Oklahoma Vacation Guide System
Oklahoma History
The history of Oklahoma refers to the history of the state of
Oklahoma and the land that the state now occupies. Areas of Oklahoma
east of its panhandle were acquired in the Louisiana Purchase of 1803,
while the Panhandle was not acquired until the U.S. land acquisitions
following the Mexican-American War.
There is some question as to whether or not Francisco Vásquez de Coronado was the first European to set foot inside Oklahoma.
Before statehood
Before 1500 CE
Archaeologists
believe that ancestors of the Wichita people occupied the eastern Great
Plains from the Red River north to Nebraska for at least 2,000 years.
These early Wichita people were hunters and gatherers who slowly
adopted agriculture. About 900 CE, on terraces above the Washita and
South Canadian Rivers in Oklahoma, farming villages began to appear.
The inhabitants of these villages grew corn, beans, squash, marsh
elder, and tobacco. They hunted deer, rabbit, turkey, and,
increasingly, bison, and caught fish and collected mussels in the
rivers. These villagers lived in rectangular thatched houses. They
became numerous, with villages of up to 20 houses spaced every two or
so miles along the rivers.
By 1500, Apache groups had also begun
moving into formerly Wichita areas of Oklahoma. However, it appears
that the two people co-existed in the region for some time. In addition
to Apache influence, the Wichita of southwestern Oklahoma appear to
have had regular trade contact with Texas and New Mexico.
The Indian Relocation
Main articles: Indian removal and Indian Removal Act
Routes to Indian Territory taken by the Five Civilized Tribes, often known as the Trail of Tears.
Part
of what became Oklahoma was designated the home for the Choctaw Nation.
Later the area would be named Indian Territory. The goal was to provide
ample lands for the relocation of Native Americans in the eastern
states who did not wish to assimilate.
The Indian Removal Act of
1830 gave President Andrew Jackson the power to negotiate treaties for
removal with Indian tribes living east of the Mississippi River. The
treaty called for the Indians to give up their eastern land for land in
the west. Those who wished to stay behind were allowed to stay,
assimilate and become citizens in their state. For the tribes that
agreed to Jackson's terms, the removal was peaceful; however, those who
resisted were eventually forced to leave.
The Choctaw was the
first of the "Five Civilized Tribes" to be removed from the
southeastern United States. The phrase "Trail of Tears" originated from
a description of the removal of the Choctaw Nation in 1831, although
the term is usually used for the Cherokee removal. In September 1830,
Choctaws in Mississippi agreed to terms of the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit
Creek and prepared to move west.
The Creek also refused to
relocate and signed a treaty in March 1832 to open up a large portion
of their land in exchange for protection of ownership of their
remaining lands. The United States failed to protect the Creeks, and in
1837, they were militarily removed without ever signing a treaty.
The
Chickasaw saw the relocation as inevitable and signed a treaty in 1832
which included protection until their move. The Chickasaws were forced
to move early as a result of white settlers and the War Department's
refusal to protect the Indian's lands.
In 1833, a small group of
Seminoles signed a relocation treaty. However, the treaty was declared
illegitimate by a majority of the tribe. The result was the Second and
Third Seminole Wars. Those that survived the wars eventually were paid
to move west.
The Treaty of New Echota of 1833 gave the
Cherokees in the state of Georgia two years to move west, or they would
be forced to move. At the end of the two years only 2,000 Cherokees had
migrated westward and 16,000 remained on their lands. The U.S. sent
7,000 soldiers to force the Cherokee to move without the time to gather
their belongings. This march westward is known as the Trail of Tears,
in which 4,000 Cherokee died.
Civil War
In 1860, the Indian
Territory had a population of 55,000 Indians, 8,400 black slaves owned
by Indians, and 3000 whites. In 1861, as the American Civil War began,
Texas forces moved north and the United States withdrew its military
forces from the territory. Confederate Commissioner Albert Pike signed
formal treaties of alliance with all the major tribes, and the
territories sent a delegate to the Confederate Congress in Richmond.
However, there were minority factions who opposed the Confederacy, with
the result that a small-scale Civil War raged inside the territory. By
summer 1863, Union forces controlled neighboring Arkansas, and
Confederate hopes for retaining control of the territory collapsed. A
force of Union troops and loyal Indians invaded Indian Territory and
won a strategic victory at Honey Springs on July 17, 1863. Many
pro-Confederate Cherokee, Creek, and Seminole Indians fled south,
becoming refugees among the Chickasaw and Choctaws. However,
Confederate Brigadier General Stand Watie, a Cherokee, captured Union
supplies, and kept the insurgency active. Watie was the last
Confederate general to give up; he surrendered on 23 June 1865.
