Thursday, June 18

Thursday Drive: CUPPs and Guthrie, OK Territory

Yesterday's Wordless Wednesday was an angelic studio portrait of Dovie CUPP and older brother, Robyn Lee, taken in Guthrie, O.T.

When that photo was made, Oklahoma was still "O.T." (Oklahoma Territory). It wouldn't become a state - the 46th - until 16 November 1907.

According to a reporter who was present, Guthrie sprang from the prairie in the afternoon of the first Land Rush Day, 22 April 1889. People had been lining up for weeks along the Kansas-O.T. border, waiting for the signal that Oklahoma Territory was open for settlement by non-Indians.

The signal was given at noon sharp and thousands rushed to stake claims to free land. By sundown, an estimated 10,000 souls were residents of brand-new Guthrie, where 24 hours earlier there had been nothing but open prairie and tumbleweeds. Lack of water and food forced about two-thirds to return to "civilization" in the first week.

Dovie and Robyn's father, Thomas P. CUPP, is listed in the 1892 Guthrie City Directory as a "Homesteader of Logan County", but didn't necessarily participate in the Land Rush. Their mother, the former Sarah E. "Emma" HUMMER had been a teacher in Lyon County, Kansas.

When Emma and Tom married in Lyon Co. on 28 June 1888, Tom was a resident of Henrietta, Clay Co, Texas, indicating they met while he was visiting his parents south of Emporia. After the wedding, he took Emma back to Henrietta. Robyn was born there the following May. Second and last child, Dovie, was probably born in Texas too, in 1891.

The family's bliss was short-lived. Tom died in 1898. Emma's father, Wm Martin HUMMER, died the following year and was buried next to Tom in the family plot at Guthrie's Summit View Cemetery.

After the death of her husband and then her father, Emma wrote to Mary (McClellan) CUPP, her mother-in-law in Kansas, that she wished she had gone to college, because teaching positions in Guthrie were only given to those who had. (At that time, a formal education wasn't required to teach school in Kansas.) Lacking means to support herself and two young children, she remarried in 1901, to James ARCHER, who had come to O.T. from the same area of Kansas as Emma and Tom.

By June of 1905, Emma had begun divorce proceedings against Archer. On 9th June, she and Dovie were in downtown Guthrie in a horse-drawn buggy. A passing street car spooked the horse, and both were thrown under the wheels of the street car. Emma died instantly. Dovie followed her a few hours later, after her mangled legs had been amputated in a futile attempt to save her life.

By sundown, mother and daughter had been buried in a single grave next to Tom Cupp and William Hummer. No funeral, no relatives notified until after the fact, the grave left unmarked.

Emma's sister Vera "Ollie" (Hummer) Calhoun arrived a week later to fetch the orphaned Robyn. She also filed suit on Robyn's behalf against the street car company, which settled several years later.

[From The Ravia Herald, 4 April 1908, Ravia, Johnston County, Oklahoma:
A jury in the district court at Guthrie has given a verdict for $4,000 against the Guthrie Street Car Company and in favor of the heirs of Mrs. Mary Archer, who with her daughter, Miss Dovie Cupp, was killed by a street car in that city in June, 1905. Their horse ran away, throwing them under the car wheels. The street car company has filed notice of appeal.]

Ironically, since Emma and James Archer were still legally married at the time of her death, he was entitled to part of the settlement. I have no clue what happened to the money, only that Archer didn't spend a dime on a tombstone for Emma and Dovie.

At age 20, Robyn was enumerated twice in the 1910 census. First as a servant ("cook and housework") in the home of a stone mason in Jefferson Co OK, and a month later as a "boarder" in a different household. I'm guessing he received his part of the settlement between visits from the enumerator.

On 31 Dec 1917, Robyn married the former Leila Fern LOCKWOOD of Edgerton, Rock Co, Wisconsin. By June of 1918, he was in Springfield City, Ohio, possibly where he trained to become a steamfitter. His WW1 Draft Registration card of that date and place states his dependents were a wife and mother-in-law.

