influence    of  the    nineteenth  century.”   He  went    on, “It seemed  a
great   adventure.  My  parents never   saw the charm   of  it  all that    I
did.     We  used    to  go  often   to  Lot     50,     about   nine    miles   into    the
Osage,  in  a   horse-drawn wagon.  It  took    a   couple  of  hours   and we
had to  cross   a   river   to  get there.”
Workers strike  oil in  Osage   territory. Credit   17Before   encountering    the     Indians,    Jean    Paul    had     asked   his
father, “Are    they    dangerous?  Will    we  have    to  fight   them    off?”
His  father  laughed.    “No,”   he  said.   “They’re    rather  quiet   and
peaceful.”
One damp    spring  day in  1917,   Frank   Phillips—a  wildcatter  who’d
previously   sold    a   tonic   to  prevent     baldness—was    out     with    his
workers on  Lot 185,    less    than    half    a   mile    from    Lot 50. They    were
on  a   platform    drilling    when    the derrick began   to  tremble,    as  if  a