Post-Civil War Period
In
1866 the federal government forced the tribes into new treaties. Most
of the land in central and western Indian Territory was ceded to the
government. Some of the land was given to other tribes, but the central
part, the so-called Unassigned Lands, remained with the government.
Another concession allowed railroads to cross Indian lands. Furthermore
the practice of slavery was outlawed. Some nations were integrated
racially and otherwise with their slaves, but other nations were
extremely hostile to the former slaves and wanted them exiled from
their territory.
In the 1870s, a movement began by whites and
blacks wanting to settle the government lands in the Indian Territory
under the Homestead Act of 1862. They referred to the Unassigned Lands
as Oklahoma and to themselves as Boomers. In the 1880s, early settlers
of the state's very sparsely populated Panhandle region tried to form
the Cimarron Territory but lost a lawsuit against the federal
government. This prompted a judge in Paris, Texas, to unintentionally
create a moniker for the area. "That is land that can be owned by no
man," the judge said, and after that the panhandle was referred to as
No Man's Land until statehood arrived decades later.
In 1884, in
United States v. Payne, the United States District Court in Topeka,
Kansas, ruled that settling on the lands ceded to the government by the
Indians under the 1866 treaties was not a crime. The government at
first resisted, but Congress soon enacted laws authorizing settlement.
Congress
passed the Dawes Act, or General Allotment Act, in 1887 requiring the
government to negotiate agreements with the tribes to divide Indian
lands into individual holdings. Under the allotment system, tribal
lands left over would be surveyed for settlement by non-Indians.
Following settlement, many whites accused Republican officials of
giving preferential treatment to ex-slaves in land disputes.
Oklahoma and Indian Territories
Land runs
Oklahoma and Indian Territory, 1890s
The
United States entered into two new treaties with the Creeks and the
Seminoles. Under these treaties, tribes would sell at least part of
their land in Oklahoma to the U.S. to settle other Indian tribes and
freemen. This land would be widely called the Unassigned Lands or
Oklahoma Country in the 1880s due to it remaining uninhabited for over
a decade.
In 1879, part-Cherokee Elias C. Boudinot argued that
these Unassigned Lands be open for settlement because the title to
these lands belonged to the United States and "whatever may have been
the desire or intention of the United States Government in 1866 to
locate Indians and negroes upon these lands, it is certain that no such
desire or intention exists in 1879. The Negro since that date, has
become a citizen of the United States, and Congress has recently
enacted laws which practically forbid the removal of any more Indians
into the Territory".
Photo of one of Oklahoma's land runs
On
March 23, 1889, President Benjamin Harrison signed legislation which
opened up the two million acres (8,000 km²) of the Unassigned Lands for
settlement on April 22, 1889. It was to be the first of many land runs,
but later land openings were conducted by means of a lottery because of
widespread cheating—some of the settlers were called Sooners because
they had already staked their land claims before the land was
officially opened for settlement.
The Organic Act of 1890 created the Oklahoma Territory out of the Unassigned Lands and the area known as No Man's Land.
In
1893, the government purchased the rights to settle the Cherokee
Outlet, or Cherokee Strip, from the Cherokee Nation. The Cherokee
Outlet was part of the lands ceded to the government in the 1866
treaty, but the Cherokees retained access to the area and had leased it
to several Chicago meat-packing plants for huge cattle ranches. The
Cherokee Strip was opened to settlement by land run in 1894. Also, in
1893, Congress set up the Dawes Commission to negotiate agreements with
each of the Five Civilized Tribes for the allotment of tribal lands to
individual Indians. Finally, the Curtis Act of 1898 abolished tribal
jurisdiction over all of Indian Territory.
Angie Debo's landmark
work, And Still the Waters Run: The Betrayal of the Five Civilized
Tribes (1940), detailed how the allotment policy of the Dawes
Commission and the Curtis Act of 1898 was systematically manipulated to
deprive the Native Americans of their lands and resources. In the words
of historian Ellen Fitzpatrick, Debo's book "advanced a crushing
analysis of the corruption, moral depravity, and criminal activity that
underlay white administration and execution of the allotment policy."
Statehood
In
1902, the leaders of Indian Territory sought to become their own state,
to be named Sequoyah. They held a convention in Eufaula, consisting of
representatives from the Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, Muscogee
(Creek), and Seminole tribes, known as the Five Civilized Tribes. They
met again next year to establish a constitutional convention.
The Sequoyah Constitutional Convention and statehood attempt
The
Sequoyah Constitutional Convention met in Muskogee, on August 21, 1905.
