Indian Pioneer History Project for Oklahoma
Date: January 10, 1938
Name: Annie Lee Mathies
Post Office: Wister, Oklahoma
Residence Address: Route 2
Date of Birth: November 18, 1863
Place of Birth: near Warrenton, Virginia
Father: Thomas D. Carnall
Place of Birth: Virginia
Information on father: died 1865
Mother: Catherine E. Howison
Place of birth: Virginia
Information on mother: Cousin of rear Admiral
Howison
Field Worker: Gomer Gower
Interview 12629Interview with Annie Lee
Mathies
Wister, Oklahoma.
Mrs. Annie Lee Mathies, nee Carnall, was born in Warrenton,
Virginia, on November 18, 1863, and was the daughter Thomas D.
and Catherine E. Carnell, nee Howison.
Through the death of her father, which occurred in 1865, and
death of her mother which occurred in 1872, she and an elder
sister, Ella Howison, were left to the care of an aunt,
Elizabeth Carnell, with whom the sisters came to Arkansas in
1872 where they made their home with an uncle,
Wharton Carnall on Mazzard Prairie, near Fort Smith.
Through the efforts of their aunt, Elizabeth and their uncle,
Wharton Carnall, the sisters enjoyed the best of
scholastic advantages; the older sister, Ella Howison, attaining
her Ph.D. degree at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor,
after five years of study at the University of Arkansas at
Fayetteville, Arkansas where she earned the degree of M. A. era
here she had served as teacher of English.
The younger sister, Annie Lee, was sent to a private school
In Prince William County, Virginia, and after the completion of
her studies at that school, returned to the home of her
uncle near Fort Smith, Arkansas.
On January 1, 1684, she was united in marriage to C. C,
Mathies, who through a former marriage had established his
right of citizenship in the Indian Territory, and
established a home near what now the village of Monroe in
Leflore County. The couple lived et that home for twenty-seven
years and then moved to a point near Wister, where Mrs. Mathies
still lives, Mr. Mathies having died in 1915.
Mrs. Mathies related of her husband that he frequently aided
his friends, end especially his Indian friends, when in doing so
he had no hope or desire for fee or reward. On one occasion when
crops generally had failed and the plight of his Indian
neighbors was such that they badly needed corn for bread,
Mr. Mathies refused to sell corn to those who were in a position
to pay for it, in order that he could supply those that had
neither corn nor money. Be it said to the great credit of the
Indians the last penny which they owed Mr. Mathies for corn
bought when in their extremities, was paid in full. She recalls
that one old Indian some years after he had been supplied corn
by Mr. Mathies came to their home and proffered a silver dollar
in payment. Mr. Mathies had forgotten all about the transaction.
The Indian had not.
Mrs. Mathies sheds an amusing sidelight on some of the
problems which the various enrolling committees were called upon
to solve. In one instance two dark-skinned women who, ordinarily
dressed in conventional manner, appeared before the enrolling
committee wearing the cheapest and longest gingham dresses;
their ill-concealed dyed hair and eyebrows stressed with red
bandana tied over their heads in the usual Indian manner, and
with little else in the way of corroborating evidence upon which
to base their right to enrollment as Choctaw citizens.
Mr. Mathies home was on segregated land, so he took his
allotment near Wynnewood; but the absence from their view of the
enchanting Poteau, Sugar Loaf an Cavanal Mountain to which they
had become accustomed, caused the family to dispose of their
prairie home and to return to a point near Wister where the
grandeur of these mountains can be viewed from the front porch.
Mrs. Mathies has ever preferred farm life, close to nature,
to the more glamorous life of the drawing room which her
education and inherent refinement has so well fitted her to
adorn.
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