ur father, John William Lawrence, was born
Feburary 8, 1888 on a farm in Sumner County, Kansas. From an
exceptional memory he often retold the stories of his childhood
and those of his father, an early settler of the area, and
special credit is given to him for keeping alive our Lawrence
family tradition. His early life was spent in the shadow of the
Cherokee Strip of Oklahoma, and he remembered vividly the day of
the Strip opening with its sea of people, horses, wagons, and
every available means of transportation, the firing of the guns
that started the mad rush in clouds of dust. His older half
sisters participated in the race and received land, but he was
too young to obtain a claim. He was later able to become a part
of it by obtaining a patent to a school quarter in Grant County,
Oklahoma. He broke the virgin red soil, planted crops, and made a
home for his family in a similar tradition as his ancestors, and
again brought to a new generation a love and respect for land. He
died November 24, 1950, in Caldwell (Sumner County), Kansas and
is buried at Drury (Sumner County), Kansas. [Lawrence
homepage]