General Pleasant Porter, Principal Chief of the Muscogee Creek Nation,
was selected as president of the convention. The elected delegates
decided that the executive officers of the Five Civilized Tribes would
also be appointed as vice-presidents: William Charles Rogers, Principal
Chief of the Cherokees; William H. Murray, appointed by Chickasaw
Governor Douglas H. Johnston to represent the Chickasaws; Chief Green
McCurtain of the Choctaws; Chief John Brown of the Seminoles; and
Charles N. Haskell, selected to represent the Creeks (as General Porter
had been elected President).
The convention drafted the
constitution, established an organizational plan for a government,
outlined proposed county designations in the new state, and elected
delegates to go to the United States Congress to petition for
statehood. If this ever happened, the State of Sequoyah would have been
the first state to have a Native American majority population.
The
convention's proposals were overwhelmingly endorsed by the residents of
Indian Territory in a referendum election in 1905. The U.S. government,
however, reacted coolly to the idea of Indian Territory and Oklahoma
Territory becoming separate states; they rather have them share a
singular state.
Cartoonist's rendering of Theodore Roosevelt's initial reaction to the Oklahoma Constitution.
Murray's Proposal
Murray,
known for his eccentricities and political astuteness, foresaw this
possibility prior to the constitutional convention. When Johnston asked
Murray to represent the Chickasaw Nation during Sequoyah's attempt at
statehood, Murray predicted the plan would not succeed in Washington,
D.C.. He suggested that if the attempt failed, the Indian Territory
would work with the Oklahoma Territory to become one state. After
President Theodore Roosevelt and Congress turned down the Indian
Territory proposal.
Seeing an opportunity for statehood, Murray
and Haskell proposed another convention for the combined territories to
be named Oklahoma. Using the constitution from the Sequoyah convention
as a basis (and the majority) of the new state constitution, Haskell
and Murray returned to Washington with the proposal for statehood. On
November 16, 1907 President Theodore Roosevelt signed the proclamation
establishing Oklahoma as the nation's 46th state.
After statehood - 20th century
Oil
Although
the first oil well in the United States was completed July 1850 in the
old Cherokee Nation near Salina, it was in the early 20th century the
oil business really began to get underway. Huge pools of underground
oil were discovered in places like Glenpool near Tulsa. Many whites
flooded into the state to make money. Many of the "old money" elite
families of Oklahoma can date their rise to this time.
Throughout
the 1920s, new oil fields were continually discovered and Oklahoma
produced over 1.8 billion barrels of petroleum, valued at over 3.5
million dollars for the decade. In 1920 the spectacular Osage County
oil field was opened, followed in 1926 by the Greater Seminole Oil
Field. When the Great Depression Oklahoma and Texas oil was flooding
the market and prices fell to pennies a gallon. In 1931 Governor
William H. Murray, acting with characteristic decisiveness, used the
National Guard to shut down all of Oklahoma's oil wells in an effort to
stabilize prices. National policy became using the Texas Railroad
Commission to set allotments in Texas, which raised prices as well for
Oklahoma crude.
Prosperous 1920s
The prosperity of the 1920s
can be seen in the surviving architecture from the period, such as the
Tulsa mansion which was converted into the Philbrook Museum of Art or
the art deco architecture of downtown Tulsa.
Blacks
For
Oklahoma, the early quarter of the 20th century was politically
turbulent. Many different groups had flooded into the state; "black
towns", or towns made of groups of African Americans choosing to live
separately from whites, sprouted all over the state, while most of the
state abided by the Jim Crow laws within each individual city, racially
separating people with a bias against any non-White race. Greenwood, a
neighborhood in Northern Tulsa, was known as Black Wall Street because
of the vibrant business, cultural, and religious community there. The
area was the site of the 1921 Tulsa Race War, one of the United States'
deadliest race riots.
Socialists
The Oklahoma Socialist Party
achieved a small degree of success in this era (the small party had its
highest per-capita membership in Oklahoma at this time with 12,000
dues-paying members in 1914), including the publication of dozens of
party newspapers and the election of several hundred local elected
officials. Much of their success came from their willingness to reach
out to Black and American Indian voters (they were the only party to
continue to resist Jim Crow laws), and their willingness to alter
traditional Marxist ideology when it made sense to do so (the biggest
changes were the party's support of widespread small-scale land
ownership, and their willingness to use religion positively to preach
the "Socialist gospel"). The state party also delivered presidential
candidate Eugene Debs some of his highest vote counts in the nation.
The
party was later crushed into virtual non-existence during the "white
terror" that followed the ultra-repressive environment following the
Green Corn Rebellion and the World War I era paranoia against anyone
who spoke against the war or capitalism.
