After leaving office, the Fergusons returned to
Watonga, Oklahoma. Her husband died in 1921. After his death she was active in
Republican Party politics by chairing the state delegation to the national convention in 1924 and serving as the vice-chair of the
Republican Party of Oklahoma from 1928 to 1932. She continued to work at the
Watonga Republican until she retired and sold the paper in 1930. Her writing served as the basis for
Edna Ferber's novel
Cimarron (1930) and she served as a technical advisor on the
1931 film of the same name. In 1937 she published the book ''They Carried The Torch: The Story of Oklahoma's Pioneer Newspapers''. In her later life, she was active in the
National League of American Pen Women and
Order of the Eastern Star. In 1933 she was inducted into the
Oklahoma Hall of Fame and in 1946 she was named Oklahoma Mother of the Year. She died on December 18, 1947, in Watonga. Elva and
Thompson had five children, but only two survived to adulthood:
Walter Ferguson and Tom Jr. ==References==