OARDNJffi, KLBA C-,LBS*T SHJiRP INTJKVIXW * 116

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OARDNJffi, KLBA C-,LBS*T SHJiRP INTJKVIXW * 116

117 GARDNER, ELBA COLBERT SHARP. INTERVIEW. 13495. Hazel B, (Jreene Journalist, March 29, 1938.. ui Interview With. Elba Colbert Sharp Gardner, Antlers, Oklahoma* 2.;<_/.icSt A - i. \ ^ t I was born in, 1867 at Hickory Grove faiv., cno mile south of Nelson in the Choc tew Nation in Indian Territory. My father, George W, Colbox't ws:; born in Hiasis3i':- % i cmd is buried in the city cerastery at Antlers. My mother, Elizabath jjorrels-culbur^wac bom in Fort anith, Arkansas and is buried about five mile? west of :lelson in the o!3 cemetery of tbe Samuel *>.. Colbert family. My father vus about ei^ht years old ~hen ho came with hie parents to the Indian Territory, but he never did toll us anything about their trip. I have often wondered ibout that since I have been :rown t and thought perhaps i t was because h was so younj thnt he had just disnissed it from his mind* Neither did ray yrandprrents evor talk about the i trip to us children, I don f t know exactly how ranch Indian I am, but I imagine abc~t an eighth. And it is e mixture of Chiekasate and Choctav. I am earolled ac a Choctaw and my sister is enrolled as a Chickasav., But I have never known just what degree of each blood we have.

118 GARDNER, ELBA. COLBERT SHARP. INTERVIEW. 13495. filly grandfather, Samuel A. Colbert settled about five miles west of what is now known as Nelson* Nelson was then called Caffery 3tation and waa on the stage * route from Fort Smith, Arkansas, through the Indian / Territory and on South, I don't know how far. But there must not have been a post office there, because we got our mail at Goodland, which was several miles southeast of our place, and we were just a mile south of Caffery Station* Still it looks like there should have been a post office at a stage coach station, yet the way I remember it, Nelson was established as a post office about 1880 and named for Colonel Coleman Kelson who owned a home and store at that place, and I believe too, that the Groodland post office was at Governor LeFlore's place before it was ever at the home of Silas Bacon, because Silas Bacon was such a young man then* fie was born about 1862. I used to see him when I would go with my father to District Court at Good land, when X was a little girl, around twelve or thirteen years old* X would go with my father to make coffee for him* He would take his lunch and he wanted hot coffee, X would make it, and serve it to

? 110 GARDNER, ELBA COLBERT SHARP. INTERVIEW. 13495* crowds of the Choctaws who were there, and they would talk about mo in Choc tan a l l the time I was making and serving the coffee and I could not understand a word they said. Fa could speak Choctaw, but he was grosa before he learned it* His parents would talk Choc taw when they didn't want the children to know what they talking about, but would not teach it to their children* They wanted them to apeak only Siglish* I never listened to the court at Goodland, it *ras not interesting to me* I just aat out in the hack add waited for Pa to get ready to go home. I never saw an execution or a whipping; I never wanted to see any* Pa said he saw one man whipped and aever wanted to see another* Our old home one mile south of Nelson was built before I was born* Pa bought it from a man of the nans of Ormsby* He might have had it built, and it may be seventy five years old* 1 understand that it is Standing* I remember the big chimneys at either end. made of native stone* People named their homes then and we named ours "Hickory Grove". Pa farmed and raised stpck and didn't

\ OARDNER, ELBA. COLBERT SH^RP, INTERVIEW. 13405. 120 try to run the affairs of the Nat leu. Of course he was interested in tribal affairs, but not to the extent of talcing an actlre part In them. Our place was on the stage route, and I can remember seeing covered wagons going past on the route, then about the time I was grown Fa fenced across it and travel was turned another way. I never went to dances, we sometimes went to play parties and I played "Wearley Wheat" a few times until Mother found it out, then she put a stop to my going to play parties. "Weavely Wheat" was Just a figure of the square dance» and Mother was very religious. No playing cards were erer allowed in our home. My mother earae to the Indian Territory from up near Fort Smith, Arkansas, with some missionaries of the name of McAlister. She and another young lady named Ellen Steele. I guess they were both in their twenties. They were white girls and came out here to teach in the Indian schools. Mother said that they came in a two horse buggy or hack. That was in about 1854 or f 56. There were a good many outlaws here then, and the young ladies cane down through the mountains some ;lace close to Tishomingo* o

121 OAflDNER, S,BA COLBERT SHARP. INTERVIEW. 13495, called "The Narrows", It was a beautiful place and they stopped for lunch and were all stirring around there admiring the scenery, and when they got ready to start again they made the discovery that their suitcases, or at le st their luggage had been stolen* It had been tied on the back of the buggies with ropes* And none of them had seen it done, yet it was done right there in the Narrow s* They were told afterward that it was quite common for tr-velers to be held up and robbed right there and that they were lucky not to have been robbed of their money. I think lay mother really made history» because of the good that she did* She was truly a Christian woman* She was a aplendid seamstress and she sewed and taught in the primary d«part«t»nt of a boys' school at Tiahomingo* It was a Boys* Manual Training School. I believe it waa called the Cbickasaw Manual Training School tot Boys. Mother could stake anything, even nice suits for men and boya* In those days, the wealthy Chlckasaws and Choctaws employed governesses for their children* They usually

