<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></SPAN>CHAPTER VII</h2>
<p class="center">ORISTOWN, THE "LITTLE CROW" RESERVATION</p>
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<p class="cap_1">WHEN I left St. Louis on the night of
October fourth I headed for Oristown to
buy someone's relinquishment. I had
two thousand, five hundred dollars. From
Omaha the journey was made on the C. & R.W.'s
one train a day that during these times was loaded
from end to end, with everybody discussing the
Little Crow and the buying of relinquishments.
I was the only negro on the train and an object of
many inquiries as to where I was going. Some of
those whom I told that I was going to buy a relinquishment
seemingly regarded it as a joke, judging
from the meaning glances cast at those nearest
them.</p>
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<p>An incident occurred when I arrived at Oristown
which is yet considered a good joke on a real estate
man then located there, by the name of Keeler,
who was also the United States Commissioner.
He could not only sell me a relinquishment, but
could also take my filing. I had a talk with Keeler,
but as he did not encourage me in my plan to make
a purchase I went to another firm, a young lawyer
and a fellow by the name of Slater, who ran a livery
barn, around the corner. Watkins, the lawyer,
impressed me as having more ambition than practical
business qualities. However, Slater took the
matter up and agreed to take me over the reservation
and show me some good claims. If I bought,
the drive was gratis, if not four dollars per day, and
I accepted his proposition.</p>
<p>After<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</SPAN></span>
we had driven a few miles he told me Keeler
had said to him that he was a fool to waste his
time hauling a d—— nigger around over the reservation;
that I didn't have any money and was just
"stalling." I flushed angrily, and said "Show me
what I want and I will produce the money. What
I want is something near the west end of the county.
You say the relinquishments are cheaper there and
the soil is richer. I don't want big hills or rocks
nor anything I can't farm, but I want a nice level
or gently rolling quarter section of prairie near
some town to be, that has prospects of getting the
railroad when it is extended west from Oristown."
By this time we had covered the three miles between
Oristown and the reservation line, and had
entered the newly opened section which stretched
for thirty miles to the west. As we drove on I
became attracted by the long grass, now dead, which
was of a brownish hue and as I gazed over the miles
of it lying like a mighty carpet I could seem to feel
the magnitude of the development and industry
that would some day replace this state of wildness.
To the Northeast the Missouri River wound its
way, into which empties the Whetstone Creek, the
breaks of which resembled miniature mountains,
falling abruptly, then rising to a point where the
dark shale sides glistened in the sunlight. It was
my longest drive in a buggy. We could go for
perhaps three or four miles on a table-like plateau,
then drop suddenly into small canyon-like ditches
and rise abruptly to the other side. After driving
about fifteen miles we came to the town, as they
called it, but I would have said village of Hedrick—a
collection<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</SPAN></span>
of frame shacks with one or two houses,
many roughly constructed sod buildings, the long
brown grass hanging from between the sod, giving
it a frizzled appearance. Here we listened to a
few boosters and mountebanks whose rustic eloquence
was no doubt intended to give the unwary
the impression that they were on the site of the coming
metropolis of the west. A county-seat battle
was to be fought the next month and the few citizens
of the sixty days declared they would wrest it from
Fairview, the present county seat situated in the
extreme east end of the county, if it cost them a
million dollars, or one-half of all they were worth.
They boasted of Hedrick's prospects, sweeping their
arms around in eloquent gestures in alluding to the
territory tributary to the town, as though half the
universe were Hedrick territory.</p>
<p>Nine miles northwest, where the land was very
sandy and full of pits, into which the buggy wheels
dropped with a grinding sound, and where magnesia
rock cropped out of the soil, was another budding
town by the name of Kirk. The few prospective
citizens of this burg were not so enthusiastic as
those in Hedrick and when I asked one why they
located the town in such a sandy country he opened
up with a snort about some pinheaded engineer for
the "guvment" who didn't know enough to jump
straight up "a locating the town in such an all
fired sandy place"; but he concluded with a compliment,
that plenty of good water could be found
at from fifteen to fifty feet.</p>
<p>This sandy land continued some three miles west
and we often found springs along the streams.
