OKLAHOMA

ōkləhōˈmə, state in SW United States. It is bordered by Missouri and Arkansas (E); Texas, partially across the Red R. (S, W); New Mexico, across the narrow edge of the Oklahoma Panhandle (W); and Colorado and Kansas (N).

Facts and Figures

Area, 69,919 sq mi (181,090 sq km). Pop. (2000) 3,450,654, a 9.7% increase since the 1990 census. Capital and largest city, Oklahoma City. Statehood, Nov. 16, 1907 (46th state). Highest pt., Black Mesa, 4,973 ft (1,517 m); lowest pt., Little River, 287 ft (88 m). Nickname, Sooner State. Motto,Labor Omnia Vincit [Labor Conquers All Things]. State bird, scissor-tailed flycatcher. State flower, mistletoe. State tree, redbud. Abbr., Okla.; OK

Geography

The high, short-grass plains of W Oklahoma are part of the Great Plains, which are chilled by north winds in the winter and baked by intense heat in the summer. There are extensive grazing lands and wheat fields. The plains are broken here and there, notably by Black Mesa in the Panhandle and by the Wichita Mts. in the southwest, but the general slope is downward to the east, and central and E Oklahoma is mostly prairie, rising in the northeast to the Ozark Mts. and in the southeast to the Ouachita Mts.

The rivers that flow from west to east across the state—the Arkansas and its tributaries, the Cimarron, and the Canadian (with the North Canadian) in the north, the Red River with the Washita and other tributaries in the south—are much more prominent in the east. Chickasaw National Recreation Area is in S Oklahoma. Oklahoma City is the capital, and the other large city is Tulsa.

Economy

Cotton, formerly the leading cash crop of Oklahoma, has been succeeded by wheat; income from livestock, however, exceeds that from crops. Many minerals are found in Oklahoma, including coal, but the one that gave the state its wealth is oil. After the first well was drilled in 1888, the petroleum industry grew enormously, until Oklahoma City and Tulsa were among the great natural gas and petroleum centers of the world. Oil and gas have declined somewhat in importance today. Many of Oklahoma's factories process local foods and minerals, but its chief manufactures include nonelectrical machinery and fabricated metal products. Military bases and other government facilities are also important.

Government and Higher Education

The original 1907 constitution is still in effect. Oklahoma has a legislature of 48 senators and 101 representatives. The governor is elected for a four-year term. The state elects two U.S. senators and six representatives and has eight electoral votes. In 1994, Republican Frank Keating won the governorship; he was reelected in 1998. Democrat Brad Henry narrowly won the office in the 2002 elections.

Among institutions of higher learning in the state are Oklahoma State Univ., at Stillwater; the Univ. of Oklahoma, at Norman and Oklahoma City; and the Univ. of Tulsa and Oral Roberts Univ., at Tulsa.

History

The Native American Heritage

Oklahoma's Native American population is the largest in the nation—252,420 at the 1990 census. Several indigenous cultures existed in the area before the first European visited in 1541. Francisco Coronado almost certainly crossed Oklahoma in that year, and Hernando De Soto may have visited E Oklahoma. Later Juan de Oñate passed through W Oklahoma, and some other Spanish explorers and traders and French traders from Louisiana visited the region, but there was no development of the area.

Tribes of the Plains cultures—Osage, Kiowa, Comanche, and Apache—dominated the west; the Wichita and other relatively sedentary tribes lived farther east. It is asserted that the first European trading post was established at Salina by the Chouteau family of St. Louis before the territory was transferred to the United States by the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, but the land remained in control of the sparse and nomadic native population. For the most part only traders, official explorers (notably Stephen H. Long), and scientific and curious travelers (among them Washington Irving and George Catlin) came into the present-day state.

