Interview with William! L. Cowart 1002 S. Haskell Stwt, Tulsa, Oklahoma». T. Holland Interviewer Ootober 21, 1937.

Similar documents
364 JOHNSON, SARAH JANE tntjsrview #6370

McClIN, WILLIiM JAS^iiE. 'INTlsRVIEW 12969_ 89

KIRK, FAME. 2NT2RVI2ff 13748

CtJMMINS, WILLIAM ANTHONY ' 335. INDEX CARDS Muakogee Fort Gibson '» Intermarried Whites--Charokei Nation Marriage Cherokee Citizenship Cherokee

CHRISTIE, mm. INTERVIEW

JENNINGS, TO*'.. INTivhVli.tf

Notice of Copyright. Citing Resources from the Western History Collections

M4UTBY, C. B. INTERVIEW

Notice of Copyright. Citing Resources from the Western History Collections

GorernmaQt Cli«rol»e IntaaciCGnt»~-Gliaiokee Nation Law enforceawiwcberokee Districts Clierokee Courts Cherokee

IRELAND, LIZZIE. INTERVIEW 7395

~ - 8 -' Form A-(S-149).. - ihograkiy FORM..."»'. WORKS PROGRESS ADMINISTRATION ' Ind fan-pioneer History Project-for Oklahoma' (& f (a ( s$^

GAITfiER, W. W. INTERVIEW #

Notice of Copyright. Citing Resources from the Western History Collections

OKLAHOMA HISTORY THE FIVE CIVILIZED TRIBES IN INDIAN TERRITORY

HUSHES, ID4 MS. INTERVIEW _ #18*84

LEAL, CELESTE CABY INTERVIEW INDEX Chickasaw Nation Ranch Home Sulphur Cherokee Town Beef Issues Cyrus Harris

INDEX CARDS: Cherokee Nation Tribe-Cherokee Cherokee Politics Secret Societies Allotment

UJJGLEY,.ANI»EW J. INTERVIEW 6300

ESTUS, JAMES J. INTERVIEW 106Et 259

HARRIS, JlfiXL. XlffBtVIIW»64

JOHN D. JONES Father of Charles E. Jones

MflKBAL, SARAH. mcbstliss #804?

Abraham Lincoln. By: Walker Minix. Mrs. Bingham s 2 nd Grade

H&TCH2TT, T, Si. IKT3HYI? #9439

JOHNSON, MHOIS. WTfllVIIW 13778, 219

JENNINGS, LUCY INTHtVIBW

Notice of Copyright. Citing Resources from the Western History Collections

, J. WiLUCS. J INTERVIEW 13083

194 Elizabeth R. H oltgreive

JIMMY DODGING HORSE FRANCIS CROW CHIEF WILLIAM LITTLE BEAR GEORGE HEAVY FIRE OFFICE OF SPECIFIC CLAIMS & RESEARCH WINTERBURN, ALBERTA

DWIGHT, BJSN. INTERVIEW

PRAIRIE GROVE CUMBERLAND PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH HISTORY

Jesse James Birthplace & Museum. for Students. January 2019 Revised by Staff at Jesse James Birthplace & Museum

Pratt migration from Bibb Co. Alabama to Saline Co. Ark now Grant Co. Ark.

Indian Raids of 1856 From Capt. J. T. Lesley's Diary

Civil War. July 7,1861. A. Kennedy, Mayor. Frederick Sasse. John D. Plunkett. R. P. Dolman, Clerk

GRALL, FRANK INTiBVIJEW //827?

Jesse James Birthplace. for Students. February, 2019 Revised by Staff at Jesse James Birthplace Museum

, TOM 3K0ND BftJBBVIW

iiail Carrier LOCOS, JCfflBOI; \ ) OABTII, LOUIS \ ) HARRIS, AIHU,»«e WILSON) IKTKRTIIW 6645 William Atoka INDEX CftBDS:

Captain Samuel Brady s Daring Rescue of the Stoops Family Near Lowellville, Ohio

Reminiscences of Jackson Buckner Written by Jackson Buckner August 8, 1891, at University Place (Lincoln) Nebraska

