Early Settlers Personal
History
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1-2. Mr. Amos Braley Greenwood, Arkansas
- 3. Mr. Braley is retired.
- 4. Mr. Braley has been a farmer and
a school teacher.
- 5-6.
Mr. Braley was born October 4, 1852. He was born in Tennessee. He does not
remember the place. His family moved to Arkansas when he was a very small
child. They settled in a valley now known as Braley Valley. They were the
first white people to settle in the valley and the valley was named after
Mr. Braley's father (John Braley).
- 7. Mr. Braley did not wish to
discuss his marriage.
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6. Mr. Braley has been a
resident of Arkansas
since 1854.
- 8-10. He has heard his father say
they came to Arkansas in a wagon. They drove over.
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12. Most of the houses were log
houses. Some of the homes were one room cabins, some were made two rooms and a
hall between the rooms. All of the buildings had stone fire places. The stones
were native stones. In early years the people cooked on the fireplaces. Mr. Braley was a grown man before they ever had a cook stove.
- 13. In the early days they used
homemade candles. Made the candles out of tallow. He seen and bought his first
oil light in about 1872. He has used oil lights since. He has never used
electric lights.
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14. Electric lights were first used
in Greenwood in about 1910.
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15. Mr. Braley used wood for
fuel. This county is in the coal district and coal was used by some people.
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16. Mr. Braley raised most of
their food in the early days. They had flour sometimes and sometimes they
could not get flour and had to depend on corn meal. They raised their corn and
would take their corn to the mill and have it ground. Raised potatoes, sorghum
cane, peas, and vegetables. They made their sorghum. They raised hogs for meat
and lard. They used game for food but did not depend on it. When Mr. Braley
was young, there were lots of turkeys and small game and for several years a
lot of deer. Mr. Braley has killed two deer.
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17. In the early days Mr.
Braley's mother made their clothes. She spun the cloth at home. He can
remember his mother making this statement, "My spinning wheel and loom is a
living," several times. They raised their cotton for spinning.
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18. Shivarees have been
practiced since Mr. Braley can remember.
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19. Mr. Braley does not remember
the prices of food or clothes in the early days.
- 20. Mr. Braley has shared food
with his neighbors.
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21. The leading crops were
wheat, oats, corn, and cotton. Mr. Braley worked oxen in the early days, later
he used horses and mules. He has eaten tomatoes since he can remember.
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22-23. In the early days they made
a lot of their implements at home. Later made some at the blacksmith's shop.
The first blacksmith shop
around this community was at the place now called Burnsville (Burnville), a man named
Frank Dunn operated the shop. Mr. Braley does not remember the date he thinks
it was between 1865 and 1870.
- 24. Some of the wild plants and
fruits used for food are blackberries, wild grapes, wild plums, poke salad,
sassafras root; and they used one kind of dock (called narrow leaf dock).
- 25. When Mr. Braley was a small
boy, the Indians would come through the country selling and trading things
they made, mostly things made from animal skins. These Indians were
friendly. Mr. Braley cannot remember
the dates, but it was while he was a small boy.
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26. In the early days when they
would have a forest fire, the men would get to a place where the brush and
grass was thin, set a fire and fight it out behind them and let the fire they
had set burn in and meet the forest fire. The people would plough around their
buildings.
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27.-28. Braley Valley was named for
Mr. Braley's father as he was the first white man to settle in the valley.
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29. Mr. Braley first studied
under his father who was a school teacher and a Cumberland Presbyterian Preacher. Then Mr. Braley took a
job helping the teacher at Burnsville (Burnville). His pay for this was the teacher taught
him two subjects each day. The school house was made of logs. Mr. Braley taught
the lower classes. He could not remember the name of the teacher whom he
worked for. Mr. Braley then went to Cane Hill College where he studied
mathematics under Professor Carneyham (Carnahan) whom Mr. Braley thinks was one of
the best mathematicians of that time. (I have known Mr. Amos Braley for a number
of years. He is the best mathematician I have ever known.)
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30. Then Mr. Braley went to Buckner
College for three years. This college was a large two-story frame building
with the classrooms on the first floor, and a large auditorium on the second
floor. This building was torn down and the school at Witcherville was built
with the lumber.
31. Mr. Braley then went to Tennessee to a college. He cannot remember the
name of that college. He studied psychology under Professor J. R Hallbrook.
Mr. Braley does not have the dates that he went to college.
32. He then studied law under Judge Styles T. Rowe. He never practiced law.
Mr. Braley does not remember how much tuition he had to pay. He split rails
to help pay for his schooling.
33. He does not remember the books he studied.
34. He read books and newspapers. He does not remember the authors or
titles.
35. The first telegraph station at Greenwood in 1889.
36. Mr. Braley does not remember anything about the horse cars.
37. Mr. Braley saw the first car in Greenwood, but he does not remember the
date.
38. Mr. Braley saw the first train that came to Greenwood in 1889.
39. Mr. Braley has never seen an airplane. His eye sight has been gone for a
number of years. (Totally blind now.)
40. Greenwood has never had any buses.
41. Mr. Braley does not know anything about theaters.
42-46. Unanswered.
47. Mr. Braley remembers a lynching in Greenwood in about 1884 or 1885. They
lynched two men. A white man and a Negro. The white man had killed a man and
robbed him (beat him to death with a rail) at Dayton. They had both men in
jail waiting trial. Thad Tatum was deputy sheriff at that time and acting
jailer. The Negro (whose name was Dumas) took advantage of Mr. Tatum and
got his gun. The Negro then ran. There were several men trying to catch him
and he shot and killed Mr. Blakely. They caught the Negro and took him back
to jail. That night several of the men decided to lynch both of the men.
Five or six of the men took another man who acted like he was drunk to the
jail and got the jailer to unlock the door to put the drunk man in. When he
unlocked the door, the men overpowered the jailer and took the prisoners out
to a big tree, put them on a horse, the rope around their necks, then ran
the horses out from under them. Mr. Braley could not remember the name of
the white man, or the given name of the Negro.
48-49. Mr. Braley remembers that during the Civil War, they had a battle
near Greenwood on what is
known as Backbone Mt. (The geological name of this mountain is Devil's Back Bone
Ridge) He can remember hearing the cannons shoot. They could hear the
cannons from Fort Smith.
50-52. Unanswered
53. His father was dead at the time of the war, and Mr. Braley was too young
to fight. None of his family was in the war. Mr. Braley knew a captain in
the Confederate Army. Captain Hindley (Peg Leg) Millam (Milam). He thinks that Mr.
Millam (Milam) fought in the battle of Backbone Mt.
54-55 Unanswered
56. Mr. Braley has one daughter Mrs. Cline West, and one grandson Tom West
in Lavaca, Arkansas.
Transcribed by Kevin Scoggins, GHS Class of 2007
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