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Okla-homey
4/22/2008, 06:39 AM
I know some of the pictures are HUGE, but they have great detail and I thought you might enjoy nosing around in them.

April 22, 1889: Biggest Oklahoma land rush begins

http://img501.imageshack.us/img501/7999/o2215496550x550mbartr0yk0.jpg

119 years ago today, at precisely high noon, thousands of would-be settlers make a mad dash into the newly opened Oklahoma Territory to claim cheap land. 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.


There were five land runs in Oklahoma:

1. Land Run of 1889 took place on this day at high noon in 1889 and involved the settlement of the Unassigned Lands (most of modern day Canadian, Cleveland, Kingfisher, Logan, Oklahoma, and Payne counties).

2. September 22, 1891: Land run to settle Iowa, Sac and Fox, Pottawatomie, and Shawnee lands. (Your correspondent's great gandfather Jim Lester made that one. Unfortunately, he got hooked out of his claim five years later because he hadn't "made the required improvements to the land." See, you didn't get to keep your claim unless you threw up appropriate buildings on it. He just farmed his, and being single, lived in a shack. No biggy, he ended up buying a quarter section in Okfuskee County and made a go of it, eventually acquiring a whole 160 acre section just northeast of Okemah. That area is still known as Lester Township. My great grandpa is buried in the Welty cemetery. His daughter (my granny), raised on that place married a boy from Lone Grove, OK and they settled in Ardmore in the 1920's.)

3. April 19, 1892: Land run to settle the Cheyenne and Arapaho lands.

4. September 16, 1893: Cherokee Strip Land Run. The Run of the Cherokee Strip opened nearly 7,000,000 acres to settlement. The land was purchased from the Cherokees for $7,000,000.

5. May 23, 1895: Land run to settle the Kickapoo lands

The nearly two million acres of land opened up to white settlement was located in Indian Territory, a large area that once encompassed much of modern-day Oklahoma.

The United States had 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.

http://img501.imageshack.us/img501/656/okterritoryjs9.png

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".

http://img501.imageshack.us/img501/3847/o470pxeliascorneliusbouug8.jpg
Elias Boudinot

In 1889, President Benjamin Harrison agreed, making the first of a long series of authorizations that eventually removed most of Indian Territory from Indian control.

http://img501.imageshack.us/img501/8403/o473pxbenjaminharrison2dg6.jpg
President Harrison

To begin the process of white settlement, Harrison chose to open a 1.9 million-acre section in the central part of modern Oklahoma that the government had never assigned to any specific tribe.

On March 3, 1889, Harrison announced the government would open the 1.9 million-acre tract of Indian Territory for settlement precisely at noon on April 22. Anyone could join the race for the land, but no one was supposed to jump the gun.

http://img501.imageshack.us/img501/1831/owest138ud6.jpg
Waiting on the big day in Arkansas City, KS.

With only seven weeks to prepare, land-hungry Americans quickly began to gather around the borders of the irregular rectangle of territory. Referred to as "Boomers," by the appointed day more than 50,000 hopefuls were living in tent cities on all four sides of the territory.

The events that day at Fort Reno on the western border were typical. At 11:50 a.m., soldiers called for everyone to form a line. When the hands of the clock reached noon, the cannon of the fort boomed, and the soldiers signaled the settlers to start.

With the crack of hundreds of whips, thousands of Boomers streamed into the territory in wagons, on horseback, and on foot. All told, from 50,000 to 60,000 settlers entered the territory that day. By nightfall, they had staked thousands of claims either on town lots or quarter section farm plots. Towns like Norman, Oklahoma City, Kingfisher, and Guthrie sprang into being almost overnight.

http://img501.imageshack.us/img501/1139/o2708275690054938111uebig6.jpg

"Hell's Half Acre" in Perry, OK in the weeks afteer the 1889 run.

An extraordinary display of both the pioneer spirit and the American lust for land, the first Oklahoma land rush was also plagued by greed and fraud. Cases involving "Sooners"--people who had entered the territory before the legal date and time--overloaded courts for years to come.

http://img501.imageshack.us/img501/3776/owest136oc3.jpg
Once you staked your claim, you had to guard it until you had registered your title in the land offices that sprang into being.