Indian Territory

In 1819 the Adams-Onís Treaty with Spain defined Oklahoma as the southwestern boundary of the United States. After the War of 1812 the U.S. government invited the Cherokee of Georgia and Tennessee to move into the area, and a few had come to settle. Soon intense white pressure for their lands, with the approval of President Andrew Jackson, forced the Cherokee and the others of the Five Civilized Tribes (the Choctaw, the Chickasaw, the Creek, and the Seminole) to abandon their old homes east of the Mississippi and to take up residence in what was to become the Indian Territory. Their tragic removal is known as the Trail of Tears. They settled on the hills and little prairies of the eastern section and built separate organized states and communities.

The Cherokee particularly had a highly Europeanized culture, with a written language, invented by their great leader Sequoyah, and highly developed institutions. Some of the Cherokee were slaveholders and ran their agricultural properties in the traditional Southern plantation pattern; others were small farmers. The Five Civilized Tribes clashed briefly with the Plains Indians, particularly the Osage, but they were for a time free from white interference, and they were able to establish a civilization that strongly affected the whole history of the region.

The troubles of the whites did not, however, long escape them, and the Civil War was a major disaster. Although no major battle of the war was fought in present-day Oklahoma, there were numerous skirmishes. Most Native Americans allied themselves with the Confederacy, but Unionist disaffection was widespread, and individual violence was so prevalent that many fled, leaving their farms to desolation.

As a punishment for taking the Confederate side the Five Civilized Tribes lost the western part of the Indian Territory, and the federal government began assigning lands there to such landless eastern tribes as the Delaware and the Shawnee, as well as to nomadic Plains tribes, who put up strong resistance before they were subdued and settled on reservations. The territory was plagued by lawlessness and served as a hideout for white outlaws. After the establishment of a federal court at Fort Smith, Isaac Parker became famous as the "hanging judge."

Cattle, Railroads, and Boomers

Immediately after the Civil War the long drives of cattle from Texas to the Kansas railroad head began to cross Oklahoma, traveling over the cattle trails that became part of Western folklore. The best known was the Chisholm Trail. The cattle were fattened on the virgin ranges of Oklahoma, and cattlemen began to look on the grasslands with speculative and covetous eyes.

The first railroad to cross Oklahoma was built between 1870 and 1872, and thereafter it was not possible to keep white settlers out. They came despite proscriptive laws and treaties with the Native Americans, and by the 1880s there was a strong admixture of whites. In addition, ranches were developed that were nominally owned by Native Americans, but actually controlled by white cattlemen and their cowboys. The region quickly took on a tinge of the Old West of the cattle frontier, a tinge that it has never wholly lost.

In the 1880s land-hungry frontier farmers, the boomers, agitated to obtain the "unassigned" lands in the western section—the lands not given to any Native American tribe. The agitation succeeded, and a large strip was opened for settlement in 1889. Prospective settlers lined up on the territorial border, and at high noon they were allowed to cross on a "run" to compete in finding and claiming the best lands. Those who illegally entered ahead of the set time were the nicknamed the "sooners." Later other strips of territory were opened, and settlers poured in from the Midwest and the South.

Oklahoma Territory and Statehood

The western section of what is now the state of Oklahoma became the Oklahoma Territory in 1890; it included the Panhandle, the narrow strip of territory that, taken from Texas by the Compromise of 1850, had become a no-man's-land where settlers came in undisturbed. In 1893 the Dawes Commission was appointed to implement a policy of dividing the tribal lands into individual holdings; the Native Americans resisted, but the policy was finally enforced in 1906. The wide lands of the Indian Territory were thus made available to whites.

The Civilized Tribes made the best of a poor bargain, and the Indian Territory and Oklahoma Territory were united in 1907 to form the state of Oklahoma, with a constitution that included provision for initiative and referendum. Already the oil boom had reached major proportions, and the young state was on the verge of great economic development. At the same time, cotton, wheat, and corn were major money crops, and cattleland holdings, although shrinking, were still enormous.