WILLIAM M. IST K71 W //

bhappelwg. A, INTERVIEW \ \

HILL, FIELDEN SALYisH INTiKVI^W 6779

OFFICE OF SPECIFIC CLAIMS & RESEARCH WINTERBURN, ALBERTA

HOLT, TOM. INTERVIEW 8790 /, 450

CUUDB Ju INTi&VlKW.,

Conflict on the Plains. Level 2

, MARTHA. J. INTERVIEW. *90t

Notice of Copyright. Citing Resources from the Western History Collections

The Saints Build Winter Quarters

,' / /, UkfTLU JACOBS. IHTSHVIKW. 130C

Notice of Copyright. Citing Resources from the Western History Collections

Form A-(S-149) BIOGRAPHY "FORM WORKS PROGRESS ADMINISTRATION Indian-Pioneer History Project for Oklahoma

Notice of Copyright. Citing Resources from the Western History Collections

Notice of Copyright. Citing Resources from the Western History Collections

Notice of Copyright. Citing Resources from the Western History Collections

Hardin Cemetery No. 1

icarpkntjsk,"chas. W*.. INTERVIM 1244& I. ' :.. 9 d -

Grace Kelley, October 10, Henryetta. Oklahoma. Indian Burial Grounds. Finding the locations of Indian.graves is the most

, mat* mmm. u *U. INDEX CARDS: Civil War Chootpw Nation Fort Stoith Railroad Development J. J. McAlester Hominy Indian Cry

' CRUDT/P, H. L. INTiKyiinV 6784^0 INDBX GAED3: Chickaaaw Nation Kud Creek Ryan Court House Chickasaw Militia isvans Ferry //olaey

Remembering. Remembering the Alamo. Visit for thousands of books and materials.

report made on (date) August 27,

Indian-Pioneer History Project for Oklahoma 19S Residence address (or location) 4. DATE OF BIRTH: ' Month X - : Day % Year

Letter to John Butler, Eliza (Smith) Butler and Matilda Smith from Peter and Rachael Butler

IORRKST R, flichard MILLS* INTERVIIW,712834

EELIHKATUBBSE. r tyewie. INTffiVIEW 7067 ' 186

Station 1: Maps of the Trail of Tears

M&HEL LBS CUSTJSflH ETT^BVIB. ^

rj)dl.man, MARY. INT.itVIE'. 7888

Chief Joseph, : A Hero of Freedom for Native Americans, Part Two

Transcontinental Railroad

Notice of Copyright. Citing Resources from the Western History Collections

FLKTCHSR, ILLA. INTERVIEW 10281

Excerpt from Trail of Tears Diary By Jobe Alexander & Mary Hill 1938

Territorial Utah and The Utah War. Chapter 9

422 HENRY E. JENKINS OXEN TO AIRPLANE 423

Included Names: Andrew and Lucy Lucetta Brown McCombs, Ellen (Nellie) Gray

OFFICE OF SPECIFIC CLAIMS & RESEARCH WINTERBURN, ALBERTA

HUUNG, JAMiS INTiftVUW 4666

THE LAST SLAVE HAL AMES

BOIittN, BUIK INDEX CABDS: . Negro. Freedman. Bluff Mild Game

Oklahoma! Script 2017

Thomas Eames Family. King Philip s War. Thomas Eames Family in King Philip s War Josiah Temple The Thomas Eames Family.

' Form.MS-149) BIOGRAPHY FORM WOUKS PROGRESS ADLINISTRATION Indian-Pioneer History Project for Oklahoma

Territorial Utah and The Utah War. Chapter 9

GABRISON, GARRJSTT.. INTERVIEW U614

This book, Lincoln: Through the Lens, is a unique book that follows Lincoln through a time in history when photography was in its infancy and the

HUTSLER, J. S. INTERVIEW ^8781

f / CiTil War " / Ferries Coal Creek Payments Cherokee -HJDEXJ&RDS Removal Cherokee Household Manufactures Cherokee

Notice of Copyright. Citing Resources from the Western History Collections

The Legend of Cracow Dragon. The Legend of the White Polish Eagle. The legend of Janosik - The Polish Robin Hood

HAM S3, W. S. (DH.) INTERVIEW

Oherokee I:ation Tribe-^lierokee Livin;; Conditions Civil iar Trail pf*tears JheroWue Trouble Kee-T6o-.. ; ah ren Indians 2radinf Joints allotment

