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- 1.
Mrs. Margaret Foster (Power)
Sherlock
- 2. 211
Lexington Avenue, Fort Smith, Arkansas
- 3. Retired:
semi-invalid
- 4. Housewife
and mother
- 5. December
3, 1844
- 6. Salem,
Missouri
- 7. Married
in 1866 to Samuel H. Sherlock a promising young lawyer who shortly
after marriage was elected to the Missouri legislative
- 8. Was
an immigrant
- 9. Since
1884
- 10. In 1882 they moved from Salem,
Missouri to Raleigh, Missouri. After two years there, they came to
Arkansas, making the trip down the Mississippi river on a flat boat,
landing near Memphis Tenn. Thence across the state on train to Van
Buren where they left the train and ferried the Arkansas River to Fort
Smith, locating at North 3rd and B Street.
- 11.
Mr. Sherlock decided that there was
a greater field of work for a lawyer in Arkansas so he moved his
family, which consisted of his wife, on daughter and two sons, to
Arkansas
- 12.
Most of them were frame with brick
chimneys and (or) foundation. Homes owned by the wealthier class of
people were very pretentious. Mrs. Sherlock’s home on North 3rd
and B Streets was built of stone and brick. This house is still in
very beautiful condition both outside and inside.
- 13.
They used dripping candles at first
but after a very few years began using oil lamps and lanterns.
- 14.
In the early 1890’s. She has
forgotten the exact date when electricity was first used here.
- 15. Coal
was used in the majority of homes and Mrs. Sherlock used it entirely. She
said coal was plentiful even in 1884.
- 16. Fish
was plentiful as were deer and great coveys of quail. Mrs. Sherlock
says her husband was very extravagant about cows. It seems that in the
early days of Fort Smith there was no law concerning stock running
loose, an everybody turned their cows out every morning and trusted
them to come home in the evening. The Sherlock’s always put a bell on
their cow so she was easy to find in case she strayed too far from
home. In case the cow failed to show up at night and could not be
found, Mr. Sherlock would go out and buy another cow before he went to
bed.
- 17. Mrs.
Sherlock remembers that, as a child, she always had to help in the
cotton patch which her father planted each year. Her mother carded the
cotton and spun thread to make all their clothing and all useful
articles, in housework. Her father, also, always kept a great number
of sheep on the place. When shearing time came, he drove the sheep
down to the river so they would get clean. Then when they were dry,
they were sheared and her mother then carded and spun
the wool to weave into winter clothing and knit into socks, stockings
and warm caps and mittens for her children.
- 18. All
courtships were interesting as the lady related but young love
followed practically the same course as it does at present except that
people generally did not jump into marriage so precipitately as they do
now and divorce was practically unheard of in those days.
- 19. Staple
foods were much higher directly following the war than at the present
time; silks for dresses were also much higher but shoes and other
wearing apparel were not as expensive as now.
- 20. They
shared a common cause, therefore a common need and one divided with
another without thinking of cost or inconvenience.
- 21. Potatoes,
corn, cotton, wheat. Mrs. Sherlock does not remember just what year
tomatoes were regarded as edible; she thinks it may have been around
1880.
- 22. Most
farm implements were purchased from other states and shipped here by
boat up the Arkansas River.
- 23. Shipping,
mining, farming and building.
- 24. Sassafras
roots, sunflower seeds, poke salad were often used as well as sweet
gum and maple sugar. Mrs. Sherlock says she was almost grown before
she ever saw white sugar. They always tapped the maple trees and made
their own syrups and sugar. Rye and wheat and fruits were also grown
at the time.
- 25. She
said she always had an average social life of any young person of her
age. Her father owned a wheat mill and she stayed around the mill and
everyone for many miles around knew her and made much of her. As she
and her husband landed on Arkansas soil after coming by flat-boat from
Raleigh, Missouri, down the Mississippi River; she decided immediately
decided she wanted to go back home to Missouri. To her surprise and
fear there were as many Indians on the banks of the river as there were
white people. Somehow, she says, they had no trouble with the Indians in crossing the state. Once after
settling on North 3rd Street, she looked out toward North 2nd
Street and saw an Indian woman and baby sitting on a corner, waiting
for her husband to come out of a saloon. It was almost sundown
when the Indian left the saloon. But the woman merely strapped the
papoose to her back and stolidly started following her husband home.
Old Judge I. C. Parker who was federal judge of the old Indian
Territory was hanging all Indians who were caught in town and
misbehaving. Judge Parker was called to Washington D. C. and
reprimanded for hanging so many Indians, and he replied that he would
either hang or run out every Indian until this was a fit place for
white people to live.
- 26-28. Van
Buren was once known as Phillip’s Landing.
- 29. Belle
Point School located on South 9th Street was grade and high
school combined. This building was erected before Civil War. The
Belle Grove School in 600 block on North 6th Street.