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Troop 'C,' 5th Cavalry, which arrested sooners and squatters prior to opening of Oklahoma, ca. 1888.

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.

http://img501.imageshack.us/img501/1271/owest135cb3.jpg
"Lordy, there must be a decent spot to cop a squat around here somewhars".

The Cherokee Strip was opened to settlement by land run in 1894. The government attempted to operate subsequent runs with more controls, eventually adopting a lottery system to designate claims.

http://img501.imageshack.us/img501/7505/owest179qu9.jpg
Disputes over land were inevitable. Thus, with the Boomers came lawyers. In 1890, there were more lawyers in the Territory than doctors, school teachers and preachers.

By 1905, white Americans owned most of the land in Indian Territory. Two years later, the area once known as Indian Territory entered the Union as a part of the new state of Oklahoma.

http://img501.imageshack.us/img501/5846/owest148hs2.jpg
Anadarko, c.1901

OU4LIFE
4/22/2008, 07:41 AM
one of the best ever.

nice job Homey.

12
4/22/2008, 09:01 AM
SOONER!

Excellent photos. Looks hot in that last shot of Anadarko.

tommieharris91
4/22/2008, 09:07 AM
:stunned: themz damded gooner squats iz guna hav a parrtay today!!! :stunned:

OKLA21FAN
4/22/2008, 09:12 AM
now if I can just find a ring tone

Thanks Homey

Mixer!
4/22/2008, 09:26 AM
Excellent as always, Homey.

BlondeSoonerGirl
4/22/2008, 09:33 AM
Looks like the 'National Bank' might need a little more security.

TUSooner
4/22/2008, 12:54 PM
Best GM ever. Well, a really good one, anyhoo.

StoopTroup
4/22/2008, 04:05 PM
Dear Lord....

If there is ever another Oklahoma Land Run....

Could you help me get a nice spot with a casino on it? ;)

Rogue
4/22/2008, 07:08 PM
Greatness!

I need a bigger screen.

Okla-homey
4/22/2008, 08:30 PM
Dear Lord....

If there is ever another Oklahoma Land Run....

Could you help me get a nice spot with a casino on it? ;)

Aye, but there's the rub. Those casinos may ONLY exist on Indian land that has remained in Indian hands from the get-go or was subsequently acquired by Indians and placed into trust for the benefit of a tribe by the US.

Thus, even if there was another land run, you couldn't boomer onto Indian land.

As an aside, that is also why there are no casinos in OKC...which otherwise, would be quite profitable.

SoonerJack
4/23/2008, 08:27 AM
that last shot of Anadarko, the tent to the left (National Bank) has a banner that says something Chickasha. It almost looks like "telephone." I also like the collection of furniture under the tarp with the sign "Lodging House."

I would give my left one to be able to go back in time and see stuff like this.

TexasLidig8r
4/23/2008, 08:47 AM
Soooo.....

the initial "sooners"... were they put on probation as well and should that count against your total? ;)

sooner_born_1960
4/23/2008, 09:08 AM
Remington Park is in OKC.

BigRedJed
4/23/2008, 09:40 AM
Fantastic thread, Homey. Top shelf, and great pictures.

It might be nitpicking, but I do want to correct one thing that is a common misconception about who the Boomers were. Of the few Oklahomans who can even put together a halfway plausible explanation of who they were, even fewer actually give the right description. Boomers were the people who formed a "Boomer" movement long before the land runs, putting pressure on the government to open up the Unassigned lands and ultimately other lands in Oklahoma. They were described as "Boomers" ten years before the first land run (http://digital.library.okstate.edu/encyclopedia/entries/B/BO011.html), owing to the fact that they saw a potential land boom, or economic boom, in the Oklahoma and Indian Territories. It had nothing to do with the sound of the cannon or anything else of the sort.

David Lewis Payne (http://digital.library.okstate.edu/encyclopedia/entries/P/PA028.html), for whom Payne County is named, is perhaps the most famous of the Boomers (Payne died five years before the Run for the Unassigned Lands). Another is his former lieutenant, William Couch (http://digital.library.okstate.edu/encyclopedia/entries/C/CO070.html), Oklahoma City's first mayor, for whom Couch Drive in downtown OKC is named.

