= M A I N   
 = R E F E R E N C E S   
 = S I T E   M A P   
 = W H A T 'S  N E W  
 = M E S S A G E  F O R U M  
 =C O N T A C T  
 C H E U V R O N T  T E X T : Fwd 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11  
 C O O K M A N  T E X T : Fwd  1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 (res.)
 
 A   B R I E F   H I S T O R Y 
O F    T H E 
C O O K M A N   F A M I L Y 
P A G E   T H R E E 
M E L B U R N   C O O K M A N

   Melburn Cookman (s/o Parker Cookman and Elizabeth Post) was born on May 19, 1845, and died on April 5, 1920.  He was the second son of Parker B. and Elizabeth Post Cookman, and grew up on the home farm on Jesse's Run, Jane Lew, WVa. 
    He spent four years in the Confederate Army, enlisting when he was sixteen and receiving his discharge in 1864. He was wounded only once, when a piece of wood, knocked by an enemy bullet, flew from the log he was shooting over and struck him.  During the war (like the other soldiers) he lived off the land, fought in many battles and was more than glad when the awful war was over.  He was discharged about two months before its end due to a severe attack of pneumonia, and made his way home one evening, gaunt and emaciated, on a poor old horse.  The family had not heard from him for months and had feared the worst; what a reunion that must have been! 
     Right after the War, on Oct. 12, 1865, Melburn married Olive Edmonds (see her photo).  Olive was born in 1845, the daughter of John Edmonds and Hannah Straley (d/o George Straley and 1st wife; 2nd wife was Margaret Roby).  John and Hannah Edmonds had a large farm only 1.5 miles over the mountain (but six miles to walk around to it) on which they used only oxen to work it, no horses.  John Edmonds owned slaves and gave each of his children a slave before the Civil War.  Olive's "Aunt Moll" [one of these former slaves, we think] stayed with her until the family left West Virginia and helped her raise her family.  After the war Aunt Moll lived with Olive's family and helped care for them, not as a slave, but for pay and a place to live. 
     John Edmonds was a tall slender man, 6ft.2in., and lived to be 102, though he spent his last four years in a wheelchair due to illness.  He was a good friend of Stonewall Jackson, and supposedly told many tales of their days together. 
     Melburn and Olive lived on the farm on Jesse's Run, Jane Lew, a farm of 400-500 acres which he worked with his father Parker and his brother George.  Farming those days was difficult, as the weeds had to be grubbed by hand and the sprouts had to be cut twice a year.  The average wage for a farm laborer at the time was .75 cents a day. 
     Melburn and Olive's first house was made of logs, and their first child Arminta (see photo) was born there in 1867.  They added on to this house and lived there until 1881, when it was moved to the back and a new, larger house was built in its place. 
     Their first home had a lean-to kitchen and a barn and "spring house" nearby.  The spring house was approximately 8'x10' and enclosed a cold spring, making a nice cool place where the family kept milk, cheese, and butter on large rock slabs. 
      Their second house was a big Colonial type, two stories with a two story front porch common to the design.  There were six fireplaces and all the rooms had high ceilings.  A large stairway to the second floor was in the entry hall.  The house was in excellent repair when visited by the author J.Howard Cheuvront in 1964.  Two chimneys and four fireplaces had been removed, and a basement with a furnace had been added, but all the rooms still had their original ceilingboard interior.  The original 18" ribbed metal roofing was in place, as were the original porch columns.  [J. Howard thought that] the house was in such good shape it was hard to believe it had been built in 1881. 
      Between 1885/86, conditions took a turn for the worse for the Melburn Cookman family.  The farm work was hard and money was scarce, and in addition Melburn still owed on his land.  He had signed a note for a friend, George Goodwin, which George had defaulted, and after paying his friend's note Melburn decided to leave West Virginia and move to Missouri.  Friends of the family George and Phoebe Wolf Cheuvront and her parents had gone to Missouri a decade before, so Melburn sold his farm, cashed in everything of value, and moved the next year. 
     As a young man Melburn had known George and Phoebe Cheuvront and her parents before they left Jane Lew for Missouri in 1857.  The 1850 Lewis Co. Va Census #172 lists the following:  
John Cookman, aged 31, male, farmer, b. VA
Eliza, aged 29, female, b. VA
G., aged 6, male b. VA
Mifflin, aged 4, b. VA
Amanda, aged 2, b. VA
George Cheuvront, aged 18, male, b. VA
 
