t COM^S, SARAH INTERVIEW #7836

Similar documents
A Bridge to the Past: The Euharlee Covered Bridge Written By Amanda Closs Edited for web application by Judi Irvine

LOG CABIN (Now at Fiddler s Grove, Lebanon, Tenn.)

From the Testimony of Bernard Mayer on Building a Bunker in a Gentiles Home, Poland, 1943

Notice of Copyright. Citing Resources from the Western History Collections

A.M. Irene, how long has your family been farming in this area?

FUNERAL ARRANGEMENTS By Laurie Allen Copyright 1998

Interviewers: Wynell Schamel and Ed Schamel IntervieweEd Schamel: Lucille Disharoon Cobb. Transcriber: David MacKinnon

POP ABERNETHY - An Ulster Scot in America. By Brian McConnell *

John E. Reilly spent Sunday in Beloit, the guest of his daughter, Mrs. Edna Iunghuhn. February 10, 1906, Badger, Evansville, WI.

WILLIAM ESTABROOK. Interviewer: Cliff Crawford

The Batterson Barn: Then and Now

[Here follows another passage in Blackfoot followed by a passage in English.]

DENISON, CHARLES A. (Dr.) INT2RVI&W //122O0 126

IM)EX CARDS Schools Choctav/ nation ^and Tenure Choc taw Farming hoctaw nation 'l'oll bridges Ohoctaw i Springs Choctaw Nation Ball games ^octaw

The gorges of Mohican Park in Ohio create a hiker's paradise Sunday, May 22, 2011 By Bob Downing, Akron Beacon Journal

From Commemorative Biographical Record of the Counties of Rock, Green, Grant, Iowa and Lafayette Wisconsin, publ page

First Generation. Second Generation. Third Generation

DANIEL PUTMAN of the Pendleton District South Carolina

My grandmother experience making a family in the U.S. citizen during the times were so rough. condemn and there house was haunted.

Mark your calendar for 2018 special MCHS events

Married: Thursday evening, Jan. 4, at 6 o'clock, Miss Sybil Ball and Mr. Benj. Ellis both of this city.

Interview with Walter C. Robbins ID0005 [Sr] 20 September at his home Transcribed by Walter C. Robbins, Jr. ID0001 [Jr] 20 September 2005

Below is the section of the Byway discussed in the Dickenson County meeting. Primary coal sites are noted on the map.

The Frenchman s Cabin on Commonwealth Creek: One of the Lost Lodges at Snoqualmie Pass

#4256 INDEX CABDS: Chl/Jkaaaw Nation Dugout Home Cheyenne -Arapatko Country Osceola-Gh^at Town Hange and Herd L&V

Pioneer Fashioned Home from Glade Park Cave

The Storm. (looking at a photo of a boat) Very nice, Dad! Bye! See you at the picnic. My friends are waiting for me. I m late.

Niehaus/Nienhueser Family Information

Copeland Hill Cemetery

1XUEEMAN, tii&vin ^8368 \

Welcome To La Recoleta ARGENTINA'S 'LIVELIEST' CEMETERY

Violet Morehouse Jurek

Capitol Hill Interviews

The Lost Settlement of Roanoke

The GADE Story. as related to Edward (Ted) George GADE ( )

Personal History. Curiosity Creek on the end of Jenal Road in 2003 (USF) Curiosity Creek in 2003 (USF)

Doty Meets Coyote Contents & Audio Playlist

CAST MEMBERS 1.DARK WALKER

JAMES WATT

MISSING SANTA By Allyson Lindsay December 8, 2006 Wyndmere, ND

My Life Since Brymore June 2014

Robin Hood. Level 2. Retold by Liz Austin Series Editors: Andy Hopkins and Jocelyn Potter

History/Descriptive Notes: 3.5 acres with orchard that was actively used until current owner purchased in 1982.

Recollections of My Family History

Jonesfield Township History Traced to 1812

Ira Hartley died of consumption in October 1929 before his

Photo collection: Heuer family farm (Bertha, Minnesota)

and led Jimmy to the prison office. There Jimmy was given an important He had been sent to prison to stay for four years.

ZACHARIAH PUTMAN Virginia to Kentucky to Ohio then Illinois

Annual General Meeting

THE COUNTY FARM POOR HOUSE By Charlie Hunter "Siftings from Putnam County, Tennessee" by Mary Hopson, pp

Uncle James Howver The Gold Rush and a Lost Claim

*** Note: Mileages are based on resetting trip odometer to zero at each turn point AL-5 is Alabama Highway 5 CO-51 is County Road 51, etc.

