HOWELL, THOMS BELL INTERVIEW

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Transcription:

HOWELL, THOMS BELL INTERVIEW 4846.. 359

- - 8 - Form A-(S-149) BIOGRAPHY, FORM WORKS PROGRESS ifflmdjistration Indian-Pioneer History Project for Oklahoma 3(59 i 'Field Worker's name * f Thi& report made on (date) 193 7 F! Name Post Office Address BellHowll I 3, Residence address (or location) 4. DATS OF BIRTH: Month Jtafr f 5» Place of birth. Day- Tear 1869 Middleton^ Tenaossee ft-: r 6* Name of Father 1 # B, Bomll. Place of birth Other information about father 7# Name of Mother Place of birth Other information about mother =**? Notes or complete narrative by the field worker dealing.r 'Y ^-^ l.tc and story of the person interviewed. Refer to Manual for su~ '...- 4^ct suljtcts [ and questions. Continue on blank sheets if necessary and r^ach firmly to t this form, Nijmber of sheets attached 5 "

BOUE&, TBBOUB BOX (MU) ' IMTEHflflU AM Interview with Mr* T* B* Howell, Gfcqrmon, Oklahoma* By - Carl H«Meyfield, Held Worker* July X7 f 1097* / Mr* Howell moved to No Man's Land in December, 1903, from Seymour, Texas* He came by Altus and was a week in crossing from the southeast corner to the northwest corner of old Greer County. He filed on a claim twelve miles north of Guymon. Daring the winter and spring months of 1904 he gathered bones on the prairies from his place to within eight or ten mile* of where KLkhart, Kansas,is now located. He was late getting home on several oceamione and to keep from getting lost in a new country he put up a tower in his yard so his wife could hang a lantern on it at night* He could see it for several miles* One night he saw a light and started toward it* The moles kept trying to go to the left* When he ease to a one wire fence he realised that he had spotted the wrong ligot* He had traveled about six miles northeast of His claim to a plaee near where Houser, Texas^ is mow located. He received seven dollars per ton for the bones and times it would take him a week to get a ton* At that

HWttLL, THOMAS PETER (DR.) INTERVIEW* 369 tin** I spent two years at Atoka and sold out to Dr* Folaom, then moved to Pauls Valley, where I began the practice of medicine. In 1876, I moved to my present location, three miles west and one mile north of Davis* Here, I established a good medioal practice, sometimes riding as far as Healdton to see a patient* I would go on horseb- ck ; usually riding down one day and coming back the next* My mother moved four miles vest of the present town of Davis while I was attending school In Baltimore* She settled on the old Monorief place, which is now owned by a Mr* Smith* Tom Grant. My first wife was Lizzie Grant, a daughter of Ton Grant later married my sister* The first store around Davis was called the Washita tore and was owned and operated by Matt Wolfe* Apparently he wanted to own the whole place and did not want anyone else to own property there f so Sam Davis went down to the present town of Davis and established a home and began operating a store* larly settlers in this country were the Gardners, Brad Camp, 3am Garvin, Tom Grant, Mitchells, Wantlinga, Kimberllns and Joe Myera. The Ktmberlins and Wantlings

BDWJKLL, T* B* (MR,) INttJttWUW* #4846 363 the herd and thought he was, riding a go#fil horse, bu he could not crowd"the-stallion fast enough to make him break a single foot* The last he heard of this stallion he was above the Point Bock Ranch on the Cimarron River and latex in Colorado where a Mexican shot him too low in the neck to crease him but the horse wai." never worth anything alter that* Lot Heaton, the foreman on the Anchor Dee Ranch; told Mr* Howell in town one day that he heard the n nesters n were going to fence the range, burn the grass, dog the cattie and run the. cowmen out of the country* Mr* Howell replied; "I can only speak for ay self, but 1 hare a two wire fence around my place, which, was all I could afford* I also hare a fire guard plowed around it* And if any cattle break into my field I will put them out, but if they show fight and I have to kill any of them I will be man enough to bring you the hides" Mr* Heaton saw he was a square shooter and told him if he needed any wire or post to go down, to the Ten Ranch and get them* \ Mr* Howell raised a good crop that year, especially

BOIILL, T. B. (MR.) IKHOIVJLJ«* #4846 364 watermelon* jand a few pie melons* He told the ranch hands to help themselves whenever they wanted a melon but he did not want them to tear up the vines* On the east end of the field he had some extra good pie melons* was about the size of a ten gallon cream can* One of them One day he missed this big melon and later found it out in the pasture with four knife blades broken off inside it* On Saturday he brought a wagon load of melons to town and Lot Heaton walked up to the load and asked if these were the kind that broke knife blades* Mr* Howell laughed because he knew then who had gotten the big melon and learned that Mr* Heaton had a new four blade knife costing about two dollars and that he had broken all of the blades trying to open the melon* * That spring Mr* Howell used a walking plow to mark off the road from Guymon north of the Kansas line* which was one of the first in what is now Texas County* He sold his first maize for a dollar a hundred at Optima, Texas, which was about ten miles southeast of his claim* The roads were easier to travel over at that time*

H31ELL, T. B. (ME,) ISSEB7IEV* < #4846 In the spring of 1907, Kr. Howell went down to the Ten Ranch to see Harry Clark on some business matters* Mr* Clark was peeling the hides off of some old cows that had died* He would skin the legs and by ripping the critter down the belly he could tie the cows feet to a tree* He was using a big saddle horse called "Possum" to peel the hide* Old "Possum" was one of the beat allround eow horses in the country at that time* Mr* Howell raised his best.crop in 1910 and sold his maize fox- a dollar, but sold some of it for sixty cents a hundred weigbtf* In ls15^hr^howell served as elerk for a group of successful farmers in establishing the Eula Christian Church^fourteen miles north and one mile west of Quy«on* The Beverend Mr* Haddock of Brick was the first minister* Several years latex Mr* Howell imported one of the first herds of Quernaey cattle into this section of Oklahoma* He retired from the farm in 1922* He has axwaye been * faithful worker fox lite church which he helped to build for the Cfwiwnrtty* ************* ****»*»»»»**».» ***************

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