Nannita Daisey

Nannita Daisey, also known as Kentucky Daisey,[1] gained fame during the late nineteenth century in Oklahoma's land runs, fame that extended after her death in a legend about how she claimed her first Homestead tract.

Nannita Regina H. Daisey was born in Pennsylvania in 1855. After the deaths of her parents she lived and was educated at the Sisters of the Good Shepherd Convent in St. Louis, Missouri. Moving east to work as a teacher, she lived in Kentucky where she also began a career in journalism, fighting the gender discrimination common at that time against women who sought professional careers. Moving to Oklahoma, she participated in four land runs, where predominantly white settlers were allowed by the US government to claim lands that had previously been allotted in perpetuity to Native Americans. In addition to teaching and journalism, Daisey was active in the Guthrie, Oklahoma community where she made her home, helping other women to claim homesteads, and helping initiate schools in the new towns. By 1890 she had married Scandinavian immigrant and US Army soldier Andreas E. J. Ueland Svegeborg; the couple had no children. Daisey died in 1903.

Daisey is, and was, most known for exaggerated accounts of her activities. Dramatically, in the first (1889) land run, she jumped from the front of one of the first trains into the Territory, staked her land claim, and reboarded the train before it passed her by. That feat gained her local notoriety, and the tale was reported in local, regional, and national newspapers. After her death, an obituary reported than she had leapt from the train's cowcatcher, a claim not supported by any contemporary accounts of her actions, nor by her own accounts in published interviews.

Nevertheless, that version of the tale has been passed on in printed histories of Oklahoma, the Land Run of 1889, and the town of Edmond (where Daisey's homestead site lies). On Independence Day (4 July) 2007 the town of Edmond unveiled a statue of Daisey, leaping from the cowcatcher at the front of a train.[2] The statue is named "Leaping into History" and was sculpted by local artist Mary Lou Gresham. Estimated cost for the project was $160,000[3] by funded by the Edmond Parks Foundation, Inc. as well as private donations.[4] Thus, Daisey, along with even more famous westerners such as Calamity Jane, has become most known for a mythologized version of her life and its events.

Sources

Notes
  1. Houghton, Jaclyn (13 March 2007). "Oklahoma history cast in bronze". Archived from the original on 28 September 2007. Retrieved 2007-04-15.
  2. "Edmond Centennial Event Calendar". Archived from the original on 23 June 2007. Retrieved 2007-04-15.
  3. Coburn, James (5 July 2007). "Great past looks toward future". Retrieved 2007-10-18.
  4. Coburn, James (9 June 2007). "Great past looks toward future". Retrieved 2007-10-18.
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