J S Chambers
James Esquire, or J. S. was born in Chambers Hollow near Relfe. He was the son of Frances Marion Chambers and Celeste Thomas Ferrell.
James Esquire and Nancy homesteaded 160 acres of land
next to Francis Marion Chambers, his father's place, Chambers
Valley near Relfe. He built a house and log barn, then
cleared 15 or 20 acres and put up a rail fence around that part.
Their first four children were born there. They farmed 5 years
then sold the property to Zackery Ward. They left MO in
early 1907 and went to the Texas panhandle. They went in a
covered wagon. It took them 31 days! . They moved several times
in the following years. They went to Gunter, TX and were in LA
for one year. The went with several families using one railroad
car for people and one for the animals and implements.
They went to CO on the train where they worked in the potato and
sugar beet fields. The came back from CO in two cars, William
Lee Chambers driving one and Charlie Melton, Nancy's brother,
the other. Charlie and Robert Earl had gone to CO with them.
James had come back earlier to find a house for the family.
James and Nancy were members of the First Free Will Baptist
Church at Pryor, OK, Grand River Association. Other church
members were the Howard's, Burke's, Wesley's, and the Lester
Hensley's. They were later members of the Free Will Baptist
Church at Beggs, OK and then were charter members of the church
organized at Preston, OK when they moved to that area.
James was a member of the Woodsman Lodge, which used an axe as
an insignia, a Christian organization. He knew and used
scriptures for healing cuts and burns. Most of the ceremonies
and business of the Lodge was kept secret by the members.
All of Franklin's children remember how their grandfather used
to worry about his flower beds all the time they were at the
house for a visit for they liked to play ball while the grown
ups talked and the ball would end up in the flower beds. They
always kept one eye on the house when one of them had to
retrieve the ball from the flower beds before he saw them.
James liked to hunt, He killed coon and skunk for their hides.
In 1936 or 1937 while he was hunting, he chased a possum under a
large flat rock over hanging a small den. He crawled under the
overhanging rock, removed a smaller rock to reach the animal
causing the larger rock to fall on him. he managed to get the
rock off and make his way home. He had trouble with his chest
after the incident. He used yellow powder that came in a round
can for his asthma. He would put a small amount on the lid,
light it with a match and breath the fumes. It eased his
breathing but smelled like sulpher and medicine.
Remembrances of the children and grand children
They lived in two tents on the Northern edge of Oklahoma after leaving Missouri in 1906 or 1907. They cooked and ate in one tent and slept in the other. It got down to 17 degrees and it snowed. They piled the snow around the bottom of the tent to keep the wind out.- Franklin Marion Chambers
All but James and Franklin Marion had the flu. They survived on
100 half gallons of tomatoes, biscuits, and oatmeal, cows milk
and butter, which was all the two knew how to cook.--Madge
Chambers
All the children had whooping cough while they were in
Louisiana, Mildred, Franklin, Lee, and Fred were in school. They
took Madge the last day. They were all given a tube of Coalgate
toothpaste and a toothbrush. Madge ate her toothpaste.
They planted sugar cane and made syrup which they put in jugs.
When they turned to sugar they set them in the wash tub full of
hot water to return it to liquid form.
The home always smelled of Apple butter and spices--remembrances
of Paula Sue, Nadine, and Norma Jean.
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