27 June 2016

OkieLegacy Ezine/Tabloid, Vol. 18, Iss. 25 - 2016-06-27

We are in the process of publishing this weeks "OkieLegacy Ezine/Tabloid." A new issue has been added by the NW Okie. You may now read it and post comments at The Okie Legacy: Volume 18, Issue 25 published on 2016-06-27.
http://okielegacy.net/journal/tabloid/index.php?iss=25&vol=18
http://okielegacy.net/journal/ezine/index.php?Issue=25&Volume=18

19 June 2016

OkieLegacy Ezine/Tabloid Volume 18, Issue 24 published on 2016-06-19

We are in the process of publishing this weeks OkieLegacy Ezine/Tabloid.  A new issue has been added by the NW Okie.  You may now read  it and post comments at The Okie Legacy: Volume 18, Issue 24 published on  2016-06-19  
 http://okielegacy.net/journal/tabloid/index.php?iss=24&vol=18  
http://okielegacy.net/journal/ezine/index.php?Issue=24&Volume=18 

13 June 2016

We are in the process of publishing this week's OkieLegacy Ezine/Tabloid. Anew issue has been added by the NW Okie.  You may now read  it and post comments at The Okie Legacy:  Volume 18, Issue 23 published on  2016-06-13  
http://okielegacy.net/journal/tabloid/index.php?iss=23&vol=18  
http://okielegacy.net/journal/ezine/index.php?Issue=23&Volume=18  

06 June 2016

We are in the process of publishing this weeks OkieLegacy Ezine/Tabloid. A new issue has been added by the NW Okie. You may now read it and post comments at The Okie Legacy: Volume 18, Issue 22 published on 2016-06-06
  http://okielegacy.net/journal/tabloid/index.php?iss=22&vol=18  http://okielegacy.net/journal/ezine/index.php?Issue=22&Volume=18

30 May 2016

OkieLegacy Ezine/Tabloid, Vol. 18, Iss. 21 2016-05-30

Castle On The Hill, Alva, Oklahoma, 1893
We are in process of publishing this weeks OkieLegacy Ezine/Tabloid, while consolidating websites, and webpages into our OkieLegacy database.

This week we are adding the "1920 Pow-wow Alva High Yearbook." Next week we will continue consolidating old yearbooks with the NSTC 1917 Yearbook. You may now read it and post comments at The Okie Legacy: Volume 18, Issue 21 published on 2016-05-30
  http://okielegacy.net/journal/tabloid/index.php?iss=21&vol=18

http://okielegacy.net/journal/ezine/index.php?Issue=21&Volume=18

 If you are having problems finding (paristimes.com) and (okielegacy.org), those domains have been merged with okielegacy.net at http://okielegacy.net/paristimes/ and http://okielegacy.net/okielegacy/.
Almost 100 years ago (actually, 99 years ago), the  Alva (Oklahoma) Rangers' Northwestern  Newspaper staff were the following (photo taken from the 1917 Ranger Yearbook):

 Bob Lasley,  editor in chief;  Fant Ward, Busi. Manager; John Hicks, Asst. Busi. Manager; Kathrine Monroe, Literary Editor;  Ruth Miller, Asst. Literary Editor; Ines Beattie, Art Editor; Rosa Walker, Asst. Editor in chief; Edna Conway, Joke Editor; Thomas Coffman, Ast. Org. Editor; Dee Julian, Athletic Editor; Eugena Huddleston, Asst. Athletic Editor; Chalmer Morefield, Org. Editor. 

18 May 2016

Warwick, Oklahoma


Warwick, Oklahoma



Warwick SW turn off Route 66. Photos were  taken February 25, 2001 at the southwest entrance, in  Warwick, and north off of Route 66.



According to the Lincoln Historical Society, Warwick originated from the East half and Southwest quarter of Section 17, Twp 14N, Range 3 EIM (east indian meridian), Territory of Oklahoma.
The rural area around Warwick used agriculture for family income with cotton as the cash crop.
David M. High and his wife, Norah Copp, were very early settlers of Warwick. Norah was born in Canada and moved to Kansas, USA, at the age of seven years. Several years passed, and she married David High.

Between the opening of the Run of 1889, and the Sac and Fox opening of 1891, Territory of Oklahoma, Mr. and Mrs. High and their oldest daughter moved to Purcell. Later in 1891 they moved to their "homestead" on South half of the SE quarter, Sec 17-Twp 14N-Rge3 EIM. Their patent was signed 9 April 1901 by President McKinley.

17 September 1896, the Saint Louis & San Francisco Railway purchased right-of-way from David High for the building of a railroad.

