Person:James Rasberry (4)

Watchers
     
James Lawson Rasberry
m. 14 Feb 1850
  1. James Lawson Rasberry1851 - 1951
  2. Benjamin Fleetwood Rasberry1853 - 1943
m. 11 Nov 1874
  1. William Minor Rasberry1875 - 1949
  2. James Benjamin Rasberry1877 - 1923
  3. Martha Astoria Rasberry1879 - 1975
  4. Mary Lucy Rasberry1880 - 1950
  5. Jackson Green Rasberry1882 - 1968
  6. Thomas C. Rasberry1884 - 1886
  7. Joseph Lee Rasberry1886 - 1947
  8. David Dunklin Rasberry1888 - 1890
  9. John Joncy Rasberry1890 - 1966
  10. Beulah Rasberry1893 - 1941
  11. Eula Rasberry1893 - 1987
  12. Ernest Hill Rasberry1896 - 1950
Facts and Events
Name[1] James Lawson Rasberry
Gender Male
Birth[1] 20 Nov 1851 Bibb, Alabama, United States
Marriage 11 Nov 1874 Bibb, Alabama, United Statesto Mary Alice Woolley
Death[1] 3 May 1951 Guthrie, Logan, Oklahoma, United States
Burial[1] 1951 Chickasha, Grady, Oklahoma, United StatesRose Hill Cemetery
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Azalia McGranahan Thomas of Sandy, Utah. Letters of Correspondence with Patrick Lawrence Hogue (Samples) of Weed, California. (17 Jan 1996; 14 Feb 1996; 22 Feb 1996; 24 Feb 1996).
  2.   Interview with J. L. Rasberry, in Indian pioneer papers, 1860-1935. (Millwood, New York: Kraus Microform, 1989).

    This was an interview with James Lawson Rasberry by Thaddeus Smith, Jr. on September 23, 1937. Thaddeus recorded in his typed version interview that James Lawson Rasberry referred to as J. L. Rasberry in the record, was living at 1428 South 8th Street in Chickasha, Grady, Oklahoma. J. L. Rasberry said his birth date was November 20, 1851 and that he was born in the State of Alabama. J. L. Rasberry stated his father Bill Rasberry was born in Alabama and was buried in Alabama. J. L. Rasberry stated his mother was Lona Campbell. Lona was born in Alabama and was buried in Alabama.

    The following was transcribed by Patrick Hogue in February of 2000 of this record.

    J. L. Rasberry states: "I made my first trip into the Comanche country, in 1898. The Comanche Indians had a big dance near Ryan, which I attended. A lot of the dancers had terrapin shells, which had little rollers inside, strapped to their legs. These terrapin shells would rattle when the Indians danced. The Comanches are very smooth dancers and it seemed as if they were just as light as feathers. All of the Indians had fresh beef to eat while at the dance and some of them dried some beef while there. They would take a piece of beef seven or eight inches square and five or six inches thick and cut a cross in the beef from the top side nearly through or within a quarter or half an inch of being through. They would then turn each cut back and cut it thin but never in two. They did each quarter that way and when they finished they would have just one big piece of beef from a quarter to a half inch thick, that was ready to dry. It usually took about three days in the hot sun to dry this beef. In 1899, I lived just across Red River, in Texas, at Red River Station and occasionally I would come over to Cal Suggs ranch, which was in the Comanche country. I would usually go with some of my neighbors who wanted to buy some workhorses. Mr. Suggs had thousands of cattle and horses. His brand was O H triangle made like this [unable to duplicate drawing]. Nearly all of the horses were gray and brown and they would weigh from nine to eleven hundred pounds. Mr. Suggs sold these horses for one hundred and fifty dollars a span, either for cash or on time and he always got his money. In 1902 I came to Chickasha and met Scott Jones, a white man, who married a Chickasaw Indian. I leased six hundred acres of land about twelve miles southeast of Chickasha, from Mr. Jones. I paid Mr. Jones eight hundred and eighty-seven dollars and fifty cents for my lease but I did not have to pay it until I raised and sold my crop. I sowed one hundred and thirty acres in oats, which made twenty-six bushels an acre. I sold the oats for thirty-one cents per bushel. The rest of the land I planted in corn. The corn averaged about thirty-five bushels an acre. I sold the corn to "Red" Alexander, a cattle feeder for twenty-five cents per bushel. I did all of the farming with twelve head of mules and I had five men hired to help me do the work. I had six walking cultivators. In 1903 I rented two hundred acres of land from Ben Vaughan. The land was only a few miles from the Scott Jones farm and was in the Chickasaw Nation. I raised sixty bushels of corn to the acre that year and I fed it to some coming four-year-old steers, which I bought in West Texas. Some of the steers died with tick fever. I paid thirty-five dollars per head for the steers and would have made some money on them if some of them had not died, as I got sixty-seven dollars per head for them, when I sold. There were a few wild turkeys, prairie chickens, quail, squirrels and deer in the Chickasaw Nation, when I first came, but they soon disappeared. I have an old muzzle loading shot gun, which I brought to this country from Alabama. I have lived here continuously since 1902."

  3.   Azalia McGranahan Thomas. Transcribed Letters of Correspondence from Azalia Thomas to Patrick Hogue (Samples) - 1996.
  4.   Patrick Hogue (Samples). The Samples / Semples Family.