Leila then divorced him, but by 24 January 1920, they were again living together in Tulsa OK. In September 1920, they remarried in Jackson Co, Missouri. As the photo below shows, they stayed together at least 19 more years before she divorced him again!

UPDATE:

"Robyn & Leila & our old car, May 1939".

Leila returned to Wisconsin, where she died in 1965. Robyn went the other direction, to Lubbock TX, where he remarried to a woman named Ruby, and died there in 1966.

9 comments:

Unknown said...

Real life is so much more interesting than fiction and in hearing all about Robyn's life I can't help but wonder about poor Dovie :-)

JamaGenie said...

Poor Dovie, indeed. I assumed for years that she'd grown up and married, and it was while looking for a husband and children that I came across newspaper accounts of the accident and the wrongful death suit that followed.

You probably won't be surprised that my grandmother never mentioned either. Only one of many family secrets I've unearthed in 25+ years of digging.

Leila Lockwood Cupp was the daughter of a merchant. Her only sister Edith never married, but became a nurse instead, and her home became a hospital in their hometown.

Peter Opa Fleming said...

Wow what a great read. It must be fulfilling for you to delve back in time. They sure did things tough.
It would be interesting to find out just when a woman was allowed to divorce their husband. I thought it was a relatively new concept.

JamaGenie said...

Hey, opa! Remember, Oklahoma was a territory and not yet a state, and therefore not subject to the same laws. But women have been divorcing husbands "forever". Most women simply didn't because they had no means of supporting themselves alone. Emma's circumstances must've changed if she had begun divorce proceedings. We'll never know.

LondonGirl said...

What a fascinating story! Marrying and divorcing the same woman twice, there must be a lot there. Are there divorce petitions available to find out the reasons each time?

JamaGenie said...

I only recently found Leila's maiden name and her family. That's how I found out about the multiple divorces. Not having kids by choice or circumstances might've had something to with it.

A Sea Rogue said...

What a absolutely beautiful Main Street/Americana story, but like all such stories a sad element as well.

Unknown said...

Ollie Vera Hummer Calhoun was my great grandmother. I have collected quite a bit of information about the family over the last 20 years. I have a box full of family photos and letters dating back to 1885 to and from the Hummer family members. I think two of the sisters married a Cupp. One of the photos is of a Cupp headstone. I saved these mementos when my grandfather died. Martin Paul Calhoun was Vera's son. Vera married a Horace Wilder in Guthrie when she was 18 in 1891. Judge John S Calhoun signed the marriage license. A year later Vera and Calhoun married. The judge was 38. They divorced in 1898. I have a copy of the divorce decree. The judge remarried, quit law and was a preacher. He went to the Carolinas. Vera married another man in 1903 near Chicago where she graduated from nursing school. She left Charles Michael after 2 months and went back to Kansas. My grandfather Paul was born in September 1904. It is pretty clear that his father was not Judge Calhoun. We think that Vera got pregnant without being married, maybe even by a man married to someone else and decided to give Paul the Calhoun name. These theories are based on intensive research over the last couple months after getting DNA results. My brother and match a Minor family as half first cousins 1R and their daughter as a strong 2nd cousin. The Minors lived in and around Iola, Kansas which is not far from Emporia where Vera was born and raised. I have a letter addressed to Vera in Iola Kansas in March 1904. The minors had a grandfather the same age as Vera whose wife was 8 months pregnant when Paul was conceived. He was a good looking man. The type that Vera and her sisters liked. I'm still trying to establish my surname and find my roots. I have not found the death date and place and burial for Vera. I know it was around 1915 and that she was in Los Angleles shortly before then. I joind My Heritage and Ancestry to fill out my family tree. I have DNA with FTDNA, My Heritage, Ancestry and GEDmatch. I would like to get these pictures and documents posted online. There are a lot of people in the photos that I cannot identify. Maybe some of them are Cupps.

JamaGenie said...

Marvin, thanks for the long comment! So much information which dovetails with *more* information not included in this post that I have on the Hummers and Cupps. Too much to be shared in comments here. Please email me at JamaGenie@gmail.com. Looking forward to hearing from you!