Chapter 3
EUFAULA,
CREEK NATION
INDIAN
TERRITORY
1888-1889
After the Conference of 1888, the
Shapard family moved from Savanna in the Choctaw Nation, to the parsonage at
Eufaula in the Creek Nation. This was a familiar setting for them, since
Eufaula was where they had lived during their appointment at the Asbury Manuel
Labor School from 1886 to 1887. Sumner had already been living and working
there since May of 1888, at Mr. Moore’s Drug Store. The community of Eufaula
rejoiced at having their much-loved minister return to their charge, and their
friends welcomed them back with open arms.
As Christmas approached, Lizzie
returned from Texas where she was attending school. The Shapard family spent
Christmas Eve at a celebration in the Methodist Church of Eufaula. “The
Christmas tree at the church… attracted a crowded house. Artistic hands had
preceded the audience and arrayed with dexterous skill the multitude of handsome
presents which were to be distributed, one by one, among the expectant
gathering. At an appropriate hour after the fall of night the church was
illuminated, the many colored candles and Chinese lanterns which hung pendant
from the branches of an elegant cedar were touched and the variegated
decorations of the tree had flashed upon them in equal number of brilliant,
scintillating colors which converted it into one magnificent scene of
translucent beauty. While admiring eyes rested upon this exquisite grandeur,
Rev. Mr. Shapard, in a brief manner and appropriate words, announced a short
programme of sacred services. This completed, Santa Claus was searched for,
found and presented to the audience. It was in his place to make a talk and
then proceed with the distribution of presents. Everybody laughed at his
grotesque appearance, and he tried to make the expected talk, but his voice
trembled, his knees smote together, and he soon found himself handing out the
gifts. This was a long task, for the presents were numerous and all had been
remembered. Therefore the children all went away happy while the more advanced
found no cause for complaint. It was a pleasant evening and one that will
linger long in the memory of each auditor.”
During the winter, Rev. Shapard
again became extremely ill, and on February 11, 1889, he drew up his last will
and testament at Eufaula, in the presence of Rev. W. B. Austin and T. F.
Turner. The document was given to his long-time friend, Rev. T. F. Brewer, for
safekeeping. His health was so afflicted that he was unable to do the work of a
Methodist preacher and was forced to rest until his condition improved. In late
February, Rev. Shapard sought rest and recovery in Madison, Tennessee, at “Neely
Farm,” the homestead of his in-laws, Mr. and Mrs. S. S. Hall. Mrs. Shapard and the children, Edwin Jr., and
David, went with him, while Sumner remained behind at Eufaula, with the mumps,
to work and attend school. While in Tennessee, two year-old David contracted
the chicken pox. The Shapard’s returned to Indian Territory in late April of
1889, and Rev. Shapard returned to his work, preaching at Eufaula and
Fishertown.
Sumner recovered from the mumps and
resumed work at Mr. Moore’s Drug Store, as well as, planting a vegetable garden
and attending school. He remarked that Eufaula was declining as a town and
nearly depopulated. The town doctor, Dr. K. R. Cutler, and the town’s main
businessman, Mr. Adams, both had plans to relocate to Muskogee which was on the
boom. Fourteen year-old Sumner claimed that Eufaula was “as dull as a hole,
nothing going on at all” and that the other young men of the town “were just
thinking about having a car load of girls shipped in here to supply the
country, as there were so few here, and probably some of these fellows will
have a chance to get married.”
In the early months of 1889, Indian Territory was overwhelmed with people traveling across the Indian Nations to participate in the first land run for the unassigned lands west of the Nations. It was estimated that, at noon on April 22, 1889, over 50,000 people raced for their own claim of land of the two-million acres that became available for settlement through the Indian Appropriations Bill of 1889. The towns of Guthrie and Oklahoma City literally went from an unoccupied open prairie to a settlement of 10,000 people within the matter of one afternoon. Within the following weeks, roads were laid out, schools opened and numerous businesses were established. This vast influx of population held enormous potential for the Indian Mission Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. All these people were new souls to whom the church could shepherd. This event would forever change the nature of their work in the Territory. They had been thrust from a small missionary Conference with a hand-full of preachers into potentially one of the most important, productive Conferences of the church during this era in history.
The 44th Annual Indian
Mission Conference was held in the Methodist Church at Atoka, in the Choctaw
Nation, on October 2-6, 1889. E. R. Shapard was in attendance and had requested
to be placed on Superannuated status, which signified that he was physically
worn out from performing the duties of an itinerant minister and was requesting
to retire from active service. Rev. Shapard’s request was referred to the
Committee on Conference Relations, who reviewed his record of service and found
him to be blameless in life and blameless in the administration of his
work. On October 5, 1889, the Committee
granted Rev. Shapard’s request of ‘Superannuate Relation’, thus ending his
thirty-year career in the ministry. After the conference was over, the Shapard
family returned to their old home at Fort Smith, Arkansas.
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