Indian Pioneer Papers - Index
Indian Pioneer History Project for Oklahoma
Date: October 27,
1937
Name: Dr. J. A.
Young
Post Office: Maysville, Oklahoma
Residence
Address:
Date of Birth: January 28, 1863
Place of Birth: Arkansas
Father:
A. A. Young,
Information on Father: born in Arkansas
Mother: Sarah
Ann Abee
Information on Mother: born in North Carolina
Field Worker:
Maurice R. Anderson
Interview #9060
I was born in 1863 in Arkansas. I came to the
Indian Territory in 1898. Before coming to the Territory, I had been
corresponding with Dr. CALLOWAY, who lived at Elmore, and he wanted me to come
to Elmore and form a partnership with him.
When I left Arkansas, I had that in mind but after
reaching Pauls Valley I met a young doctor named BERRY. I formed a
partnership with Dr. Berry.
At that time Congress had passed a bill permitting any
town or city in the Indian Territory to incorporate and Pauls Valley was the
first town in the Chickasaw Nation to incorporate. That was in
1898.
After the town was incorporated the Board of Education
was appointed. The Board of Education, with Honorable J. B. THOMPSON,
went to the bank and borrowed enough money to run the school the first
year. This was the first public school in the Chickasaw Nation.
The school was held in the old subscription school house, located where the
Stufflebean Funeral Home is now.
I was elected the second mayor of Pauls Valley, in 1899,
and was re-elected as mayor of Pauls Valley. At that time the mayor was
only elected one year at a time.
In 1899, along about the middle of the summer, and
epidemic of small pox broke out at Pauls Valley. My first case was a man
named Mr. BISHOP, who ran the hotel across from the depot, now known as the
Rice Hotel. I did not want to quarantine the hotel so his wife said to
find a place to take him and she would pay all costs. Dr. Berry and I
found an old two-room house that no one was living in. We looked up the
owner and rented the house but before we moved our patient into this house I
was met by a group of Pauls Valley citizens and was told if I moved that case
of smallpox into that house the house would be burned and that I would be
taken care of. This committee told me I could either quarantine the
hotel or move the patient out to the edge of town. I finally located a
man who owned three tents. I bought these tents and had them put up
behind the cemetery across Rush Creek, at the south side of Pauls
Valley. One tent was used for a cook-house. I put cots in the other two
and hired a negro to do the cooking. This was Pauls Valley's first
hospital. Dr. BERRY and I took care of about fifteen cases at our tent
hospital. This epidemic lasted until October of 1899.
J. T. JONES was the first mayor of Pauls
Valley.
I was on the Board of Education for six years and Miss
Jean TIPPITT was the first pupil to graduate from the public school at Pauls
Valley. She also was the first to graduate in the Chickasaw
Nation.
I helped organize the Garvin County Medical Association
in 1906.
At this time I met a Doctor PATTERSON from Maysville,
and in giving the place and date of our birth I found that Dr. Patterson was
born in the same town and state and the same day, month, and year as I
was. We both had graduated from the same medical school, but had never
met until that day in 1906. Later, Dr. Patterson was killed at
Maysville and I took his place as doctor of Maysville, Oklahoma.
Submitted to OKGenWeb by
Brenda Choate <bcchoate@yahoo.com> November 2000.