Indian Pioneer
History Project for Oklahoma
Date: June 16, 1937
Name: Noel Baker
Post Office: Nashoba, Oklahoma
Date of Birth: September 1886
Place of Birth: Near Nashoba, Oklahoma
Father: Sam McFarland
Place of Birth: Nashoba, Oklahoma
Information on father:
Mother: Anna Baker
Place of birth: Nashoba, Oklahoma
Information on mother:
Field Worker: Johnson H. Hampton
Interview: #6366
I was born sometime in September 1886, near what is now Nashoba,
Oklahoma. At that time there was no post office or store at this
place.
My father's name was Sam
McFarland, and my mother's name was Anna. After my father died
my mother married a man named BAKER, so I go by the name of
Baker. My father was not in the Civil War, and I don't think
that he came from Mississippi and my grandparents did not come
from Mississippi either. If they did I never heard them say
anything about the move. I don't know what my grandparents' name
was for they died before I was born. Father did not tell me who
they were nor their names; they lived near Nashoba, where they
both died, and my father and mother died there also.
I don't know anything about
the war. I heard that they had a war and what the Indians did
during the war, and about the dances they had during the war,
but I don't know about that. You can see that I was born several
years after the war, and, of course, would not know anything
about it any way.
At the time my father and
mother died we had no cemetery where they could be buried, so we
just buried them near the house, and there are no markers, so I
don't think that I can find their graves. We have a cemetery now
where we bury our dead.
Our Indian people here in
this country never had much of anything nor did they make beads
or anything like that. They did make some pottery, and they made
some cloth, which they sold, but after I got to where I could
understand I never saw them making anything of this kind.
We bought most of our
clothes from the store which had been opened up along the Frisco
railroad. We traded at Tushkahoma. Before the railroad went
through we traded at Fort Smith. It took several days to make
the trip, But that was the best we could do for there were no
stores near by. After several years had passed some one put up a
store at Nashoba, and a post office was established there, so we
traded at home and got our mail at this place.
We had a little farm on the
banks of a creek, a bottom farm, where we raised all the corn we
wanted for our breed. All the farms were small, there were no
big farms out there. The Indians did not need a big farm, just
enough for their corn and the garden stuff they wanted. At that
time we did not feed our stock any corn. The country had plenty
of grass on the hills and mountains and plenty of cane in the
bottom where the stock could get what they wanted, and the stock
were fat all the year. In the winter the stock would go to the
bottoms for protection from the cold weather, and in the summer
they would get out on the hills and mountains.
Nearly every Indian had
some cattle, hogs and ponies. Where we lived was in a valley; it
was between two mountains. The creek run between these mountains
which emptied into Little River, which is a big stream that runs
through the eastern part of the state. In these mountains were
lots of wild game of every description. The creeks were full of
fish. Most of the Indians had rifles. I don't know where they
got them before the payment. After the first payment they got,
they bought rifles and some of them bought shot-guns and nearly
every man had a pistol of some kind. They were long on buying
guns.
When I was a boy the
country where I still live was a good country; it was a wild
country at that time. There were not many Indians living there.
It was away from any place and no roads, only trails; most of
the Indian got out of there on horse back. The Indian used oxen
at that time to pull wagons over the mountains, and it sure was
a rough road then.
We lived in a log house
made out of pine logs; in fact all of the Indians lived in log
houses. A good many of them had split logs for flooring and some
of them had dirt floor. The church houses were built of logs and
seated with split logs, and split log flooring. My father used
to camp at the big meeting we had at our church and after he and
my mother died I kept it up for several years. I still camp at
the meeting and help feed the people that come to the meeting.
Our church is an old church; it is named Big Lick Church and is
a Methodist church. We have a lumber house now instead of log
house.
I never went to school
much. I went to a neighborhood school at Nashoba, but did not
learn much books. I can talk a little English but not much, read
a little and can write a little in English, I can read and write
in my own language pretty well. It looks like that we ought to
be able to learn English. The country is full of white people
now and I believe that our children will learn the English
language without much trouble.
I am a full blood Indian,
Choctaw. My father and mother were both full blood Indians. I
have lived among them all of my life, and right here where I was
raised. I live about 30 miles from Antlers, Oklahoma, northeast.
Note: This interviewer is
an Indian and his interviews are expressed exactly as his talk.
No effort is made to change his manuscripts to correct English.
-ED
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