Garvin County Indian Pioneer Interviews - Margaret Hall Crawford submitted by Brenda Choate bcchoate@yahoo.com ************************************************************************ USGENWEB NOTICE: These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or presentation by any other organization or persons. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material, must obtain the written consent of the contributor, or the legal representative of the submitter, and contact the listed USGenWeb archivist with proof of this consent. ************************************************************************ Margaret Hall Crawford Interview #1085 Field Worker: Maurice R. Anderson Date: March 9, 1937 Name: Mrs. Margaret Hall Crawford Residence: Pauls Valley, Oklahoma Date of Birth: 1855 Place of Birth: Mississippi Father: Mother: Story told by Mrs. Margaret Hall Crawford, born 1855 in Mississippi. My father died when I was very small, left my mother with six children.   When my oldest brother was 12, we left Mississippi and went to Texas.  That was in 1864.  we went through in a wagon working two oxens.  we stayed in Texas three years. My mother died in Texas.  My oldest brother, Buck Hall, then about 15 years old, loaded up our wagon and we went back to Mississippi.  He took over our family and made a living for us.  He farmed there two years, then he wanted to come back to Texas.   Some of our relatives did not want him to start out with us kids, as he was only about 17 then, but he loaded up and we went back to Texas.  He lived to be about 70 years old. I grew up in Texas and was married to J.T. Crawford.   My husband was a young preacher then. We moved to Wynnewood, Indian Territory in 1892.  We came from Texas in a wagon working four horses and farmed at Wynnewood one year.  Then we moved to the Choctaw nation near Boggy Depot My husband preached to the Indians.  He was a Missionary Preacher.   The Indians were good to us.  My husband would be gone sometimes two weeks at a time, holding meetings, and the Indian women would bring us things to eat. While my husband was gone one time, we got behind in our crops and a bunch of Indian men and women came to our place and worked all day.  I told them we did not have any money to pay them with.  They laughed at me and said, "We are doing this for our White Brother", but they said it in Choctaw.  We lived there five years and then moved to Pauls Valley.  We farmed around Pauls Valley until our children were all married. My husband died in 1929.  I have made my home with my daughter Mrs. Wade of Pauls Valley. Two of my sons are Baptist preachers.  I am the mother of ten children, grandmother of 106 children, great grandmother of 66 children and great great grandmother of 5 children.