In 1903, High deeded to Hoffman and Hoffman deeded to Fort Smith & Western Railway Company right-of-way for another railroad.

Hoffman sold land to Monarch Investment which surveyed and platted the lots and streets. On September 18, 1903, Monarch filed notice of establishment of the town of Warwick and the sale of lots began. Streets were named after the presidents. The streets were black-topped in 1968.

September 21, 1903, the county attorney, Emery Foster, in Territory of Oklahoma, filed a petition against Monarch Investment, alleging a lottery scheme was used to sell lots. The selling of lots to various bidders was then supervised by sheriff Martin. In December, 1905, the unsold lots were sold to Texas Townsite Company of Warwick, and later sold to individuals.

Early Businesses of Warwick:

Bank
Drug store
Saloon
Depot (serving both RR)
Warwickian Newspaper
McCall's Blacksmith




Two Hotels - Warwick Hotel was owned by Dave & Norah High who bought it from Mr. Bruce. It was destroyed by a tornado and the lumber was bought by Homer Pool.

Cotton Gin & Mill:
Several small Grocery Stores, Filling stations & garage services - The Cherry's were just one of those who owned a store in Warwick and sold groceries, hardware, dry goods, lumber, caskets, and later added gas pumps & post office.
Veternarian - Nate C. Sellars
Delivery barn - G. S. Dodd
Saw Mill - J. L. Cheatham
Southland Cotton Company - Cotton Gin

Chessman Grocery Store... Cheatham family operated the grocery store near the depot for years. It included a Post Office. They moved from Warwick to south side of town where the new grocery store was built. During the automobile era, they operated a garage.

1940's... The Frisco Railway Co. & Fort Smith & Western Railway were abandoned for financial problems and taken over by Burlington Northern. passenger service was discontinued, but freight service continued until 1986.

1963... When some towns were annexing towns in their area that bordered them, citizens of Warwick didn't see benefit to them for annexing. The entire Warwick School District No. 138 (1800 acres) was incorporated. making Warwick the largest town in the area, in Lincoln County.

Eastside of Warwick School District #138T. The Warwick School building was used as a community building and cared for by the Warwick Community Club, approved by the Wellston School Board.

The First School: 

Warwick's first school was a log building that was also used as a church.

In 1908... twenty children attended school in the Methodist church building with one teacher, Carrie Brewer.

In 1909... A solid block building was constructed. The blocks were made for the building by a local business man J. L. Cheatham.

Westside of Warwick school bldg.  In 1940 -  Warwick School District #138 was built by the WPA (Workman's Progress Administration). While it was being built the students went to the Methodist church just east of the school ground. The custodian, Golda Pinkston, put the finish on the floors of the two-room school before desks and students moved in.

May, 1968 -  The Warwick School consolidated with Wellston School.  The Warwick School was used one term for the "Headstart" program with 24 students enrolled. Ruth Davenport Greenfield and Tawyna Humphrey Franklin were the teachers. Citizens of McKinley now use the building as a voting district.

Teachers of the Warwick School:
Earl Alden
Bertha Foster
Della Weaber
Minnie Kunkle
Mary Cooper
J. O. Geiser
Myrtle Gerardy
Verkah Thomas
Myrtle Sudheimer
Anna Vassar
Vera Clonts
Opal Sudheimer
Eunice Goble
Hazel Morris
Lavinia Bowker
Dora Bowen
Otis Gilliam
Mary Conley
Elizabeth Alexander
Gladys Scott - last to teach



Hurst Park, Warwick, Oklahoma

Hurst Park, Warwick, OKHurst Park... In Warwick, just west of the Old Warwick school building is the Hurst Park built and dedicated by the Hurst family in that area.

Warwick Post Office:
Lincoln County received mail overland by stagecoach from Guthrie. It took a day to travel a distance of 50 miles from Guthrie.

Mr. Wilson owned a store in the area of Warwick (which was not yet a town). His store handled the mail, but did not have a post office name.The Warwick Post Office, began October 26, 1892, with J. A. Ramsey, postmaster. The post office closed in December 1972 when Golda Dixon retired.

Postmasters of Warwick included the following:
J. A. Ramsey, J. L. Cheatham family, G. S. Dodd, J. W. Cherry, Golda Dixon.


Sac and Fox Tribes

Sac and Fox Tribes

The following information is taken from the Oklahoma Historical Society book on the "History of Lincoln County."

The Sac or Sauk, or people of the yellow earth, and the Fox or Mesquakie, or people of the red earth, began as two separate but neighboring tribes and their earliest known habitiat was within the eastern penisula of Michigan.

