date of Birth: March 4, 1852
Place of Birth: Virginia
Father:
J. B. Merriman
Information on Father: born in Virginia
Mother:
Amanda Wortz
Information on Mother: born in Virginia
Field Worker:
Maurice R. Anderson
Interview # 9313
I was born in 1852 in Virginia. My mother died in
1860, leaving four children, two boys and two girls. We children lived
with our father on his small farm in Virginia until the Civil War
started.
My father went to serve in the war and my sister and I
went to live with our grandfather at Roanoke, Virginia, while the two boys
were sent to our uncle who was living in Texas. My father died soon
after the war and I lived with my grandfather until I was grown.
In 1889 I went to Texas to live with my youngest brother
who owned a large cattle ranch at that time and I stayed at his ranch one
year.
My cousin, Mr. P. M. EDDS, was living at Beef Creek in
the Chickasaw Nation. He wrote asking me to visit him and so in 1890 I
left Texas for the Indian Territory on the train. My cousin met me at
Pauls Valley and I went to live with him on his farm at Beef Creek, now
Maysville.
I found out later why my cousin wanted me to come and
visit him; it was so that I could meet his old friend, which was just what I
did.
His friend was John YOUNG who owned a blacksmith shop at
Beef Creek. After a two month's courtship John Young and I were
married. We went to Lexington in old Oklahoma and were married in
1890.
Our first home was a two-room log house behind his
blacksmith shop and our household furniture consisted of an old iron bedstead,
a cook stove, a homemade table and two chairs. That was about all any of
the poor people's homes had in those days. I had been raised up with
poor people and knew nothing but hard work. I only received three
months' schooling in my life.
After my house work was finished in the morning I would
help in the blacksmith shop. Once a week when my husband would go to the
mill at Pauls Valley, I would do the shop work and I learned to shoe a horse
as well as my husband could. Many a time I have heard the cowhands from
different ranches tell my husband that they believed I could beat him shoeing
a horse.
In 1895 we moved to White Bead and my husband put in a
blacksmith shop. It was at White Bead in 1895 that my husband became a
member of the Masonic Lodge. There were a few stores, a post office,
church house, a mission school of some kind, and a Masonic Lodge hall at White
Bead when we moved there and besides there were several dwelling
houses.
When I came to Beef Creek the prairies were covered with
cattle and the river bottom land was in corn. Corn was very cheap; it
sold at from 10 cents to 15 cents a bushel.
The branch railroad was built from Pauls Valley to
Lindsay in 1902 and we moved to Maysville in 1903. My husband opened up
a blacksmith shop there.
In the early days Maysville was known as Beef
Creek.
At Maysville in 1903 my husband was a member of Masonic
Lodge Number 233 and he remained in this lodge until 1923. He owned his
blacksmith shop until his death in 1923.
I still live at our home that we built in
1903.
Submitted to OKGenWeb by Brenda
Choate <bcchoate@yahoo.com> November 2000.