The Dust Bowl

In World War I the great demand for farm products brought an agricultural boom to the state, but in the 1920s the state fell upon hard times. Recurrent drought burned the wheat in the fields, and overplanting, overgrazing, and unscientific cropping aided the weather in making Oklahoma part of the Dust Bowl of the 1930s. Farm tenancy increased in the 1920s, and in both the east and west the farms tended more and more to be held by large interests and to be consolidated in large blocks.

A great number of tenant farmers were compelled to leave their dust-stricken farms and went west as migrant laborers; the tragic plight of these "Okies" is the theme of John Steinbeck's novel The Grapes of Wrath. With the return of rains, however, and with increasing care in selecting crops and in conserving and utilizing water and soil resources, much of the Dust Bowl again became productive farm land. The demand for food in World War II and federal price supports for agricultural products after the war further aided farm prosperity.

Irrigation and an Oil Boom

Large state and federal programs for conserving river water and, at the same time, meeting irrigation needs have resulted in such constructions as the reservoir impounded by the Kerr Dam on the Arkansas River. For the most part, these programs resulted in improved agricultural conditions and created new recreation areas. In 1971 the opening of the Oklahoma portion of the Arkansas River Navigation System gave the cities of Muskogee and Tulsa (at its port Catoosa) direct access to the sea.

Oklahoma experienced another boom during the 1970s when oil prices rose dramatically. In the mid-1980s, however, Oklahoma's economy was hurt (as it had been in the 1930s) by dependence on a single industry, as oil prices fell rapidly.

Bibliography

See V. E. Harlow, Oklahoma History (5th ed. 1967); E. C. McReynolds, Oklahoma: A History of the Sooner State (rev. ed. 1971); A. Marriott and C. K. Rachlin, Oklahoma (1973); A. H. Morgan and H. W. Morgan, Oklahoma (1982); A. M. Gibson, Oklahoma: A History of Five Centuries (1984); J. S. Morris et al., Historical Atlas of Oklahoma (3d ed. 1986).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Oklahoma  - 14798 results