From the book, Thwaite's Jesuit Relations, comes this fact: "when first known to history, i.e. in 1650, the Sauk and Foxes numbered probably 6500 (Sauk, 3500; Foxes, 3000)."

Father Allouez, the first person to describe the Sauk, wrote this in the book: "... in 1667 they (Sauk) were more savage than all the other peoples he had met; That they were a populous tribe, although they had no fixed dwelling place, being wanderers and vagabonds in the forests."

Because their language and customs were similiar and for protection and survival, the Sac and Foxes banded together and are considered Woodland Indians of the Algonquin linguistic family.

It was in November of 1869 that the first Sac and Fox Indians arrived in Indian Territory in what is now called Lincoln County, Oklahoma. The group traveled for 19 days from Osage County, Kansas, in 17 government wagons to reach their new home, the Sac and Fox reservation land, six miles south of what is now called Stroud. Twenty-three wagons filled with baggage, implements and provisions preceded the party and were already on the groung when the Indians arrived.

The Sac and Fox Indians had signed a treaty with the United States in 1867 and agreed to purchase 750,000 square miles of land in portions of what is now Payne, Lincoln and Pottawatomie counties.

The tribes sojourn in Kansas was just one of the many stops in a succession of moves forced on them by the migration of white settlers beginning in 1804, when they left their original Great Lakes homeland and lived in Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, and Kansas, before the move to Indian Territory.

Government Chief Keokuk negotiated the 1867 treaty to exchange Kansas land for the Indian Territory property, and some of the tribe protested the transaction. In 1868, a delegation went to Washington D.C. to protest and file lawsuits concerning the document, but in 1869 and 1870 most of the tribe removed to Indian Territory.

One band of the Sac and Fox, lead by heriditary Chief Mo-Ko-Ho-Ko, protested the move to Indian Territory and for years after the treaty was signed (and even after his death in 1880) many of his band kept returning to their old homes in Kansas and Iowa.

One discontented group of Sac and Fox returned to the Tama, Iowa area where they purchased land and remained as a separate tribe. The Sac and Fox of Iowa, who call themselves Mesquakie, list a about 700 on their tribal roles. There is also a Sac and Fox of Kansas and a Sac and Fox of Missouri, each tribe with fewer than 200 members. The Sac and Fox of Oklahoma is by far the largest of the four and list more than 2300 persons on the tribal roll.

The winter of arrival at their Indian Territory home in 1869 was a mild one -- lucky for the Sac and Fox -- as they were forced to live in linen tents until homes and buildings were constructed.

A large number of the more able tribesmen came to the reservation area in the spring of 1870, after participating in a winter hunt, and so saved the United States government moving costs.

A few months after their arrival in Indian Territory, the Sac and Fox government agent, John Hadley, reported a total of 418 Sac and Fox Indians on the reservation: 220 males and 228 females.

In both of the reports Hadley filed with the government in 1870, he writes that the Indians were unsure of land titles and rights and were worried about hostilities because the government was not sure of reservation boundaries. There is evidence in files of the Oklahoma Historical Society that the tribe had to move twice because the government surveyors ahd marked the eastern and southern boundaries incorrectly.

Soon after their arival in Indian Territory, the Sac and Fox dispersed into several villages in the huge reservation area. They built their traditional bark houses for summer and cattail house for winter and began to farm and raise stock on the mostly thin and rocky soil, a much different farming situation than they had experienced, considering the rich river bottom land of Kansas, Missouri, Illinois, Iowa, and their Great Lakes homeland.

The cattails gathered in the fall were used to weave mats for the houses that the Sac and Fox lived in during the winter months, when they moved to Indian Territory in 1869. A large piece of elm bark was laid against the canvas for a door of their winter hut. They used large pieces of elm bark like this to construct their summer houses.

In 1885 the tribal council, led by Chief Ukquahoko, organized into a Sac and Fox Nation, wrote a constitution, elected a Principal Chief to approve and sign all bills and contracts and a Second Chief to chair the councils. The same year the tribe established a complete court system and instituted a police department.

Pressure for the opening of Indian Territory to white settlement resulted in an agreement made by the United States Commissioners at the Sac and Fox Agency in June, 1890, signed by Principal Chief Mahkosahtoe and First Assistant Principal Chief moses Keokuk in behalf of the Sac and Fox Nation, providing for part of their reservation to the United States.

Allotments of 160 acres to each member of the nation were completed, and the "surplus" lands (about 385,000 acres) were opened to white settlement by a run on Tuesday, September 22, 1891.

Soon after the tribe signed the agreement that authorized the run into Sac and Fox lands, the federal government abolished the elected tribal council and Chief Mahkosahtoe held office until the council itself was dissolved officially on July 17, 1909.