Also, they were often lawbreakers every bit as much as the Sooners. They illegally settled the area for years prior to the land run(s), basically daring the U.S. government to run them off.

The people who actually legally participated in the land run are more properly known as simply "settlers," or "'89ers," "Cherokee Strippers," etc., depending upon the run in which they participated.

Much to my regret, my Oklahoma roots don't go back to the landrun, although my Viking grandfather moved from Wisconsin in the '20s and purchased 80 acres at NW 150th and Santa Fe from an original '89er.

Again, great thread.

12
4/23/2008, 09:42 AM
HISTORY FIGHT!

BigRedJed
4/23/2008, 09:43 AM
I just want to make sure the story of the Boomers doesn't get lost in the shuffle, as it mostly has. More than anyone else, these men were responsible for what we now know as Oklahoma.

12
4/23/2008, 09:44 AM
Jed, you should throw some cuss words in there to make it more effective.

Mixer!
4/23/2008, 10:18 AM
David Lewis Payne (http://digital.library.okstate.edu/encyclopedia/entries/P/PA028.html), for whom Payne County is named, is perhaps the most famous of the Boomers (Payne died five years before the Run for the Unassigned Lands). Another is his former lieutenant, William Couch (http://digital.library.okstate.edu/encyclopedia/entries/C/CO070.html), Oklahoma City's first mayor, for whom Couch Drive in downtown OKC is named.
Stillwater is home to Captain Payne's gravsite and memorial, located on the west side of Boomer Lake park; and home to Couch Park, named for Lt. William Couch.



BOOMER!

OU4LIFE
4/23/2008, 10:44 AM
I just want to make sure the story of the Boomers doesn't get lost in the shuffle, as it mostly has. More than anyone else, these men were responsible for what we now know as Oklahoma.

I disagree. Those men were responsible for what was THEN known as Oklahoma, what we NOW know as Oklahoma is largely due to Bud and Barry. :D

12
4/23/2008, 10:54 AM
and Bob.

Okla-homey
4/23/2008, 12:19 PM
Remington Park is in OKC.

In the trade, Remington Park is called a "racino." And its not Indian.

Okla-homey
4/23/2008, 12:22 PM
Fantastic thread, Homey. Top shelf, and great pictures.

It might be nitpicking, but I do want to correct one thing that is a common misconception about who the Boomers were. Of the few Oklahomans who can even put together a halfway plausible explanation of who they were, even fewer actually give the right description. Boomers were the people who formed a "Boomer" movement long before the land runs, putting pressure on the government to open up the Unassigned lands and ultimately other lands in Oklahoma. They were described as "Boomers" ten years before the first land run (http://digital.library.okstate.edu/encyclopedia/entries/B/BO011.html), owing to the fact that they saw a potential land boom, or economic boom, in the Oklahoma and Indian Territories. It had nothing to do with the sound of the cannon or anything else of the sort.

David Lewis Payne (http://digital.library.okstate.edu/encyclopedia/entries/P/PA028.html), for whom Payne County is named, is perhaps the most famous of the Boomers (Payne died five years before the Run for the Unassigned Lands). Another is his former lieutenant, William Couch (http://digital.library.okstate.edu/encyclopedia/entries/C/CO070.html), Oklahoma City's first mayor, for whom Couch Drive in downtown OKC is named.

Also, they were often lawbreakers every bit as much as the Sooners. They illegally settled the area for years prior to the land run(s), basically daring the U.S. government to run them off.

The people who actually legally participated in the land run are more properly known as simply "settlers," or "'89ers," "Cherokee Strippers," etc., depending upon the run in which they participated.

Much to my regret, my Oklahoma roots don't go back to the landrun, although my Viking grandfather moved from Wisconsin in the '20s and purchased 80 acres at NW 150th and Santa Fe from an original '89er.

Again, great thread.

I've read that before and I believe there's merit in it. However, the people who waited for the cannon's "boom" were, and referred to themselves, as "Boomers" too. As evidence, I offer the photo of the "Boomer Camp" in Ark City, KS contemporaneously captioned thereon by the photographer.

