Joseph Samuel
Murrow
Great Mason and
Baptist Missionary
by Bob Ellenwood,
MPS
On December 18, 1818, was born a child who grew up
to become a Southern Baptist Missionary to the Indian Territory who
was, in many ways, instrumental in building many churches in the
Indian Territory, and also instrumental in helping to establish
Freemasonry in what was to become the state of Oklahoma. This childs
name was Henry Frieland Buckner. He was born in the hills of Kentucky
and when fourteen years old became a Christian. He was the son of a
Southern Baptist Missionary and went on many mission trips with his
father in Kentucky and Tennessee. He was educated in Maryville
Seminary in Tennessee and the University of Alabama. When 24 years
old he married Lucy Ann Dogan, the daughter of
a Southern Baptist Preacher. They were married on November 24,
1842.
During this time one Joseph Islands, a Southern
Baptist Missionary in the Indian Territory sent out a call for help in this Mission
field. Henry and Lucy decided to go to the Indian Territory and help
this Missionary. Henry Frieland and Lucy
Ann Buckner set sail from Somerset, Kentucky
on a cold day in December of 1848. It was March 8, 1849, before they
arrived. Henry had gotten sick on the way and they had to lay over
awhile and it was a long and grueling trip to
the Indian Territory.
They arrived in Three Forks, Creek Nation, Indian
Territory, on March 8, 1849. After leasing a cabin and buying some groceries, they set out to establish a home.
While they were working on the cabin some Creek Indians came
visiting and they became good friends with the
Creeks. However, some of the Creeks did not want white missionaries
in their Nation and the Buckners were not sure if they would be
allowed to stay. Then the Creeks called a local council meeting,
and after three days of some fairly intense
discussion it was decided to let the Buckners remain. Henry
immediately began his work by translating the New Testament into the
Creek language, and also some gospel hymns which he and Lucy taught
them to sing. Before long the work grew so much that Henry; like
Joseph Islands, begged the Southern Baptist Mission Board to send
help. Henry and his wife finally moved to North Fork Town, or as it
was then called, Micco. The mission work there was turned over to the
Southern Baptist Board of Domestic Missions. Several other
missionaries were working in that area: D. M. McIntosh, Joseph
Smedley, Willis Burns, R. J. Hogue and J. 0. Silver, just to mention a few.
Joseph Samuel Murrow
Henry F. Buckner was a Charter member of Eufaula
Masonic Lodge Number 1 of the Grand Lodge of Indian Territory. On
NOvember 5, 1874, the Grand Lodge of Indian Territory was formed and
Henry F Buckner served as its first Grand Chaplain. Serving as such
in 1874, 75 and 76. He also served as Secretary of his Constituent
Lodge in 1875 and 76. He served on the Grand Lodge Charters and
Dispensations Committee (1875 1877), the Grand Lodge Law and Usages Committee (1875), the Grand Lodge Education
Committee (1875, 1878/79 and 1882/83), and the
Grand Lodge Foreign Correspondence Committee (1877, 1881/82) as well
as Grand Lecturer in 1878 and Grand Orator in 1879, 80 and 81.
Henry F. Buckner again requested help from the
Southern Baptist Mission Board. He got help in the form of Joseph
Samuel Murrow.
Joseph Samuel Murrow was born on June 7, 1835, in
Georgia. He was educated at Springfield Academy, Effington County;
George then he attended Mercer University in Macon, Georgia. Murrow
completed college in less time than most of his fellow students. He
joined the Greenfork Baptist Church in Burke County, Georgia at the
age of nineteen and was licensed to preach the following year.
Then he was ordained a Southern Baptist Minister
on September 16, 1857, then, on October 8, 1857, he married Nannie
Elizabeth Tatom of Fulton, Mississippi. The Rehoboth Baptist
Association in Georgia agreed to pay his salary if he would go to the
Indian Territory and help another Baptist Missionary there by the
name of Henry F Buckner. The Murrows traveled to the Indian Territory
arriving at the Buckners home on November 14, 1857. The Buckners were
not home,so that Sunday, Murrow preached his first sermon to the
Indians in the Indian Territory. He preached on II Corinthians 12:14
"1 seek not yours but you." This first service was one that Murrow
would never forget. He wrote to his friends back in Georgia and told
them of the wonderful welcome the Indians had given him, and how he
loved to hear them sing and pray.
When H. F. Buckner returned he immediately got
Joseph a pony so that they could travel together over the Indian
Territory. His first mission was established at Hlop-holk-ko in June
of 1858. During the next seventy years in the Indian Territory he
helped establish and start more than one hundred churches within the
Indian and Oklahoma Territories.
