Interflow with Mrs, H. J. luge Atoke, Oklahoma. Tht Ooning of the Katy to the Chootaw Hatlotu

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XMOS, ft,j«mbs. MORROW SORAPBOQK 7655 ttta D, *ason tater?i«ww» August 82, 1937 328 Interflow with Mrs, H. J. luge Atoke, Oklahoma Tht Ooning of the Katy to the Chootaw Hatlotu The following reminiscences were written by Rererend Dr. J«3, Morrow, Baptist Missionary,who first oeme to Indian Territory in 1857, end are copied from an old serapbook, *v "When I first came to this Territory if anyone had told me that I would lire long enough to see a railroad built through this eountry, my reply would have been, **If jthe good Lord will let me live as long aa Methuselah thst might be the case*"* Well, I am not yet as old as Methuselah, and yet I see many railroads and big cities and towns and the country full of white peoplt with comparatirely few Indians* "In 1870 it was the common talk among the Indians that two railroads were being built down from Missouri, and which erer one should strike the Indian Territory line first, would build Its road through the Territory * and into Taxas* The Indians did not Ilka this. They

IH01, MRS, MJRROW 8CRAPB00K 7655 329 ware very much afraid of the coming of the white people as Indeed they had great cause to be* "The '00011118 of the railroad* was the subject of oonvereatlon at man' of their gatherings, I remember hearing one old full-blood haranguing a crowd of his people on this subject- onee* He aade a forcible talk, bringing out many good reasons to prove that the railroad would be a detriment* finally, he wound up with the following clincher. "*I have ridden on those railroads ea t of the Mississippi* They hare little houses on wheels - whole strings of them* One string can carry several hundred people* Those little houses can be shut up and the doors locked* If we allow ^-^that railroad to aoaa, the white man will give, a pienle some time by the side of their iron road and will invite all the full-bloods to attend* They get wlll/lhe men to play ball, off a piece* Then they will got our woman to go Into the little houses on wheels and will lock them up and run oft with to em into Texas or Missouri. Then what ill we do for women? r

330 HUB, MRS. MORROW 3CRAPB00K 7655 3 "But the railroad cam* Just the sent* I well rsaember when It reached Atoka in July^1872, llr«j. D. DttTis and lira* X* A. Fleck owned all the land about the place. The offtoara of the road wanted to build a depot at Atoka«They wanted double the land allowed them by law for their side-traeka. They ao~ oordtn&ly asked'mr, Daris and lira. Flack to meet tnegj In conference oonoerning the matter, lira. Flaok was a fine old Indian woman. When Messrs, Steven*, Soul, in and the chief engineer, Uej» Q. B. Qunn, made known their wlahea, Mrs. Flaok asked many queationa, all of which wert satiafaotorily answered. Finally aha said: *Ton will build us a aloe depot house out of lumber?* 'Tea a4'a»«they replied. 'You will paint it white?* she aaked. 'Well, we do not know about that, we do not usually paint our depots white," was the rssponss to which she replied. 'Oh, you must paint it white; my husband was a white man and I like white houses," *lh» road brought many blessings. We Mission* arisa could afford to buy two or three calioo dreaaea for our good wires, where we oould afford but one each year before.

X8GS* MRS, MORROW SCRAP BO OK 7655 331 4 "The railroad brought many arils also - a 'tslaea of trampa and adventurers came with and after the road waa built, that for several yo r ra constituted a demoralizing element* 11 Just as the full-blood Indians predicted, the earning of the railroad opened up to the whites a knowledge of the wonderful resources of their country and waa soon followed by the demand to 'remove the rsstrictlona 1 * This demand has grown acre persistent and Imperious each year since and now, *?oor Lo* has in many instances nothing before him In this world but pauperism and the grave* "1 wall remember aany Interesting incidents connected with the coming of the railroad* In 1872 or 75 the management of the railroad gave a free excursion to the Chootaws. A great train load of them ware taken from Oaddo, Atoka, Holiest«r and other points, to Parsons, tanaaa, and to Sedalia and Boonevilla,Mo* Those cities welcomed the excuralonlete and made them very happy* Speeches ware made by several of the Indian men*

332 IHCOU MRS, MORROW SORAPBOOK, 7655 5 " At Boonerille ike* Forbes Leflore, a proaine&t nan In the publio affairs of the Ohootaw Nation, ne.de a grtat hit and was loudly applauded, Ht said that the white people wanted the Indian*a land when the whitea already had more land than they were using* Ht then consented on the fact that t^ uhlte people re* garded the Indian as unoiyilized and superstitious, yet when he was in a hank in SedaHs, Mo^ that very day, he had noticed a horse ahoe nailed up over the door* ^e had inquired what it meant and the banker had told hia that it wae 'to bring good luck and keep the witches off* "At first the railroad charged aeren c-nto per mile, passenger fare, but this was later reduced to fiv«?ants per mile,' after statehood it was reduced to three cents per mile«"sose of the early conductors were rery unaceos*- uodating. I was once put off six Biles south of?«rry~ Tille and had to walk that distance up the track under a broiling suamer sun, although I begged to be allowed to pay sixty cents more and get off at Perxyrille. Bat most of the conductors were nice men, such AS f«h» Maxwell,

ISO*, MRS* > HDHROW 80RAPB00K. 7608 33* John Hill, Ghiok Warn?, Ben Brown and others." The. faota In this manuscript wars established by laterriews with Mr«. P.. J» Inga, At oka, Mrs, FXorenoe Or egg, Durent, and Sd Flint, Ohootaw freedom, Atoka,