Also, on visitation #381, George Cheuvront's sister and mother Phoebe are listed with the William2 M. Cookman family: 
William2 M. Cookman, aged 35, male, farmer, b. VA
Sarah, aged 31, female, b. VA
M., aged 5, b. VA
Louisa, aged 7, b. VA
John L., aged 3, b. VA
Pheba E., aged1, b. VA
Elizabeth Cheuvront, aged 14, b. VA
Pheba aged 30, b. VA (see ref. 6)
  
   In 1887 Melburn journeyed to Missouri by train and purchased the farm that had belonged to Phoebe's parents Mr. and Mrs. Wolf, who had since died.  He sent for his family, met them in St. Louis, and accompanied them to their new home in October. 
     This 240 acre farm was located on West Locust Creek two miles south and one mile east of the Old Griffith School house, and one mile south of George and Phoebe Cheuvront's place (George had died in 1882 and Phoebe in 1879, but the farm was being run by their sons).  The West Locust Creek farm was poor and in bad shape, but with more and more settlers coming in to the area every week, things were booming, and life was much easier than in West Virginia. 
     There was a store (Cookman's Store, named after a relative), and a post office on the south-east corner of the crossroads south of the Asbury Church. This store was a popular gathering place and handy for supplies and mail. 
     Melburn's wife Olive Edmonds Cookman died at the home on Oct. 12, 1890, and is buried in the Asbury Cemetery.  The family of Melburn Cookman and Olive Edmonds included four daughters and one son: (see photos) 
1: Arminta Cookman, b. Jan 12, 1867
2: Ella Cookman, b. Jan 12, 1869
3: Clara Cookman, b. Feb. 13, 1871
4: Della Cookman, b. June 18, 1873
5: Claget Cookman, b. Dec. 8, 1876
     On Feb 4. 1892 Melburn married Barbara Ann Hershman, a widow who lived across the road.  Barbara Ann was born Dec. 12, 1850, and died Dec. 30, 1940.  Melburn and Barbara Ann had one child, daughter Vida, born Jan. 27, 1893. 
     Melburn, his son Claget, and neighbors Ed Stuart and Charlie Denison decided in 1901 to go to Claget's father-in-law's home in the Oklahoma Territories for a hunt.  Quail, prairie chickens, jackrabbits, and antelope were plentiful, but there were few people, and it looked as though the wilderness would be unsettled forever.  The group took one look, then went into Woodward, Oklahoma, where Melburn and Claget each filed adjoinging 160 acre claims.  Afterward they bought 1/2 bushel of sweet potatoes and 1/2 gallon of whiskey, then went back to their hunt.  It lasted an additional 21 days, with wild game at every meal. 
     At the time of their claims in 1901, Melburn and Claget had had no intention of living on their new property, but as soon as they returned to Missouri the pair sold their farms.  In 1902 they loaded their belongings on freight cars and moved "lock, stock, and barrel" to Oklahoma. 
     Once in Oklahoma each homesteaded their 160 acres near the old town of Ivanhoe in Beaver County.  Melburn eventually sold his lot to Claget and bought another 400 acres two miles south and one mile east, where in 1904 he built a sod house with 18" thick walls.  The house is still occupied (see ref. 7), and though it has been remodeled several times, was re-roofed for the first time in 1969. 
     Melburn lived in this house until his death on April 15, 1920, having returned to Missouri only once in 1914.  [J. Howard notes that as he had found Missouri easier than Virginia, he found Oklahoma easier than Missouri.] 
 the family of Melburn and Olive Edmonds Cookman, cont'd
 
-from A Brief History of the Melburn Cookman Family in America, J. Howard Cheuvront, 1972 
 B A C K      N E X T
 
 page design by pachyderm
Beaded Necklace | Shades | Webhosting Provider | Broker Agent | Faux Wood Blinds