WPA George S. Brown
Writer: Edith L. Crawford,
Carrizozo, N. Mex.
Narrator: George S. Brown,
Carrizozo, N.M.
PIONEER STORY.
AUG 2 - 1938
I have lived in Lincoln
County
fifty-four years. I came here from Cedar
Valley Missouri when
I was six years old. There were twenty one wagons in our train when we left Cedar Valley
for Mesa Arizona,
in April 1884. My father Thomas M. Brown, my mother and four children traveled
in four covered wagons drawn by horses. My mother's Father and Mother, Mr. and
Mrs. David C. May, drove one wagon drawn by two white oxen. The rest of the crowd in the train were all uncles and
aunts and cousins. They had their own covered wagons, drawn by mules. George
Murray and his wife (they were relatives of my mother) drove a one horse buggy
all the way through to Oklahoma,
where they decided to locate. There were times when we were on our way that
there would be as many as fifty wagons in our train. We would overtake some of
them and some would overtake us and we would all go along together for awhile
and then these other wagons would drift off on their own way, leaving us
twenty-one again. We had two hundred head of stock cattle with us. My father
and grandfather owned twenty-five of them. Each family had their own chuck box
and cooking utensils, and at night when we made camp each family would build
his own fire to cook on. We used buffalo and cow chips for wood on the plains.
We made our own candles. Grandma May had a mould that you could make four
candles at a time. She used any kind of tallow that she could get ahold of, and
twine string. It rained on us a lot on the first part of our trip but was awful
dry on the plains in Texas.
At night when we camped the men would form a circle with the wagons and put the
families and work stock inside the circle and the men folks would stand guard
over the cattle. We had to travel awful slow on account of our stock and ox
teams. When we came to a river where we could fish we would stay over for
several days and rest. The women folks would do their family washing and all
the children that were big enough would go out and gather wild strawberries,
raspberries, blackberries and wild plums and our mothers would make preserves
out of them. The men folks kept us in meat most of the time by killing antelope
and deer. We saw a few buffalo but they were so wild that the men could not got
near enough to kill any of them. It rained most all the time on us while we
were crossing through Missouri, Oklahoma and Kansas.
I remember when we crossed the rivers we would have to be towed across on ferry
boat and it would take two and three days to get all the wagons and stock
across. It was very hard to get the stock onto the ferry boats. We were always
on the look out for Indians but were never molested by them. We saw our first
Indians when we passed through the Cherokee Strip in the Indian
Territory. Our cattle were quarantined on the line between
Oklahoma and Kansas because they were covered with small ticks they claimed
would cause a disease called bloody [murruin?], so my father and the rest of
the men decided to sell all the cattle as they did not want to return for the
cattle later on and they sold them at quite a loss. We went through Dodge City Kansas and
crossed the line into Texas at Garden City Kansas. We passed
thro'ugh very few towns on our way out here and when we did come to a town we
would always stop and buy groceries. All of our water buckets, kegs, wash tubs,
dish pans and one flour barrell were made by my Mother's Uncle Jack Bowman, out
of red cedar that came from our farm in Missouri
and were hand made. He used copper bands to hold them together. We were six
months on the road. I remember that we crossed the Canadian
River at [?] Texas.
It was running bank full when we got there and we had to stay a week before we
could get across, as there were no ferry boats to cross on. It was quite a
cattle country and there were lots of cow boys around. They had a dance one
night while we were there and invited us all to come. Grandmother May and
Mother and several of the other ladies had never seen any one dance before so
they decided to go and see what it was like. The first dance was a waltz and
when the couples got up and the men put their arms around the women and started
to dance Grandfather May came over to Grandmother and said "Let's get out
of here, for this is no place for us," so they all got up and left. The
river was still pretty high when we left [?], so the cow boys tied ropes to the
wagon tongues and helped us to cross. One of the small mule teams fell down in
the middle of the river and the family that was in the wagon came pretty near
getting drowned, but there were about twenty cow boys who helped us across so
that there was not very much danger of anybody getting drowned. We came through
the X I T pasture which was on the staked plains in the western part of Texas. We saw lots of
antelope and cattle in this pasture. The next town that we came to was Fort Sumner, New
Mexico. When we crossed the Pecos
River it was up, but we had met up
with Oliver M. Lee and his half brother, (I can't remember his name) some where
in Texas and
they helped us to cross the river. They were coming to New Mexico with a herd of about three
hundred horses. They left our wagon train after crossing the Pecos
river and we did not see them again until years later. We came on to White Oaks, New Mexico and camped at
the Manchester Rock House, about three miles
from the town of White Oaks. Father decided to stay in White Oaks for awhile as he liked the country and old Geronimo was on
the war path and was somewhere between New Mexico and Arizona, and Father was
afraid to take a chance of going on into Arizona. Father began to haul freight
from Socorro, New Mexico to White Oaks, for the
mines. He hauled the first mining machinery that was brought into White Oaks, for a man by the name of Glass who put in a stamp mill
there. We lived at White Oaks for about two months and then
Father bought a place on Tortolito Canyon, (Turtle Dove) which is about ten
miles southeast of Carrizozo,
New Mexico, and at the foot of [?] Peak. We moved there in October 1884. We
farmed some and Father freighted for Lincoln, Fort Stanton,
Nogal and White Oaks. He bought two big schooner
wagons and twenty head of oxen. He could haul a car load of flour in the two schooners
and that is why he had to use that many oxen to pull the loads. The house on
the Tortolito place was a three room house built out of pickets and mud, and
one adobe room built about six feet from the picket house. We older boys cut
wood from the mountain side and Father hauled it to Fort Stanton
and sold it for us.
NARRATOR: George S. Brown, Aged 60
years. Carrizozo, New Mexico.
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