HDNNOLD, ARTHUR B. SECOND INTERVIEW. #

MeGATfcHT, KHOI D. IMT&RVIIW 8581 MnM 1J4

Social: classes, status, hierarchy, gender, population (demography)

Transcription:

C0WAH3V 175

C«M\ jftujalf L. ' / IUTEH7IBW,' ' 7901 ' ' Interview with William! L. Cowart 1002 S. Haskell Stwt, Tulsa, Oklahoma». T. Holland Interviewer Ootober 21, 1937. During the Civil fler period there was great strife and confusion among the various members of the fir* Civilized Tribes and there was division even in the Cherokee O?rib«as to which side they favored in the Civil Mr. Some Joined the forces of the Confederacy, while ac-ne went with th'e Union side; this led to strife and bloodshed among the Indians, and even among neighbors. So, in 1968 ; in the Flint District of the Cherokee tfation,wh«a?»ray parents lived the Onion forces, or tile sympathizers of that side,got the upper hand to suoh an extent that it beeaice unsafe for Confederates to remain thereat least my father thought so, So he moved over into Arkansas where the Confederate forces were under control, where he thought the family would 4 be. more securt, J

COflART,.TILLIAM L.. INTERVIEW 7«01 ' 177 Father was in the Confederate Army and the trouble waa dot caused by the regular forces of the Union Army but by the ^Bushwhackers" among the Cherokee. Ttoey took out their spite on the helpless nbn-eotnbatnnte \ robbed and burned &&d committed crimes, as thwre were no civil officers and no law in the Cherokee Nation at that time, and the Bushwhackers operated unmolested, where and when they pleased. I was born in Arkansas, October 25th, 186S, my parent8 being refugees from this Cherokee Nation. \ My father came home on a furlough, the last part of January, 1363. Our home in Arkansas was out in the open some distance from the timber. On the day my father was to return to the trmy, he looked out and saw a bunch of men in the edge of the timber and thinking they were after him, he took his rifle and blankets and some provisions and slipped out of cabin opposite these men* He had been gone long enough to be safely away, ay mother thought, when

COWART, WILLIAM L.' INTERVIEW * ' 7901 he returned* My mo&er setd she never knew why he returned, but just as he reached the house, a bunch of Bushwhackers closed In fraa the other side of the house, unseen by my parents,and captured my father. Before the Bushwhackers lef$t the community, they had taken seven men, either Confederate soldier? or sympathizers. These men, of whom my father was one,, were lined up and shot* These feandlts *ei» not regular Union soldiers but were Cherokee Indian who favored the Union. I have heard my mother and others say that at * times they had to hide any provisions they night have and even went so far ets to bury their china. These outlaws would take feather beds out of the home, rip open the ticks and scatter the feathers to the four winds. These men knew my father and knew where he moved to and why he came to Arkansas. After my father was killed^my mother went to N. B. Twtas and remained there until 1864, when she returned to our

COWART* WIIXIAM L.. INTEHTTKW?90I 5 ~. \ old home in fflint Distri'ct, one mile west of the present town of Stillwell. Thife district was where my parents lived before they escaped into Arkansas. I grew up therejmy mother remarried in 1889. We lived near the "Old" Flint Post Office, whioli was five -dies north of the Old Flint Courthouse. From 186*) to later yeara^j. Henry Oannenberg fas tho postmaster at Old Flint and bad a general store in connection. 2his postoffioe was on a Star Route from Jvanaville^Arkansss^to. Tahlequah and oeme by Flint* The distance from Evensvilie to Tnhlequeh was about thirty miles, one trip one way, aas made dailyy the carrier who traveled on horseback spen^t one night in Kvanaville the next in Itehlequah. t carried the mail route for a year, when I and was sixteen years old ; in 1878,^ was paid eight dollars per month but was boarded end my horses furnished and feed. All I had to do was just

