The Okie Legacy: Descendant of George Cummins

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Volume 5 , Issue 14

2003

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Descendant of George Cummins

"I very much enjoyed this web page. I am a direct descendant of George Cummins. Orange Scott Cummins was George's brother. My grandma called him Uncle Scott.

I am also a direct descendant of Valentine and Parmelia Arndt. It was told to me that Valentine made the brick and built parts of the "Castle on the Hill" where my grandma attended Normal School. I will be bookmarking this page and returning. Thanks for compiling all those photographs.

My pioneer families were there in Alva. I grew up in Alva myself, but married a college student who moved me to 'Indian Territory.' I live in Fairfax, OK now, in Osage County.

I have read Scott Cummins' book 'Musings' at the Tulsa City-County Library. Since I requested the book to read, it has since disappeared from the library. I would dearly love to own a copy. Grandma's mother (that would have been Mrs. Robert Perry Arndt, who was George Cummins' dau.) had a copy, but Grandma said that it disappeared when her mother passed on.

The Cummins owned property around Winchester, which is also northwest of Alva, as you probably already know. I have information on all of these people some of it is on CD-ROM, compliments of one of my Arndt descendant cousins. The Arndt's were from Lancaster County, PA. They were brickmakers. They owned several kilns. Jacob Arndt was also a photographer and a preacher. Jacob was Valentine's father. They worked to pave highway from Pennsylvania westward. They moved to Nebraska. Their women didn't like the harsh climate there and wanted to go back to Pennsylvania, so they sold their kilns in Nebraska and bought 50 head of horses.

On their way back to Pennsylvania they met a man at a watering hole who told them they'd never get that herd back to PA alive, and that what they ought to do was to head South to the new land being opened in the Oklahoma Territory. That is exactly what they did. I believe that they didn't get land in the run, but that they purchased land afterward. Their horses, I believe, were stolen from them at some point. It seem as if I recall that they either purchased land or sold land at Tegarden. I cannot recall so much.

This may not be entirely accurate to what I have written down, but I can get my resources out and check it all, if you want me to.

I do know that my grandmother, Beulah Estella Arndt, was born in a dugout house, in Oklahoma Territory. Her parents were divorced while she was a child and she helped her mother to raise the rest of her brothers and sisters. They lived with her grandfather George Cummins at that time. She attended McKeever School and then Normal School. She married Raymond Shafer, whose parents farmed near her home. He always teased her about being 'a foreigner' since she was born in the Oklahoma Territory. He was born in Kansas.

Grandma lived through many trials in her life, and she took them all as well as she could. She was the sweetest Grandma a girl could ever ask to have though. I loved her very much.

I an currently attempting to write a novel based on the life of my pioneer Oklahoman ancestors (not entirely factual, but true to their natures) and I was searching for background information for the setting and what life was like back in their day. That is how I found your web page. I thoroughly enjoyed it.

I plan to visit the old homesites sometime this spring, when my Shafer Family has it's reunion the first of May. I want to take some pictures, so that I may do some paintings of the places too. I took lessons in painting from John Hayword, when I was young. He was another of Alva's old timers. Thanks for your reply and interest in putting the history of my family in your paper.

Let me know how I can help. I have cousins who are keeping history notes also, we may want to compare notes" -- Linda Myers - Email: lmyers@cimtel.net   |  View or Add Comments (0 Comments)   |   Receive updates ( subscribers)  |   Unsubscribe


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