After<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</SPAN></span>
ascending an unusually steep hill, we came
upon a plateau where the grass, the soil, and the
lay of the land, were entirely different from any we
had as yet seen. I was struck by the beauty of the
scenery and it seemed to charm and bring me out
of the spirit of depression the sandy stretch brought
upon me. Stretching for miles to the northwest
and to the south, the land would rise in a gentle
slope to a hog back, and as gently slope away to a
draw, which drained to the south. Here the small
streams emptied into a larger one, winding along
like a snake's track, and thickly wooded with a
growth of small hardwood timber. It was beautiful.
From each side the land rose gently like huge wings,
and spread away as far as the eye could reach.
The driver brought me back to earth, after a mile
of such fascinating observations, and pointing to
the north, said: "There lays one of the claims."
I was carried away by the first sight of it. The land
appeared to slope from a point, or table, and to the
north of that was a small draw, with water. We
rode along the south side and on coming upon a
slight raise, which he informed me was the highest
part of the place, we found a square white stone
set equally distant from four small holes, four or
five feet apart. On one side of the stone was inscribed
a row of letters which ran like this, SWC,
SWQ, Sec. 29-97-72 W. 5th P.M., and on the other
sides were some other letters similar to these.
"What does all that mean?" I asked. He said
the letters were initials describing the land and
reading from the side next to the place we had come
to see it, read: "The southwest corner of the southwest
quarter<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</SPAN></span>
of section twenty-nine, township
ninety-seven, and range seventy-two, west of the
fifth principal meridian."</p>
<p>When we got back to Oristown I concluded I
wanted the place and dreamed of it that night. It
had been drawn by a girl who lived with her parents
across the Missouri. To see her, we had to drive
to their home, and here a disagreement arose, which
for a time threatened to cause a split. I had been
so enthusiastic over the place, that Slater figured on
a handsome commission, but I had been making
inquiries in Oristown, and found I could buy relinquishments
much cheaper than I had anticipated.
I had expected the price to be about one thousand,
eight hundred dollars and came prepared to pay
that much, but was advised to pay not over five
hundred dollars for land as far west as the town of
Megory, which was only four miles northwest of
the place I was now dickering to buy. We had
agreed to give the girl three hundred and seventy-five
dollars, and I had partly agreed to give Slater two
hundred dollars commission. However, I decided
this was too much, and told him I would give him
only seventy-five dollars. He was in for going
right back to Oristown and calling the deal off, but
when he figured up that two and a half day's driving
would amount to only ten dollars, he offered to take
one hundred dollars. But I was obstinate and held
out for seventy-five dollars, finally giving him
eighty dollars, and in due time became the proud
owner of a Little Crow homestead.</p>
<p>All this time I had been writing to Jessie. I had
written first while I was in Eaton, and she had
answered<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</SPAN></span>
in the same demure manner in which she
had received me at our first meeting, and had continued
answering the letters I had written from all
parts of the continent, in much the same way.
For a time I had quit writing, for I felt that she was
really too young and not taking me seriously enough,
but after a month, my sister wrote me, asking why
I did not write to Jessie; that she asked about me
every day. This inspired me with a new interest and
I began writing again.</p>
<p>I wrote her in glowing terms all about my advent
in Dakota, and as she was of a reserved disposition,
I always asked her opinion as to whether she thought
it a sensible move. I wanted to hear her say something
more than: "I was at a cantata last evening
and had a nice time", and so on. Furthermore,
I was skeptical. I knew that a great many colored
people considered farming a deprivation of all things
essential to a good time. In fact, to have a good
time, was the first thing to be considered, and everything
else was secondary. Jessie, however, was not
of this kind. She wrote me a letter that surprised
me, stating, among other things, that she was seventeen
and in her senior year high school. That she
thought I was grand and noble, as well as practical,
and was sorry she couldn't find words to tell me
all she felt, but that which satisfied me suited her
also. I was delighted with her answer and wrote
a cheerful letter in return, saying I would come to
see her, Christmas.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</SPAN></span></p>
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