The Industrial Workers
of the World tried to gain headway during this period but achieved
little success. The Ku Klux Klan was also particularly active but was
virtually eliminated following a major campaign by the state government
in the 1950s.
Walton
Disgruntled Oklahoma farmers and
laborers handed left-wing Democrat Jack C. Walton an easy election
victory in 1922 as governor. One scandal followed another—Walton's
questionable administrative practices included payroll padding,
jailhouse pardons, removal of college administrators, and an enormous
increase in the governor's salary. The conservative elements
successfully petitioned for a special legislative recall session. To
regain the initiative, Walton retaliated by attacking Oklahoma's Ku
Klux Klan with a ban on parades, declaration of martial law, and
employment of outsiders to 'keep the peace.' He declared martial law in
the entire state and tried to call out the National Guard to block the
legislature from holding the special session. That failed, and
legislators charged Walton with corruption, impeached him, and removed
him from office in 1923.
Dust Bowl Era
The Dust Bowl ravaged Oklahoma in the 1930s.
During
the height of the Great Depression, drought and poor agricultural
practices led to the Dust Bowl, when massive dust storms blew away the
soil from large tracts of arable land and deposited it on nearby farms
and ranches, distant states, the Atlantic Ocean, and even occasionally
Great Britain. The resulting crop failures forced many small farmers to
flee the state altogether. Although the most persistent dust storms
primarily affected the Panhandle, much of the state experienced
occasional dusters, intermittent severe drought, and occasional searing
heat. Towns such as Alva, Altus, and Poteau each recorded temperatures
of 120 °F (49 °C) during the epic summer of 1936.
Advances in
agro-mechanical technology simultaneously enabled less labor-intensive
crop production. Many large landowners and planters had more labor than
they needed with the new technology, and the federal Agricultural
Adjustment Act paid them to reduce production. Plantation owners
throughout the American South and much of eastern and southern Oklahoma
released their sharecroppers of their debts and evicted them. With few
or no local opportunities available for them, many emancipated, but
destitute blacks and whites fled to the relative prosperity of
California to work as migrant farm workers and, after the onset of
World War II, in factories.
The Grapes of Wrath by John
Steinbeck, photographs by Dorothea Lange, and songs of Woody Guthrie
tales of woe from the era. The negative images of the "Okie" as a sort
of rootless migrant laborer living in a near-animal state of scrounging
for food greatly offended many Oklahomans. These works often mix the
experiences of former sharecroppers of the western American South with
those of the exodusters fleeing the fierce dust storms of the High
Plains. Although they primarily feature the extremely destitute, the
vast majority of the people, both staying in and fleeing from Oklahoma,
suffered great poverty in the Depression years. Some Oklahoma
politicians denounced The Grapes of Wrath (often without reading it) as
an attempt to impugn the morals and character of Oklahomans.
After World War II
The
term "Okie" in recent years has taken on a new meaning in the past few
decades, with many Oklahomans (both former and present) wearing the
label as a badge of honor (as a symbol of the Okie survivor attitude).
Others (mostly alive during the Dust Bowl era) still see the term
negatively because they see the "Okie" migrants as quitters and
transplants to the West Coast.
Major trends in Oklahoma history
after the Depression era included the rise again of tribal sovereignty
(including the issuance of tribal automobile license plates, and the
opening of tribal smoke shops, casinos, grocery stores, and other
commercial enterprises), the building of Tinker Air Force Base, the
rapid growth of suburban Oklahoma City and Tulsa, the drop in
population in Western Oklahoma, the oil boom of the 1980s and the oil
bust of the 1990s.
In recent years, major efforts have been made
by state and local leaders to revive Oklahoma's small towns and
population centers, which had seen major decline following the oil
bust. But Oklahoma City and Tulsa remain economically active in their
effort to diversify as the state focuses more into finance and
manufacturing.
Oklahoma City Bombing
Main articles: Oklahoma City bombing and Oklahoma City National Memorial
In
1995 Oklahoma became the scene of one of the worst acts of terrorism
ever committed in U.S. History. On April 19, 1995, in the Oklahoma City
bombing, Gulf War veteran Timothy McVeigh bombed the Alfred P. Murrah
Federal Building, killing 168 people, including 19 children. Timothy
McVeigh and Terry Nichols were the convicted perpetrators of the
attack, although many believe others were involved. Timothy McVeigh was
later sentenced to death by lethal injection, while his partner, Terry
Nichols, who was convicted of 161 counts of first degree murder
received life in prison without the possibility of parole. It is said
that McVeigh stayed at the El Siesta motel, a small town motel on US 64
in Vian, Oklahoma.


"You can get anything you want @ CeeAmerica"