In July of 1858 the Murrows had a baby girl,
unfortunately, she died a short time later. Then in August, 1858, his
young wife also died. In his travels over the Indian Territory he
often went into the Choctaw Nation where he met some other
Missionaries. R. J. Hogue and Willis Burns were two of them. On
October 27, 1860, Joseph Murrow married Clara Burns, Willis Burns
daughter. Shortly thereafter, two more Missionaries arrived in the
Creek Nation. They were A. E. Vandiver and James A. Preston. Mr.
Buckner and Mr. Murrow thought that they now had enough missionaries
on the scene in that part of the Indian Territory so that someone
should go and minister to the Seminoles. Joseph Murrow volunteered to
go, and on January 2, 1860, the Murrows left North Fork Town and
headed west to the Seminole Nation.
Although it was only sixty miles it took them
three days to make the trip by wagon because part of the time they
had to travel where there were no roads. They set up a home at Little
River Mission station. Murrow met another Baptist preacher there and
the two men soon organized a Baptist Church, which they named Ash
Creek Baptist Church. The Seminoles called it Esu-hut-che. This
church was in a little town near present day Sasakwa, in Seminole
county. Two outstanding Seminoles who became members of this church
were James Factor and Chief John Jumper. Now John Jumper was a Mason.
Both of these men became Baptist preachers and Chief Jumper was
pastor of the Ash Creek Baptist Church for many years. He was loved
and respected by all who knew him.
The Church grew in size and had more than 100
members when the Civil War started in 1861. Soon the entire Territory
was in a state of turmoil and all the missionaries were asked to
leave. Mr. Murrow stayed on, as an agent of the Confederate
government, to help care for the hundreds of homeless Indians in the
area. John Jumper served in the Confederate Army and was a great help
to Mr. Murrow in caring for his people. Murrow continued his
missionary work among those people whom he served.
Sometime in 1865, after the Civil War started,
Joseph Samuel Murrow took his wife and little daughter Cogee (later
known as Clara) to Texas to visit with some friends. 'While in Texas,
Joseph Samuel Murrow became a Freemason. He was initiated an Entered
Apprentice on September 15, 1866, in Andrew Jackson Lodge, No. 88, in
Linden, Texas. He was subsequently passed on October 20 and raised on
December 15, 1860. Then on February 15, 1867, he obtained a demit
which he carried with him when he later returned to the Indian
Territory.
After resting for several months Murrow started
back to the Indian Territory to resume his mission work. On his way
through the Choctaw Nation he saw that there was a need for some
Baptist work there. The war had ended and he knew that other
missionaries would soon be returning to the Indian Nation, so he
decided to stay in the Choctaw Nation. He stopped at Boggy Depot,
near the present town of Atoka, for a few days, he remained in that
area for the next sixty-three years.
His wife and child joined him in March of 1867, at
Boggy Depot. Because J. S. Murrow was gone from home very often, his wife started
taking little Indian children in her home and teaching them about the
Bible and Christianity. In June of 1867, little Samuel was born to
the Murrows. Mrs. Murrow not being very strong physically could not
survive long after the birth of her son. She passed away in August of
1868, at the age of twenty-nine. She had long dreamed of the day when
her and her husband would start a church in the new town of
Atoka, but, alas, she did not live long enough
to see their dream come true.
J. S. Murrow helped start Oklahoma Masonic Lodge, Number 217,
which was Chartered by the Grand Lodge of Arkansas on November 18,
1868, and he served as it first Worshipful Master, and it was
subsequently chartered by the Grand Lodge of Indian Territory on May
12, 1875, as Oklahoma Masonic Lodge Number 4.
Notice this was before the Oklahoma Territory or
State of Oklahoma either one existed. Oklahoma is Creek Indian for
Home of the Redman.
Then on May 5, 1869, he formed a church and Rev.
Murrow was its pastor for twentythree years. He had this church named
Rehoboth Mission Baptist Church in honor of the Association in
Georgia that had paid his way and his salary for some years when he first came to the Indian
Territory.
Then in December of 1869, Joseph Murrow again
married. This time to Jane Henrietta Davidson a teacher in the
Goodwater Choctaw Mission School. Then in 1888 tragedy again struck
the Murrow household. Jane died; afterward he married again
to Kate Ellet, a missionary in Indian Territory, who
worked with the Womans Baptist Missionary Societies. She was also a
great help to Mr. Murrow in his missionary work and work as Grand
Secretary of Masons. She lived until January 7, 1915.
Then in 1872 representatives from sixteen Baptist
churches throughout the Territory met at this Baptist Church and
started the Choctaw Chickasaw Baptist Association, now considered to
be the oldest Association in the State of Oklahoma in continuous
existence. On April 1, 1876 the name of the church was changed to
Atoka Baptist Church.
