Polk-Desoto-Lee County FlArchives Biographies.....Walker, Kyle November 1861 - October 23, 1934 ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/fl/flfiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Linda Flowers flowers472001@yahoo.com September 1, 2009, 7:31 am Source: Author is the source Author: Linda Flowers KYLE WALKER Growing up…Kyle Walker was a picture I found in the family photo album of a nice, distinguished looking man standing next to a white picket fence. He was a man, who as my grandmother proclaimed, kept a human skull on his mantle. Kyle Walker was also my great grandfather. I was always fascinated with the story of the skull my great grandfather was said to have kept on his mantle. It was supposed to have something to do with the murder of his brother near Bartow. For many years I have searched for the truth. As I sought out other descendants of the family, I came across someone who had heard a similar story told to her by her grandmother, sister to Kyle. Although she knew nothing of the skull, she had heard a rumor of bones being collected by another brother…Matthew Walker. Joel Walker their brother had been murdered in 1895 and his body thrown into Lake-Walk-In-The-Water near Bartow, Florida. Matthew had collected his brother’s bones and it was Matthew’s request that Joel’s remains be buried with him at his own death. The family secrets began spilling out! Recently newspaper articles have been found, which seem to explain the skull. Joel’s body was found half buried in mud at the mouth of Tiger Creek in Polk County. The coroner held an inquest over his remains with the skull, under jaw bone and other articles being taken into evidence. It is believed that after the sensational trial concluded the skull was returned to the family, where it would rest on the mantle of his brother…for a time. NOTE: Refer to “Joel Walker, Murder Revealed” elsewhere on this site. Cuyler (Kyle) Walker was born to the parents of Ansel and Caroline (Underhill) Walker on November 1861 in Pierce County, Georgia. He was also known as Carl and CW on census records and other documents. Kyle is left off most genealogies circulating on the various family sites due to gross misinformation passed from one to another. Because he was born after the 1860 United States Federal Census came out he was not listed with his family in that census. The family has not been found at this time for the 1870 census enumeration, but are believed to be living in Polk County, Florida. A source at the Bartow Historical Library told me the census taker for the year 1870 was a fraud, leaving off names and making others up whereby only a very small percentage of people living in Polk County for that year were accounted for. Kyle was living on his own in 1880, therefore is not listed with the family then, as well, but the Bible records kept by his daughter-in-law Alma and his brother Matthew Walker’s obituary, along with a phone interview of his nephew’s widow, now in her nineties, confirm his place in this family. Kyle married Martha Jane (Mattie) Mathis January 19, 1889 in Arcadia, Desoto County, Florida and this is where they started their family. Their first child was born in Arcadia, then Kyle began moving his family from place to place. While his siblings were comfortable remaining close to their roots, Kyle was not. 1900 found him living in Ft. Drum in Brevard County and in 1908 he is living in Ft. Pierce, St. Lucie County. It was while living in Ft. Pierce, that tragedy struck and Kyle and Mattie’s son Claude lost his life swimming in an underwater race with a group of his buddies. The family picked up and moved back to Ft. Meade for a number of years, to be closer to family. Here another child Fred, succumbed due to Cerebral Meningitis in 1921. Kyle eventually settled in Ft. Myers in Lee County, after briefly living in Hillsborough County. He is shown there with his family on the 1930 census. Kyle and Mattie were the parents of twelve children; Clyde, Claude, Beulah, Lola, Carl, Helen Belle, Harley, Myrtle, James (Barney), Fred, Theda and Sherman. Kyle was know to the Indians of South Florida as “Little Big Man,” due to their fear of him. He carried a bullwhip on his side, which he liked to use on a whim. His children left home early to get away from the outbursts of temper he often displayed, and when his health started failing and senility began to set in, Kyle was committed to the Florida State Hospital where he died on October 23, 1934 after having been there for seventeen months. He is buried at the cemetery on the grounds of the hospital. His death certificate states he died from Cardiac Decomposition as well as “Senile Dementia.” Before the old age assistance program was introduced, senile patients whose families were unable to care for their loved ones at home were often sent to the State Hospital. Kyle was a farmer, but tried various occupations including…a butcher and a mail carrier. File at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/fl/polk/bios/walker98gbs.txt This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.org/flfiles/ File size: 5.3 Kb