Gary D. Courtney
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The Cookson Hills Dictionary
Old Time & Slang Words & Phrases
by
Gary D. Courtney
A study in linguistics, lifestyle, sociology, and history of our heritage.
“The Cookson Hills Dictionary” provides the reader an insight to the hard-working, God-fearing, ingenious, inventive, and adventurous pioneers, who built the foundation of the country we enjoy today.
Over 3,500 terms and sayings like our grandparents used,
and some we still use, today.
Some of the terms we use now originated during Medieval times, over 600 years ago, and the source of terms are documented, where available.
Originally begun and intended as a small glossary in the back of Gary Courtney’s book on the Cookson Hills history, the collection became a full-fledged book on its own, thanks to the contributions of local residents and Gary’s Oklahoma roots.
Historical chapters pertain to the Cookson Hills, but the dictionary itself could apply to the language and pioneer lifestyle of all early America.
The Cookson Hills, on the Illinois River in northeast Oklahoma, were:
- The site of a large population of ancient inhabitants (over 1,000 years ago),
- The new home of the Cherokee Nation (1828-1839),
- Sam Houston’s home, before he left for Texas,
- Levi Cookson’s open range for thousands of head of cattle worked by 200 cowboys,
- A favorite hideout of outlaws, such as: Belle Starr, Jesse James, and the Doolin and Dalton gangs (1880’s), and Charles “Pretty Boy” Floyd and Carl Janaway (1930’s),
- The site of many family farms taken for Camp Gruber, during World War II, and
- Scene of the book and movie filming of “Where the Red Fern Grows”.
The rugged limestone bluffs and crystal-clear, spring-fed streams are where Gary Courtney, a born adventurer, has walked, camped, fished and hunted, ridden horseback, SCUBA dived, and explored underground in caves, since childhood. The area is now a water sports, hunting, and trail riding Mecca, Intermingled with horse and cattle ranches and farms, the Cherokee Nation, and Northeastern State University.
His writings and two one-month-long museum exhibits at Northeastern State University on the Cookson Hills history and outlaw Carl Janaway, last surviving bank robber of the 1930’s, have been the subjects of Gary Courtney’s guest speaking engagements at local civic organizations and at the Sam Noble Museum at Oklahoma University.
Inspiration for the book came from Gary’s grandmother, Cleva Pauline (York) Tillman and grandfather, James Grover Cleveland “Cleve” Tillman, who pioneered the homestead cotton fields of Hollis, Oklahoma, in the 1890’s, and from the many good, hard-working people he grew up with, in Cleveland, Hominy, and Tulsa, Oklahoma. In living the ethic he learned from his father, a printer in a small town newspaper, Gary has worked as many as 120 hours in one week and accomplished “impossible” projects, while in the business world.
Contributions to “The Cookson Hills Dictionary” came from all walks of life and ages.
People from Jimmy Houston’s Outdoor Store in Keys on Lake Tenkiller, to Braum’s and Lucky’s Café in Tahlequah, and Tulsa, have submitted contributions. Sometimes, the submissions were written at 1:00 A.M., on an empty Marlboro carton, a brown paper sack, or an envelope, so they wouldn’t chance being forgotten by morning. Sometimes, entries were written with friends, over a breakfast of biscuits and gravy.
Printing has been intentionally kept to a font sizeable enough for easy reading, especially by the old-timers who contributed to the book’s content. Blank pages are provided for notes in the back of the book, so readers can record and submit their suggestions for the next edition. A CD-ROM disk is available by order form, so readers can use the Microsoft WORD Edit-Find function to look up words and phrases quickly and easily, without trying to sort the dictionary in any particular order.
A chapter is planned, for subsequent editions, to contain Cherokee old time and slang words and phrases.
In the future, a contest will be held for the best story by a purchaser of the book, written entirely with old time and slang words and phrases.
Judges will include: an English professor, a historian, an author, and a professional storyteller.
Gary Courtney
Author, Photographer, Outdoor Adventurer & Historian
Business Automation & Organization Pioneer
- Raised in Oklahoma as a woodsman, hunter & fisherman
- Front Page Feature writer and books – historical and outdoor adventures
- Author, photographer, designer & creator of the San Juan Mountains 60-page online magazine, including local US Forest Service stories, and his pictures from backpacking area trails, since 1998.
- Creator of museum exhibits at Northeastern State and Oklahoma University Sam Noble Museum
- Creator and Editor of the Cookson Hills 100-page online magazine, “LakesOK.com” in 2000
- Designer, builder and owner of the Cookson Hills Gallery of fine art,
award-winning Western and American Indian paintings, scrimshaw, sculpture & pottery
- Pioneer in cave exploring, backpacking, S.C.U.B.A. diving & new computer technologies
- Organizer & foundation builder of prominent nationwide companies
- Collector-dealer and authenticator of Civil War weapons, antique books, maps, and cameras
- Keynote guest speaker on:
- His history “A Portrait of the Cookson Hills”, “Cookson Hills Chronicles” &
“Cookson Hills Dictionary of Old Time & Slang Words & Phrases”
- “Carl Janaway - Last Surviving Bank Robber of the 1930’s”
book & month-long museum exhibit at Northeastern State University (NSU)
- The “History of Caving in Oklahoma” & museum exhibit at
Oklahoma University and Northeastern State University - Tahlequah
- “Growin’ Up Okie”, his outdoor & business adventures
- “Okies in the Outback”, a two-week Colorado backpacking adventure off a steam train
- Advice to CEO’s & CFO’s of nationwide Distribution companies
- Business Project Planning and Management & Methodologies
- The Civil War & Artifacts Collecting, Authentication
- “The Evolution of Technology in Information Systems since the 1960’s”
- Backpacking Tips ‘N Techniques - short trips & extended expeditions
Find his stories & photography on: www.BlackhawkPublishing.com
Cookson Hills Dictionary
1. Malarky noun. Nonsense.
“That’s a bunch of malarkey!”
2. Discumbobulated adjective. Jumbled, disconnected, or fallen apart.
“It just got all discombobulated!”
3. Druthers noun. First choice.
“If I had my druthers, I’d take that one.”
4. Whatchamacallit noun. Unidentifiable object, or nameless item.
Usually previously known, and since forgotten.
“Did you see that whatchamacallit around here?”
5. Do-hicky noun. Unidentifiable object, or nameless item.
“Hand me that do-hicky over there.”
6. Flabbergasted adjective. Astonished, or surprised.
“I was flabbergasted by his response.”
7. Catawompus adjective. Crooked, not level, upside-down, or out of alignment.
“He bumped the picture, and it was hangin’ kinda’ catawompus.”
8. Out-of-kelter adjective. Misaligned, crooked, in disagreement with, out of sorts.
“The man woke up out-of-kelter with the world, with his prejudiced opinions.”
9. Heinz-57 adjective Mixed breed (i.e. dog), after the steak sauce with many ingredients.
“The dog was just a Heinz-57 mutt.”
10. Boondoggle noun. Gross mistake, the expensive result of ineptness, inefficiency and incompetence, a complete waste of money.
“The government program was just a big boondoggle!”
11. No nevermind noun. No matter to me, no cause for concern, or something inconsequential.
“It don’t make me no nevermind!”
12. Yonder adverb. Over there.
“He lives over yonder a piece.”