Present building was erected in 1886. Another building of
frame
stood there previously. The present Belle Point school was moved and
built in 1908 on Dodson Avenue.
- 31.
Miss Mollie Williams is present
principal of Belle Point and formerly
- 32.
Free schools, no tuition ---- (was
a teacher in previous school).
- 33.
School was taught in Mrs.
Sherlock’s home when she was a child. The teacher went to a home
where there were children and taught them one whole day and spent the
night. Then the next morning went on to a neighbor’s home and stayed
the same length of time until all homes in neighborhood had been
visited and then started routine over again.
- 34. The Bible,
almanacs.
- 35. Western
Union but does not remember date.
- 36. The early
“horse cars” were run on small tracks with horses walking between
rails. These were taken from use in 1898 when trolley cars were
substituted.
- 37. In early
1900’s. Here in Fort Smith. Boxed in over the wheels.
- 38. She saw a
train once before riding one across Arkansas to Van Buren. They
were very inconvenient. and uncomfortable.
- 39. Here in
Fort Smith in May 1912 at old Electric Park, North 11th
St.
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40. In November
1932. Cost of operation and decrease of passengers who bought
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their own cars,
caused the Fort Smith Light and Traction Company to quit trolley.
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Twin City Coach and Bus Co. began.
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41. The old Grand
Opera House stood on the corner of South 5th Street and
Garrison Avenue. There were numerous local performances, but
mostly traveling stock companies showed there, not cheap burlesque but
really refined elegant, dressy shows were put on. The people who
attended these performances dressed in their finest silks and
sported their expensive jewelry.
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42. None
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43. No
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44. She never saw any
duels or heard of but one during her life-time and that one did not
closely concern her. A girlhood friend of hers owned a pair of pistols
one of which had been used by a member of her family. The duel was over
a debt of honor but Mrs. Sherlock never learned the exact nature of the
debt.
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45.
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46.
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47. Indian
lynchings have already been explained but occasionally a Negro or
white man deserved the rope too. A Negro was lynched here in early
1900’s.
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48. Her
Grandfather was a Revolutionary Soldier. Her father was in the
Northern Army as, also, was her husband who was a Captain. Even
now she dislikes to think back over the dark days of the war.
They had to hide their food from marauding companies of the Southern
Army and many times had to hide themselves for days at a time in fear
of Indians as well as soldiers. Food was not plentiful as the
men-folk were away fighting and the women and children were unable to
raise the crops which would provide food. Although Mr. Sherlock has
been dead many years, his widow still receives a pension check each
month. She thinks that is unusual to receive a pension more than
seventy-five years.
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49. She was too
young to remember enough about battles to describe them now.
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50. She says that
during the Reconstruction period and even for years afterward
everyone still felt the effects of the war; what it had done to the
minds and hearts of the oppressed; the morale of the people
generally. You could sell anything on earth nearly and you could
buy anything you could pay for. No credit in those days. Their
first home in Fort Smith was at North 3rd. St. and cost
$4,000 which was “dirt-cheap” then. Her husband went into
partnership with a man named Lyman. The law firm of Lyman and
Sherlock employed
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other young
lawyers who worked day and night trying to straighten out snarled
affairs for people, tried to recover lost or stolen property.
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51. She knew
nothing definite, just hear-say, concerning the Ku Klux Klan. The
very mention of them was made with fear and trembling.
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52. Mr. and Mrs.
Sherlock were members of a Presbyterian Church in Missouri and when
they were preparing to remove to Arkansas, they were warned that
they would not be welcome in Arkansas a “Southern” state and more
especially they would not be welcome in any church. Nevertheless,
on arrival in Fort Smith, they located the First Presbyterian Church
and presented themselves together with a church letter, asking for
memberships in that
congregation. They were heartily and wholesomely received. Six
months later Mr. Sherlock was
made superintendent of the Sunday School, which office he held many
years.
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53. Answered in
question 48.
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54. None.
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55. None.
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56. Mrs. Sherlock,
herself, was a niece and namesake of Margaret Foster, the first
white child born west of the Allegheny Mountains. She has eight
descendants.
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57. Mrs. J. D.
Southard who lives in the old family home at 214 North 6th
Street, Fort Smith, Arkansas; William Sherlock who lives in (La)
Puento, California. Another son died in young manhood.
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58. Miss Ruth
Southard who lives with her mother at 214 North 6th
Street, Fort Smith; Mrs. Wilbur Hall Hutsell (the former Corrinne
Southard) who lives in Auburn, Alabama; Dr. J. S. Southard who lives
at 312 Belle Avenue, Fort Smith. One grandson and two
granddaughters whose homes are in California. There are no great
grandchildren.
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59. None.
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Mrs. Sherlock says
that after living on North 3rd Street for a few years,
they purchased a home on North 6th Street at 214 North 6th
St. from which house, the year preceding, a little four year old
girl was stolen by Indians and never was heard from again. This
house is now the property of her daughter Mrs. J. D. Southard.
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