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...in athletics, 175 ff.; in art, 218 -19 " Oklahoma Bills": 26 Oklahoma City: 8 , 47 , 68 , 104 , 106 , 123 f., 153...center, 212 -14, art in, 216 , 225 ; see also Oklahoma City oil field Oklahoma City oil field: 37 - 38...
...Co., 1907 . Irvin Hurst, The Forty-Sixth State: A History of Oklahoma's Constitutional Convention and Early Statehood Oklahoma City: Semco Color Press, 1957 . Oklahoma Constitutional Studies of the Oklahoma Constitutional Survey and Citizen...
...Indian Territory," The Chronicles of Oklahoma, XV 1937 , pp. 139-165. John D. Benedict, History of Muskogee and Northeast Oklahoma 3 vols., Chicago, 1922 , Vol. I...of Public Instruction of the State of Oklahoma Guthrie, 1910; Oklahoma City, 1910...
...the Construction of Meaning, Journal: Oklahoma State Medical Association, April 1999...Museums exhibition We Will Be Back: Oklahoma City Rebuilds. Tape 1, Boom or Bust...Robert F. Hill, eds., The Culture of Oklahoma (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press...
...is a fifty-eight-year-old Enid, Oklahoma, attorney whose practice is limited...Texas, graduated from the University of Oklahoma Law School in 1966, and was admitted...was legal counsel to the Governor of Oklahoma. From 1966 to 1969, he worked as administrative...
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Did Divorces Decline after the Oklahoma City Bombing? by Paul A. Nakonezny...Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City on April 19, 1995, was at that...however, including recent studies on the Oklahoma City bombing, has focused on the psychopathology...
Oklahoma: a View of the Center by Ruthe Blalock Jones , Maria Depriest...and fun. Our focus was, and still is, twentieth-century Oklahoma artists and writers. While Oklahoma has not been recognized in mainstream America as a major center...
Did Fertility Go Up after the Oklahoma City Bombing? an Analysis of Births in Metropolitan Counties in Oklahoma, 1990-1999* by Joseph Lee Rodgers...particular man-made disaster-the Oklahoma City bombing in April 1995-had an effect...
The impact of Arkansas v. Oklahoma on the NPDES process under the Clean...waterways. Recently, in Arkansas v. Oklahoma,(3) the U.S. Supreme Court...the factual setting of Arkansas v. Oklahoma, the procedural history of the case...
...Redefining Plains Village Complexes in Oklahoma: the Paoli Phase and the Redbed Plains...years at Plains Village sites in western Oklahoma has indicated that some current cultural...Plains societies. Plains Village sites in Oklahoma, the focus of archaeological research...
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Oklahoma Offensive: Conservative and Religious...once every four years, you might be from Oklahoma. What in the Sooner State is going on...to bring responsible government back to Oklahoma. Oklahoma Conservative Political Action...
Oklahoma City, April 19, 1995 by Don Bown 9:02 a.m., April 19, 1995...and a day that forever changed the lives of everyone who lived in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. A time and a day of which we will ask each other: What were you...
Oklahoma City, April 19, 1995: managing when disaster hits. by Don Bown...and a day that forever changed the lives of everyone who lived in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. A time and a day of which we will ask each other: What were you...
Oklahoma: the Hartpence Trust: Oklahomas Scholarship...in the lives of dozens of children in Oklahoma who have been in state custody because...her commitment to the well-- being of Oklahoma children. Not wanting the trust to be...
Finally, a Dome: The Oklahoma State Capitol will soon have a dome...on the top. by Malia K. Bennett Oklahoma will soon lose its dubious distinction...new dome. Like many other states, Oklahoma has a citizen legislature, with lawmakers...
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Oklahoma a homestead for intriguing black heritage...Oscar Hammerstein IIs Broadway musical "Oklahoma" shattered box-office records and changed...boom and the upwardly mobile economy made Oklahoma the place to settle. The five civilized...
Oklahoma vs. Florida St by Barker Davis Washington...tonights Orange Bowl battle between No. 1 Oklahoma (12-0) and No. 3 Florida State...on pedestrian, lightweight scatbacks. Oklahoma midget Quentin Griffin (5-foot-6...
BIG RED REVIVAL: The Oklahoma-Nebraska rivalry is back, and it...Sunshine State showdown meant a thing, Oklahoma and Nebraska were engaged in supreme...the early 1960s to the late 1980s, Oklahoma vs. Nebraska routinely represented...
...WHERE DOES BLAME LIE? Towboat captains, Oklahoma officials debate what led to I-40 bridge...across the Arkansas River in eastern Oklahoma that collapsed last week was considered...Terri Angier, a spokeswoman for the Oklahoma Department of Transportation, the agency...
FBI supervisor in Oklahoma City probe to step down; Agent under...of documents in the investigation of Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh plans to...served as inspector in charge for the Oklahoma City bombing investigation and heads...
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OKLAHOMA okl ho m , state in SW United States...Mexico, across the narrow edge of the Oklahoma Panhandle (W); and Colorado and Kansas...1990 census. Capital and largest city, Oklahoma City. Statehood, Nov. 16, 1907 (46th...
OKLAHOMA CITY (1990 pop. 444,719), state capital, and seat of Oklahoma co., central Okla., on the North Canadian River...city extends into three neighboring counties of Oklahoma co. and has many parks. Of interest are the capitol...
OKLAHOMA STATE UNIVERSITY at Stillwater; land-grant and state supported; coeducational; chartered 1890, opened 1891 as Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical College, renamed 1957. It has centers for laser research, integrated design and...
OKLAHOMA, UNIVERSITY OF mainly at Norman, state supported; coeducational; chartered...medicine and nursing, with hospitals and a research foundation, are at Oklahoma City. Research facilities include an earth sciences observatory at Leonard...
...Great Lakes region, Montana, Wyoming, Oklahoma, and the NE United States. The Algonquian...and Seminole, which are spoken in Oklahoma and Florida; Caddoan, composed of the...Pawnee, and Arikara languages found in Oklahoma and North Dakota; Yuman, with individual...
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