BigRedJed
4/23/2008, 04:41 PM
Well, yeah, of course there's merit to it, because it's true and all.

If you want further evidence, check out this script (http://www.okhistory.org/okjourneys/davidpayne.html) from "Oklahoma Journeys," an audio program produced by the Oklahoma Historical Society and voiced by my friend and professional collegue Michael Dean. Some of you might recognize Michael's voice if you click the audio link; he also works the OU football radio broadcast for Sooner Sports Properties.



David Payne Arrested, 1884

This week on Oklahoma Journeys: Celebrating our Centennial. Boomers getting busted, territorial style. Indian Territory was meant to be the final home for many Native American nations, by the late 1800's, however, some white felt that some of the unused land should be given up for settlement by non-Indians. It's David Payne and his boomers this week on Oklahoma Journeys from the Oklahoma Historical Society.
From the Oklahoma Historical Society, this is Oklahoma Journeys: Celebrating our Centennial. I'm Michael Dean.

After the Civil War ended in 1865 the Federal Government used the fact that some Native Americans had fought for the Confederacy as an excuse to renegotiate treaties and began to take parts of Indian Territory from the Indians. In addition, they bought a large parcel of land from three Indian tribes.

This land, the unassigned lands, was a large rectangle in the middle of the territory and was the area that many whites felt should be opened up for settlement. The Native American nations knew that if the unassigned lands were opened for settlement it would be just a matter of time before all of their lands were gone. It was illegal for anyone to enter Indian Territory without permission but that didn't stop groups of white settlers from trying to live there.

The Boomers as they were called were colonists, sometimes numbering in the hundreds who would illegally travel into Indian Territory and set up towns. The Boomer leader for Indian Territory was David L. Payne a Civil War veteran and part time farmer. Payne led a number of trips into Indian Territory all of them unsuccessful. He and other Boomers would gather in Kansas towns along the border, get all fired up with speeches and rhetoric and then head into Indian Territory. They sat up their towns in various places, once in present day Oklahoma City, once near Stillwater and elsewhere.

Regardless of where they encamped, the result was always the same.

Federal troops from Fort Reno would arrive and either forcibly or peacefully escort the Boomers off of the land and usually into jail. Some of these encounters weren't friendly and some involved prolonged gun battles between troops and Boomers other arrests were made without incident.

In August of 1884 David Payne led what was to be his last Boomer movement into Oklahoma. Settling near Rock Falls, two miles northwest of present day Braman, Payne and his cohorts proceeded to lay out a town and begin building structures, the first being the office of the Oklahoma War Chief newspaper. More than 300 people followed Payne to Rock Falls and started the process of settlement.

It was in this week of 1884 on August 7th that soldiers from Fort Reno arrived at Rock Falls and ordered Payne and his followers to leave. Repeat offenders were arrested and first-time Boomers were escorted to the Kansas line. The dozen or so primitive structure erected at Rock Falls were burned to the ground along with the Oklahoma War Chief printing press.

Payne was taken to stand trial in Fort Smith but managed to get a change of venue to a court in Topeka, which, later that fall ruled in his favor. Payne died from a heart attack the morning after the ruling was issued and didn't live to see the territory opened for settlement.

You can see some of his belonging on display and learn about him at the Oklahoma History Center, on NE 23rd Street just east of the state capitol in Oklahoma City.

Oklahoma Journey's: Celebrating our Centennial is a production of the Oklahoma Historical Society dedicated to the collection, preservation and sharing of our state's past. I'm Michael Dean.

BigRedJed
4/23/2008, 04:48 PM
I don't question that some of the people who participated in the run referred to themselves or were referred to as Boomers, but they were really just people who benefitted from the effort the actual Boomer movement made for many years prior to the run.

And again, it had zippo to do with the firing of the cannon. They called themselves Boomers because that's what people who were agitating for Oklahoma settlement had been publicly called since the 1870s, and they were the logical culmination of that movement. There has been a bit of confusion regarding this handed down through the years by most people who relay the story of the landruns.

I'm just saying that distilling "Boomer" down to describe the people who legally made the landruns is not an accurate description of what a Boomer was (the true "Boomers" actually were very often breaking the law), and in fact they were actually distinctly separate groups.