Walter Battice, an early-day treasurer of the tribe, wrote that with the abolishment of the council "... We, as educated Indians, too late to ponder right and wrong of human relations with Indians and invaders ... must equip ourselves for what is coming. Before 1867, we had two chiefs, one Sauk and one Fox, then we have five Chiefs, Keokuk, Chicaskuk, Ukquahoko, Pahtequah and Cuppewhe, each with a band."

The Sac and Fox Indian Boarding School, begun by Quaker missionaries in 1872, was located on the eastern edge of the reserve land and many Sac and Fox children were forced to attend. A number of Sac and Fox elders remember the government sheriffs' coming to their villages to "catch" children, load them into wagons and take them to the Sac and Fox School and a number of other Indian Schools as far away as Pennsylvania. There they were forced to learn English and were often punished for speaking their active Indian lanuage.

"Many wagon loads of nearly 100 children are expected to attend the Sac and Fox Mission School," reported a Stroud newspaper in September of 1901.

The first school building was a handsome three-story brick structure, built at a cost to the tribe of $9500. Other school buildings included a girls' dormitory, boys' dormitory, a laundry, a large barn, and a water tower and sewer system.

Many buildings were erected a the Sac and Fox Agency in the years between 1870 and 1900, including several two-story brick homes for the tribal chiefs. A large brick home was constructed for Chief Keokuk and still stands about four miles west of the "agency" site. (In 1987 the Keokuk house was owned and occupied by the Ninness family and is listed on the National Register of Historic Sites).

Other structures in the Sac and Fox agency town included four brick buildings, two frame houses a sawmill, a brick kiln, two frame store buildings, a blacksmith shop, a church, a log calaboose (jail), a physicians office, and several old log cabins. At various times the town also included a cotton gin, a bank, a boarding house, cafes, and at one time even a little photography studio and a shoe repair shop.

J. Y. Bryce, a Methodist-Episcopal missionary to the Sac and Fox, wrote the following description of the agency in 1890: "... The agency was both a preaching point and a military post. Its normal popluation was less than 500...."

Lincoln County, Oklahoma

Lincoln County, Oklahoma


Chandler, OK (1999)
Chandler Museum (1999)
Chandler, OK (1999)
All Were Republicans:
Harry F. Ardery, county treasurer
Claud F. Parker, Sheriff
P. P. Hillerman, Count Attorney
G. A. Colton, County Clerk
Marquis D. Losey, County Superintendent
Charles Cunningham, Surveyor
Thomas J. Taylor, Register of Deeds 


County Commissioners: C. H. DeFord, Wylie H. Blakemore and W. N. Warren.

The County Commissioners held their first meeting October 22, 1891 at 2 pm, although the location was not recorded. Blakemore was elected chairman at this first meeting. On November 5th... The board voted to advertise for sealed bids for proposals to rent space for court rooms and county offices for one year, with a possible two-year extension.

On November 12, bids were awarded to Kalklosch and Johnson, and to R. S. White and C. L. White for rental of rooms in their business buildings from January 1, 1892 through January 1, 1893.

The commissioners voted November 7, 1891, to name the various townships in the county as follows... Ponca, Pawnee, Osage, Cimarron, Iowa, Tohee, Otoe, Chandler, Fox, Keokuk, Creek, Seminole, Choctaw, Wichita and Kickapoo.

As the years passed, the townships were divided into north and south divisions as population and needs for services merited. The divided townships were named at that time. Township government played an important role in the assessment of property, opening, building and maintaining roads. The commissioners approved naming township in southwestern County A Kickapoo and Wichita, although that part of the county was still part of the Kickapoo reservation and not open for settlement. That area had already been disignated to become part of the county when it was eventually settled.

Residents of Counties A at the first general election in November, 1892, chose names for their counties and elected officials to serve as the first elected officers.

In County
The Populists proposed the name of Sac and Fox. The Democrats wanted the name Springer (for William Springer, member of Congress from Illinois). The Republicans proposed the name of Lincoln (for the president). The Republicans won by a majority and the county was named Lincoln.

1st Monday, January, 1893 ... The first elected officers in Lincoln County took office the first Monday in January, 1893.
They were:
D. W. Ulam, county treasurer
Claud F. Parker, sheriff
W. H. Mason, probate judge
Thomas J. Taylor, register of deeds
J. B. Underwood, county clerk
J. W. Crawford, county attorney
M. D. Losey, county superintendent
N. McKimmey, surveyor
Smith Rhea, coroner
Commissioners: C. A. Kelso, first district; Benoni Rea, second district; and Jacob Amberg, third district.