Descendants of James Dudgeon

3 A , St. Peter's Roman Catholic Church (1878) 507 South Tryon Street

MAJOR ISRAEL MCCREIGHT

First Floor Plan. Second Floor Plan

HOWELL, THOMS BELL INTERVIEW

Images of a country town

L 6-1. gister of Cultural Heritage Resources Brramalea Road Crawford Hou

12/14/10 Regular Trustees Meeting. Zoning Inspector

CULTURE SHOCK The Death of Emmett Bobo Till

Read the text then answer the questions:-

St.Patrick s Cemetery, April 1861 By Peggy Calvey Patton

2018 The Friends of Two Rivers Mansion, a 501(c)(3) organization McGavock Pike,

T H E L E T T E R. only made. but also gave. of character.

NANCE, JOHN INTERVIEW

Orienteering. The fundamental outdoors skill!

The President James K. Polk State Historic Site Teacher s Packet

Grimbosq Battlefield Tour RMD and our UK contingent are working up a scenario about the battle of the Grimbosq bridgehead in Normandy.

Passamaquoddy Photograph Collection,

2008 Caribbean Volunteer Expeditions

Inchcailloch Island. Cultural Heritage. Welcome to the island of Inchcailloch.

some The funeral ser vice Burial Expenses Where can the ser vice take place? Who transports your baby? HE2319

HASTINGS, INEZ. IHTBWXgW t8e0 113

So it is probable that Richard would have been involved in the expansion of the railway from Aberdeen north and east to Inverness and Fraserburgh.

2 Have a nice trip! Mission twelve. passport. When are they leaving? Unscramble the letters. Find out!

Brigitte Schaper LITTLE HERBERT

TRAIN TO MOSCOW HAL AMES

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW LIEUTENANT RUDOLF WEINDLER. Interview Date: January 15, Transcribed by Nancy Francis

The Wieden Place. Portion of Plat Map Drawn After 1889 and Before Wiedens and Wiedens Roses

Elly s day out in Eddleston, Peebleshire 9 th August 2017

MACMILLAN READERS UPPER LEVEL CHARLES DICKENS. Bleak House. Retold by Margaret Tarner MACMILLAN

-1- Authority: Flood Control Act, 3 July 1958 Length: 8,069

Reading Counts Quiz. Time Period: N/A. Teacher: Amy Kendall. Student: Book: Way Down Deep

Oregon Burial Site Guide Hood River County J I / / / / ODSVM ALNI10)! -7=

ODOM, K7A LENA COPd^-ND. INTERVIEW ^8978 I 51

MP : The Empire Toll Gate and Glen Arbor

Songs from Windy Gully

Lewis & Clark Return Home

YMCA CAMP WABANSI Traditional day camp for boys and girls ages 7-17 GREATER GREEN BAY YMCA FUN & FRIENDSHIP ON THE BAY

Warriston Cemetery, Edinburgh, Scotland, War Graves

A short story by Leo Schoof, Kelmscott, Western Australia. The Sexton s Wife

FILE NO WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW LIEUTENANT STEPHEN JEZYCKI INTERVIEW DATE OCTOBER TRANSCRIBED BY LAURIE COLLINS

Tape Log. 004 Born 1905 in Riverdale. Talks about grandmother taking him to a farm in Riverdale after his mother died.

Driving Tour of Underground Railroad Homes in Delaware County Prepared by the Delaware County Historical Society

= Jane Birkett daughter of Daniel Birkett. witnesses: George Birket, Henry Hoggarth, James Birket. John # marriage: Lindale date: 28/06/1819

Lane Head, St James Square & Bridge Street

This interview was on the 1st December 1983, by Les Slater for the Richmond Borough Council. '' I am 87. I was bom two days before the Brunner mine

Hello, Thank you for taking the time to learn about us and the life we can offer your child.

