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

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LEAL, CELESTE CABY INTERVIEW 8345 14 INDEX Chickasaw Nation Ranch Home Sulphur Cherokee Town Beef Issues Cyrus Harris

LEAL, CELESTE CABT. ' INTERVIEW. 83451 A n - 8 - * *' Form A-(S-149) Y FO M S AKiiaSlTJA-TION Indian-Pi on our History Project for Oklahoma eld Worker*s name Maurioe R. Anderson. ic report made on (date) August 25, 1957,, 193 Name Mrs. Celeste Caby Leal. Post Office Address Wynnewood, Oklahoma. Residence address (or location) General Delivery. DATE OF BIRTH: Month ' April Day 30 Year 1882. Place of birth Indian Territory, Chiokasaw Nation. Name of Father Perry Froman Place of birth Illinois. Other information about father ' v Deceased. \ -- 1 of Mother Levina Colbert. Placo of birth Other information aoout mother Deceased. ites or complete narrative by the field v/orker dealing with the life"and story ' the person interviewed* Refer to Manual for suggested subjects and questions, Kitinue on blank sheets if necessary and attach firmly to this form. Number of u,et3 attached 4 *,

LEAL, CELESTE CABY. INTERVTEf..8345. Maurice Anderson, Field Worker. *» * < * - An Interview With Celeste Leal, Yfynnewood, Oklahoma. I was botn in 1888 about a mile and a half west of where Wynnewood, Oklahoma^is now. * My mother was part Chickasaw Indi-an. I have heard her tell about the Indians. She sai^that the.chickasaw Indians who came from Mississippi in the early days were well educated and were large slave owners. Each girl in a family whose father owned slaves, had a slave girl of her own to wait on her. I-"don't remember hearing my mother say. when she came to the Indian Territory but it was before she married my father. She had been married before, and her first husband had died. My father, a young man at that time, settled in this where part of the oountry, and started a ranch near/sulphur, Oklahoma is now. He met and married my^ aother. The ranch house was an upright log- house; instead of laying the logs on top of the other, horizontally, they were stood upright, side by side, His ranch was the Diamond Z Ranch, but our home was west of Wynnewood, and father divided his time between our home and the ranch, so I don't know much about how the cattle ranch was operated* X

LEAL, CELESTE* CAF/, INTEHVTlft.. 8345-2 - Ky mother has said in t;he early days that the Western Indians'were their main trouble. The Coraanches and Kiov/as v/ould make raids, stealing and driving off the cattle and horses. One evening a buiich of 1 ;\Qra v/ere c i ;1 i> to make a raid in this j;art of the country, so t. t ni t # ht a number of people gathered at our home and waited for the Indians to come. She ovmed most of the horses in this pert of the country. Along auout midnight, they he-.rd a noise at the corral, but by the J.,irtte they coftld all get outside, the Indians had started off with her horses, A small horse, her favorite, was in "he bunch. She always rode it, As they were chasing the Indians to recover the horses, the Indians shot this little horse full of arrows and killed it because it could not travel ts fast as the big horses. Instead of ^:oing on and leaving it. they were savage enough to kill anything they couldn r t take. Killing her favorite, hurt her more than it did losing the rest of the herd, I have heard my mother speak of old Cherokee Town t In the early days it was a shipping point on the stage line that came through there,"and w&s a trading post.

LEAL, CELESTE CABY. INTERVIEW,, 8345. -3- The government issued beef to the Comanohe, Klowe. and "Apftoh* Indians in a camp there on the prairie and along the Washita river,,. The mail would corns from Oaddo to Cherokee Town 04 the stage and would be \ delivered to Fort Arbuokle on horsebaek. so in the early days old Cherokee Town was a transfer station for mail coming in for Fort Arbuckle.. I was a large, girl before I saw an orange; we ohildren in the early days were luoky if we got some candy on Christmas day. We didn't have schools then like we do now* there were a few schools. A girlts Boarding Sohool was at WhitaUead, before the branch of the Yftilroad from Pauls Valley was built by there. r I have heard Mother say that peddlers would come through this part of the oountry selling things. Several times she has paid a five dollar gold piece for enough calico dress material to make one dress. Governor Harris of the Chlckasaw Nation was banker and guardian for lots of people. I knew several Indian women who took their gold to Governor Harris to keep for. them. When a child

CABY. INTERVIBPf. 8345. 19-4- was left an orphan it was turned over to GoTernor Harris. ".He would find a home for it and sometimes kept it himself. It has 'been said Governor Harris ran a boarding house at Mill CreeET He did in a way, but it was free, for anybody coming through that part of the country. They were always welcome, were well fed and given a Tied if they stayed all night. But he did not charge for room and meals. Strangers were welcome to stay without cost. There were very few church houses in my young days. After Wynnewood started, building up we had a church house and a school.» * *