' 380 00WART, ntluml L. / INTBRVTRW 7901 to carry tine mail which at-that time was not i / First class mail constituted the bulk of if* the mail and registered raail^a g od part of that. There were a few weekly papers. I have cut hay *ith a mowing blade over the land whtre Stillwell now stands. The cemetery outside of Stillwe-ll^and used by the people there, dates back several years prior to the Civil War. people buried there were the Adairs. The first later on a church was built near the cemetery and given the name of New Hope, so the country took that name from then at first ft was known &s the. Adair burial ground. Sorae of the early preacheic of the period imnedia^ely following the wer were Reverend Mr. John Herold Mr. / and Reverend jawing, both Methodist Circuit rid&rs. Our preaching services were held at Muddy Spring^ School near the place where we lived. The locaypreachera a among the Cherokeea were the Beverend^r. Hogshooter and John Sheel, both full blood Ctferokees and both / Baptist preachers.

j I» V COWART/fllLLIAMhi INtaTIBW 7901 I, My first schooling in 186? was at Muddy Springs 'in a log school house and W. H. Davie was my teacher. Our school ran from six to eight months and was provided for by our Cherokee National Government. i After the Civil War when things got settled again, ' i we lived quietly and! very pleasantly* We farmed and raia^rfd everything we needed. It was easy to raise cattle and hogs, as (they grew up on foe range without much feed or. attention. Wild game } too, was plentiful. i i My mother made ail our clothes by hand, and e goodly part of the cloth was woven at home.. Our social life, and that of the community t v was different from today. Almost all rail fences had been either torn down or burned and the houses burned. So the neighbors would get together and build fences-,. put up log houses and barns for each other, and of course the

003ART, WILLIAM-L. j ISTEBVUW / 7901 / women folks went along and provided a good dinner which made it all the more pleasant. / A lot of people moved away durimg the war and their farms went to reck, Brlarsy and bushes grew up and they virtually had to be cleared again* In 1874^ a widow made a trade with two-vfoite families from Dutch Mills, Arkansas to come on her farm a Mr. and clean it-up. Their names were Mat Bryant and/adams. These were the first whites to come into our district; they were given the first year's rent on all the ground which they cleaned off* this caused their crop to be lete, no it was better, that was the dry year wheji practically no crops were made. These men, having fresh soil and planting late, made several hundred bushels of corn and this WAS the only core in the community. -* The Indians were really in Aeed ; especially foiv corn to make bread, andjjjhad to buy from Bryant and Adams, * / / who knew the scarcity of corn and took advantage of it.

COWAHT, WILLIAM L. IBTKRVXBW. 8 An Indian would drive a good steer up to the bouse of Mr. JJryant or Mr* Adams and get only, two bushels of corn for i t* Thls^ weapon until Mr* Adams and Mr* Bryant had accumulated a good herd of cattle and dis- v posed of their corn, when one night a bunoh of Indians banded together and rode by their houses firing Into the air and letting out war-whoops* These Indians did not hurt anyone, and didn't intend to, but they did resent Hie way they had been treated just because the white men had them where they could take advantage of thenu However* they didn't have any white neighbors long, for as soon as It was light enough the next day Mr. Adams and Mr* Bryant were on their way bade to Arkansas with their cattle and belongings* Outlaws who infested the Territory during ray early life never bothered us* i X knew Louis "owning, the founder of the Downing party and its head and leader for years*

COWART, WILLIAM L... INTERVIEW 7901 184 I also knew John Roae, who was leader of the Republican or National Party. I knew a number of the. Cherokee Chiefs; Chief Buahyheed, Colonel Harris, Joel B. Mayes and Sam a,, Under the Cherokee laws, the locel pesce officer we a sheriff end he hed deputies, but there were no. constables as we now hare. The United States Government provided the Indian Police, a uniformed force which looked after whisky law violaters mostly, I think. I remember Sam Sixkiller was a member of the Indian police. Et, Hatters, Dr. Lit tie John and Dr,FergU3oa were the doctors in the Flint District during my early days and- like the circuit'riders^ were greet factors in the building up of the territory and state. Dr. Watters attended my grandfather who was shot from ambush a few years after th# war. Grandfather / had gone out to Investigate a noise he had heard. He

COIilT, WILLIiM L. IHTffitVIBW. '7901 * 10 really thought come one wae stealing bis males, but It «fts a man or man in hie crib stealing corn and he gofneer, they shot him and escaped. Orand- Itether lired a year, btit waa never well after that.