Transcription:

t COM^S, SARAH INTERVIEW #7836

COMES, 3ABAH INTERVIEW. 7835 430 Journalist, Hazel B. Groene, votober 14, 1937, Interview with SaraoCombs, About*three miles west of Hugo. 1/8 Cbo«rtaw«My grandfather, Christopher Spring, was a fullblood German and came from Germany. Hejnarried my grandmother, Susan Bohannon,ln?«5isslssippi and came to the Indian Territory, Choctaw Nation, when some of the children were great big children. Grandmother Susan was a half-breed Choctaw Indian. They were the parents of ten children, eight boys and two &lrls. All lived to raise fanilies of their own. Our home that Grandpa built for my mother was a double log house, locnted in -whajl is now just about-the center of Spring Chapel Cemetery, right close to where Joel Spring's grave is. I was born there June 3, 1863. Uncle Lev! lived over on the hill across the railroad from our place. Only there was not any railroad then and upon that hill was a little one-room, log school house. It was about half way between the place that was settled later by Uncle Tom Spring and by Uncle Levi. I went to school there one month when I "

COMBS, 3AJUH.DJTERVIEW, 7835 431 V was four years old* Uncle Tom went, also* He was a good big boy but ho.went to school. Our teaoher was a Mr. Pole, Then X vent another month to school when I was seven* Uncle Billy Spring had a big lot of land under fence # north of his homo and that traot of land covered about all of what is no 1! the third ward of Hugo. It was some pasture and some cotton patches, and over about where Mount Olivet Cemetery Is he had built a little school house for the children of his tenants and I got to go just a month there in that little log hut* When I was twelve years old, I visited a sister at Caddo, and I got to go to school another month. That was the total of my schooling but I learned to read and write and figure. Grandfather, Christopher Spring,decided to return to Germany and saddled up hia horse, put a lot of gold money In his saddle bags and proceeded to a waterfront somewhere* We always thought it was maybe New Orleans, because on his return journey he died and was buried at Sttrevepori, Louisiana. In the days when my grandfather died news did not travel very fast and it was several months before,the family learned of his death* TheQ»jQnole Billy and Utfcle Levl went down wet re.

GOMES, SARAH INTERVIEW / 7835 They vent on horseback and It took them a long time to get there, so by that time several more graves had been made around where he had been burled and nobody could tell which is, grave was Grandfather*. It was said that' they had burled his money with him, but the people at Shroveport did not know which grave to dig into or to mark* The proper auth- - orlties gave them permission to dig in and get that money, but they did not hare pe mission to dig into others and did not know which one to dig into so they just returned home with proof of his death and burial* Grandmother lived a good many years longer and died and was tmrieu in Spring Chapel Cemetery. Uncle Levl's first wife was buried there in 1874* She was Bailey Spring's mother. Nation. Bailey was a prominent man and educator of Choctaw He was Superintendent of Goodland Orphanage for several years prior to his death. Uncle Levi's first wife was named Betsy. The next was Sophia boatman. The first old tombstones were of sandstone and carved and hewn out by one Chouteau, a Frenchmen, who did lots of stone building and such work all over this part of the Ghootaw Nation. Mr. Choteau hewed and carved out lots of ohimneys and foundations for houses*

O0MB3, 3ARAH. INTERVIEW. 7855 About 1874,1 was married to Edward Combs, a white man* In the Fall of 1880 when we had one child, we moved to the little one-room, log cabin $hat is now standing at the foot of what is- now known as Terry Hill in Laurel Heights, Hugo* The cabin has just about fallen into decay* The chimney is down and it is being used for a store place for feed* That cabin is at the base of the hill on the southeast side of the hill, but the southwest side of it is more sloped and down that way was a spring where we got our water* The spring was so deep that we had to draw the water up in a bucket* There is a pool there now but it does not look like the location of the well* Perhaps it is though* I imagine that they hat* just excavated that spring to make the pool because in tramping over the place the other day; - we could not find the spring* It never went dry while wt lived there, over a period of about four years* My hssb&sld was a hired hand of old Dr. George Scott, a practicing physiolan who was a ifolte man and married to an Indian woman* He and his wife and two daughters are burled up on top of that hill somewhere but in our search the other day. we oould not locate the graves* We could not even locate

C0MB3, SARAH. INTERVIEW. 7835 434 the old home place. The patches that my husband tilled in corn and other feed stuff is in the streets in the fourth ward of Hugo* He only tilled about six or eight acres» And there was a school house upon'the hill. T&at is now a bare hill was timbered then* All the way down to my cabin was timber* * I used to visit "Granny Roebuck" at Roebuck Lake, when I was a little girl, and there was not half as such water in the lake then as^ there is now and Granny Roebuck told me that when she was fifteen years old that there were-holes of water here and yonder in what is now Roebuck Lake and they trickled along and converged with each other, but that there were plenty of places where one could step across the lake, dryshod, and plenty of places where one could wade across. The Roewucka lived over on the "island" part and cultivated it* So they had to cross over to the main land all of the time*