122 O&KDKER, ELBA. COLS&H? SHAHP. XNTKRVIKW. 13495* -6- went to the Government schools-toad made their selections. So my grandfather, Sanuel A. Colbert,went to that school at Tishomingo aid selected Mother for a governess for a while for hia children. He built a little log school house out close to his and named it The Colbert Institute. Of course he paid i&other a regular salary end 1 imagine others who attended paid her something too. Many who became notables or the parents of notables went to school to her. One pupil I recall was the mother of Judge Thomas Hunter. Her name was Tennessee Kisser, They had Sunday School and church in that tiny building on Sunday* My father was then going to school in Holly Springs, Mississippi, end when he returned from there, I i u^ine was the time when the romance began and George W. Colbert and Elizabeth Sorrels who later became my parents got married and Pa bought the place where I have told you I was born* Mother taught only at home after she married* She taught me to the Second Header before we went to iltoka to school. It was forty miles to Atoka, so she just

OAHDSSR, ELBA COLBERT SHARP. IHTERVIEW. 13495, -7- took us girls and went over there and stayed with us while we attended two terms, then she went home and left us there to board the next year* Then she sent us to Paris, Texas, to common school for a year* It was forty miles to Paris too, from our place, I attended lira, Witherspoon»e Private Scho-1 for girls awhile, then attended Hock Academy at Wapanucica three terms, Mrs, Robert L, Owen was my first music teacher. She was Miss Daisy Hester then in 1883. We used to have spelling matches. I was a good speller, and reader, tut never knew much else. I was nearly grown before I knew that Mother was a Presbyterian, She taught in the Methodist Sunday School at Nelson and in the absence of the regular Superintendent, she acted as Superintendent, We used to go to Nelson Chapel to church and Sunday School, It waa about a half a mile west of the present depot at Antlers* Colonel Nelson bought and paid for that building and th«n turned it over to the Methodists 4 Conference was held in 1886. I was there. We always attended Oanp meetings all over the country f and always went with well filled baskets.

124 OAfiDNSR, ELBA. COLBERT SHARP* OTTERTIEW. 13495. -8- We fad many preachers too. We had a big plae«acd people made It a point to stop at oar house where they were welcome* Of course we fed many other folks too* I renumber one old minister name Myat* When he would baptize a Choctaw baby and it had no name he would name it Myat. Grandfather Colbert had a maiden sister named Malcie Colbert* She was a physician. She was probably educated in the schools of Mississippi* there was no doctor within forty miles* Afler she died There were some doctors at Atoka, and at Paris, Texas, and Dr* J, fi* Miller came to this country and married one of the Roebuc& girls and located on Roebuck Lake* We used to send for Dr* Hooks at Paris 7 before Dr* Miller came here* Spencer Academy was only a mile and a half away from us and we usod to go orer there to church* first Superintendent whom I knew* 0* P. Stark was the Be had a daughter named Helen who became Mrs* R* J* Murphy of Paris. Texas* Then Mr, Skimmerhora was the next one I knew* The railroad through here from Fort Smith to Paris, Texas, was completed in June 1887 and the town of Antlers

125 t ELBA. COLBERT SHARP. JSTSRVXEh. 13495* -9- was started and we moved her*, it built a big frame house on the block where the post office is now; we had the entire block at first and many big oak trees around in our big yard, so we named our place Oak Hall* We never dreamed that we would be crowded and could not hare the entire block always, until the town kept growing and growing, then people began wanting to board with U3, and we took them in* I remember a friend of ours spent the night there once and he was fussing about the Choc taw girls not doing any public wprk as he thought they should* That friend of ours was named George Harklns, and I believe he represented the Chootaw people in Congress. Any way be had a lot of influence and he suggested that he have me appointed postmistress for the new torn*' I told him that Pa would never let me serve and that it would be useless to get the appointment for me but he did get the appointment for Be* I received it in July or August 1387 and my father would never let me serve. He compelled me to resign in fa/or of William Gardner. And here is one thing I want corrected* Some time ago I saw m article in the Chronicles of Oklahoma in which they said I was the

126 (UHDNER, ELBA. COLBERT SHARP. INTERVIEW. 13495* -10- postmistress at Antlers, but they had my none as Slla Colbsrt, vhsa In reality it Is Elba. After we mored to Antiers Mother's health got bad and she went up to Mansfield, Arkansas, to Dr. Sorrels who was a cousin of hers, thinking that maybe he could help her, but she died in a few weeks after going up there and was brought back to the old ^Colbert home and "laid away in the family burial ground five miles west of Helson. The houses were burned long ago and there is nothing there now except the tombstones in the cemetery, to show that there had* erer been any body living around there. That was the only trip she made back home after sheearae out here, a girl, ae a ipisslonary. among the Indians. Grandfather Colbert's old papers were packed in a trunk and brought to Antlers nd I don f t know what became of them.