Quoting from the book Baptist Heroes in Oklahoma
by Louise Haddock and J. M. Gaskin, "Mr. Murrow had many sorrows in his life. He
lost his little boy, Samuel, and now had only one child, Cogee. When
Cogee (now called Clara) was married in 1880 to C. A. McBride, her
father gave her a beautiful wedding reception. He ordered 'store
brought ice cream from Denison, Texas, which they said was the first
such ice cream the people there had ever seen. So he had many happy
times too."
He served the Grand Lodge of the Indian Territory,
as Grand Lecturer in 1875 and 1876, was Worshipful Master of his home
lodge again in 1876 and 1878. He was elected as the second Grand
Master of the Grand Lodge of Indian Territory
and served for two years, 1877 and 1878. He then served as Grand
Secretary of the Grand Lodge of Indian Territory, from 1881 until
1909, when the Grand Lodges of Indian and Oklahoma Territories
combined. He served the following year as one of Two Grand
Secretaries of the Grand Lodge of Ancient Free and Accepted Masons of
the State of Oklahoma. Then from 1910 until his death in 1929 he was
Grand Secretary Emeritus.
Joseph Samuel Murrow was also known as the "Father
of Masonry in Oklahoma." Also he started the first Baptist Orphans
Home for Indian children there in Atoka; the Bacone College for
Indian students; published a newspaper for his Indian friends, called
the "Indian Missionary;" and helped to establish Baptist Missions in
the far western part of the state of Oklahoma for the plains Indians.
Then in 1921, he married his fifth wife, Jennie Ragle, who made him
happy for rest of his life.
Joseph Samuel Murrow served and helped to
establish the York Rite and Scottish Rite
Masons of the Indian Territory as well. On February 16, 1878, a
request to organize a Chapter of Royal Arch Masons at McAlester,
Choctaw Nation, Indian Territory, was made.
One of the petitioners was the Grand Master of
Masons of the Indian Territory, Joseph Samuel Murrow. On February 23,
1878, the General Grand High Priest issued a dispensation. The High
Priest was Col. Edward J. Books, the King was Joseph S.
Murrow, and the Scribe was George W Stidham, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court
of the Choctaw Nation and Grand Treasurer of the Grand Lodge of
Indian Territory. In 1889, through the almost singlehanded efforts of
Joseph Samuel Murrow, acting in the interests of Capitular Masonry,
he made an eloquent speech on the floor of the General Grand Chapter
to get them to vote to start a Grand Chapter of Royal Arch Masons in
Indian Territory. After his heart rendering speech he was greeted
with thunderous applause and a standing ovation. He got his
wish.
Then during the triennial
Convocation of the General Grand Chapter at Denver, in 1883, Joseph
Samuel Murrow sought out the M. P. G. G. Master of the General Grand Council and secured from him a
Dispensation to organize and open a Council of
Royal and Select Masters at Atoka. Then on August 21, 1894, a charter
was issued to start a Grand Council in Indian
Territory. On November 5, 1894 not
quite ninety days after charters were authorized by the General Grand
Council for Union and Muskogee, a Grand Council of Royal and Select
Masters in Indian Territory was organized. The first Grand Recorder
of this body was none other than Joseph S. Murrow.
"Mr. Murrow died on September 8, 1929, at the age
of 94. He is buried in Atoka, Oklahoma, the town he served so long as
its Pastor."
Today, in Boggy Depot State
Park, stands an eightfoot tall granite monument to this great
Southern Baptist Missionary and Mason.
So ends the story of Joseph
Samuel Murrow a great Southern Baptist and a great Mason. 'Which of
his accomplishments was he most proud? I dont know, I only know, from
reading his writings in the Proceedings of the Grand Lodges of both
Indian Territory and the State of Oklahoma, that he was very proud of
his accomplishments in Masonry. Both of what he managed to do as a
Mason and what others managed to do as Masons with his guidance. He
made a very profound impact upon Masonry within the State of
Oklahoma. Today, we Oklahoma Masons, study our Murrow Masonic Monitor
and are led by its teachings and guided by its precepts. Masonry is not a religion. Even
J.S. Murrow said this
many times. However, as he has taught,
written, believed, and inspired others to believe the two
go hand in hand.
Also, he started over seventy-five Baptist
churches in Indian Territory, ordained sixty Baptist preachers,
mostly Indians; baptized approximately eighteen hundred new Baptists,
organized the first Baptist Association in the Indian Territory,
helped establish the first Indian University
(Bacon College) at Muskogee, IT and served for fifteen years as
president of the Board of Trustees.
He also served as editor of the Vindicator; a
weekly newspaper started at Boggy Depot and was later moved to Atoka. Later he and Granville McPherson
(first Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of
Indian Territory) combined it
and the Oklahoma Star, as the Star Vindicator. It was published in
McAlester, OK.


8 Foot Tall Granite Monument in Boggy Depot
State Park Honoring Joseph Murrow
This article has been published with the permission of Bob
Ellenwood as published in "the philalethes", December
2000.