A standard history of Oklahoma
Joseph Bradfield Thoburn, pg 1641
Rev. James Sapulpa, whose Indian name,
given him in childhood, is Wah-lakeyahola, signifying '' sweet potatoes," was
born not far distant from his present place of residence in Sapulpa, in the
winter of 1847, and is a son of the well known old Creek Indian, Sapulpa, who
was a leader in the Creek Nation and who eventually embraced the Christian
religion, though he never received a personal name other than the one cognomen,
Sapulpa, which is perpetuated in the fine little city that has been reared near
his former home. He came with other members of his tribe to the section now
compassed by Creek County at the time when the Seminole Indians were on the war
path, and after the conflict had ceased he here established his permanent home,
the Creek tribe having been transferred to this region by the Government. Here
Sapulpa married a woman of his tribe who bore the name of Tenafe, and she was an
aunt of the wife of the subject of this sketch, Rev. James Sapulpa. For his
second wife he married Nekette, who later was given the Christian name of Eliza.
No children were born of the first marriage, and of the seven children of the
second union the second was James, to whom this article is specifically
dedicated; Hannah became the wife of Ahulak-haco; Sarah is the wife of Timmie
Fife, of Sapulpa, arid the other children died young. Sapulpa, in accordance
with Indian custom, parted from his first wife, who bore him no children, and
thereafter he married not only the mother of the subject of this review but also
her sister, Japakese, this having likewise been in accord with the tribal
customs. He thus had two wives at one time, and his total number of children by
the two wives, the sisters, was twenty-four. The greater number of the children
by Japakese died young, only one of the number now surviving, William A.
Sapulpa, who is a well known and highly esteemed citizen of Creek County and who
resides near his half-brother, Rev. James Sapulpa, of this sketch. The father
died in Creek County, before the same was thus constituted, on the 17th of
March, 1887, at which time he was seventy-five years of age. His wife Eliza,
mother of Rev. James Sapulpa, died January 12, 1889, both having become
converted to Christianity, and Eliza having been retained as the only wife, her
sister having been put aside, in furtherance of the Christian ideals, but ample
provision having been made for her. Sapulpa was a fine type of the Creek tribe, and became an earnest exemplar of
its progressive element, though ever loyal to tribal laws. He had one time
brought home a small buffalo from the hunt and the same was raised by his son
James, who retained the animal until it
became unruly and attacked him, when he showed discrimination by selling it.
Rev. James Sapulpa has passed his entire life in the section of Oklahoma about
the present City of Sapulpa, and his progressiveness was early shown through his
extensive and successful activities as an agriculturist and stock-grower. Prior
to the Civil war he was sent to one of the Indian schools for a period of six
months, and this is all the specific education he ever received in the school
room. From a hymnbook published in the Creek language he learned to write his
native language, this hymnbook having been given to him by a Methodist
missionary, and from that time forward he has taken a deep interest in church
work. He and his wife, who has been his devoted companion and helpmeet, erected
at their own expense the Sapulpa Methodist Chapel, which is situated on their
homestead farm. At his home he began holding religious services for fellow
members of his tribe even before the church building was erected, the meetings
having been held on the grounds of his present residence, and an arbor having
been built to afford to the congregation protections from the weather. In the
winter season the meetings were held in his log house, which is still standing
and in excellent preservation. After continuing his services as a preacher to
his people under these conditions for a period of about ten years Mr. Sapulpa
erected the present church edifice, a frame structure. Hero members of the
neighboring Ute Indian tribe attended religious services until they erected a
church of their own, and a number of them were converted under the guidance of
Mr. Sapulpa. the Ute Church, about five miles distant, being still in prosperous
condition. Mr. Sapulpa and his nephew, Marchie Hayes, who is a class leader of
the Methodist Church, are now the only two remaining members of the original
church organization over which Mr. Sapulpa presided. On the 12th of March, 1871,
Mr. Sapulpa was baptized by Reverend Joshua, who likewise was a fullblood Creek
Indian, and in 1897 he received license from the Methodist Church as an exhorter
and in 1900 he received from the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, his license
as a local preacher. He has been an earnest, faithful and successful worker in
the vineyard of the Divine Master, and the title of good and faithful servant
well applies to him.
The early life of Mr. Sapulpa was marked by active identification with the live
stock industry on the great open range, and his present residence stands near
the site of the old home of his father who had large herds of cattle, and at one
time controlled a large area of land, including the present site of the City of
Sapulpa, which was named in his honor, at the instance of Gen. Pleasant Porter,
who was made an Indian chief.
Mr. Sapulpa is the owner of a quarter section of well improved land, 1% miles
southwest of Sapulpa, and on a fine elevation that affords an excellent view of
the city and the surrounding country he erected, in 1908, his present
pretentious and imposing frame residence, which is three stories in height and
has thirteen rooms. It is not only one of the finest dwellings in Creek County
but it's sightly location makes it an imposing landmark that is visible for a
great distance in each direction.
On the 6th of November, 1893, was solemnized the marriage of Mr. Sapulpa to Miss
Elizabeth Barnett, who was born at Walnuttown, twelve miles south of Okmulgee,
Creek Nation, on the 17th of August, 1876. and who, like himself, is a
full-blood Creek Indian. She was seven years old at the time of her father's
death, and her widowed mother sent her to the Wealaka Mission. While she was at
the mission her mother was killed, and so her schooling was limited, but her
alert mentality has enabled her to make definite progress in knowledge in later
years, and she reads and writes well in both the Creek and English languages,
the latter of which she speaks fluently also, so that she is able to assist her
husband greatly in both his business affairs and church work, as he speaks only
the Creek tongue. She is most earnest and zealous in her religious activities
and is a devout member of the church of which her husband is in pastoral charge.
Mr. and Mrs. Sapulpa have no children of their own, but their kindliness and
true Christian devotion have been shown in their rearing in their home eight
orphan children. Joseph McCombs was adopted by them when fourteen, but they had
reared him from the age of six years. He was educated at Eletsie Mission here
and Weleetka Boarding School at Weleetka, Lawrence, Kansas, and Conway,
Arkansas, Methodist College. Susanna Sapulpa, now four years of age (1915), was
taken by them when she was but four months old and was legally adopted by them.
She is the life and light of their home, and though she is a full-blood Creek
Indian, she as yet speaks only the English language.
In the various operations of his well improved farm Mr. Sapulpa avails himself
of scientific methods and the best modern machinery, and he is one of the
enterprising and specially successful agriculturists and stock growers of the
county, within whose limits he has lived from the time of his birth and in which
he commands the high regard of his own people and also of the white population.
Among the Indians of the county he is a recognized leader and his influence has
been large in the promotion of their social, material and spiritual welfare. |