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OKLAHOMA LEGENDS
Tulsa - Oil
Capital of the World |
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Greetings From
Tulsa
Vintage
Postcard
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Tulsa, in the midst of
Indian Territory,
was first settled by Native Americans in 1836 when they were forcibly made
to relocate along the infamous Trail of Tears. The Creeks,
Seminoles,
Lochapokas,
Cherokees, Quapaws, Senecas, Shawnees, and other tribes were all made to
surrender their lands east of the Mississippi after the passage of the
Indian Removal Act in 1830.
Each of the larger tribes
was given extensive land holdings and the
Indians
began new lives as farmers, trappers, and ranchers. For many, the
journey ended beneath the branches of the
Council Oak Tree, located on the east side of the
Arkansas River.
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Trail of
Tears painting by Robert Lindneux in the Woolaroc Museum,
Bartlesville,
Oklahoma
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Some called their settlement Tallahassee,
while others used the Creek Indian word “Tulsy” which meant “old
town.” For the next 25 years they would lead a peaceful life in
a primarily untamed wilderness with only a few white settlers in
the area.
In 1846, Lewis Perryman, who was part
Creek
Indian, built a log cabin trading post near what is now 33rd
Street and South Rockford Avenue. Perryman’s business was quite
successful in the rugged frontier until the Civil War, when many
residents fled the area.
When the war broke out the United States abandoned
Indian Territory
sending its troops to war against the confederate forces. The
Creek
Indians were torn as to
which side to support. Many of them believed that they should
move north into
Kansas
where they could seek protection. However, when they gathered up
their families and possessions they were attacked by a force of
Texas cavalry and
Confederate
Indians. The Battle of Round Mountain was fought northwest of Tulsa where the
Cimarron River flows into the
Arkansas River. Two other
battles were fought north of Tulsa including the Chustenahlah and
Chursto-Talasah. The surviving Union
Indians
moved into
Kansas
near the Fort Scott area.
Eventually the
Creek
Indians enlisted 1,575 men in the
Confederate armies and 1,675 men in the Union forces. After the end of
the Civil War, the Creek
Indians returned to their homes in the
Tulsa area. A United States census taken in 1867 showed that the Tulsa
area had a population of 264 Creek
Indians.
After the Civil War, numerous
outlaws began to take
refuge in
Indian Territory as it was not yet
subject to any white man’s jurisdiction. Wrecking the relative
peace of the civilized tribes in the area,
Indian Territory soon became known as a very bad place,
where desperadoes thought the laws did not apply to them and terror
reigned.
Attempting to tame the wild
frontier, President Grant appointed Judge Isaac Parker to rule over
the federal district court for the Western District of
Arkansas, in Fort Smith. This district had jurisdiction
over the
Indian Territory and
when Parker’s tenure began in 1875, he quickly began to enforce the
law against the many
outlaws who had taken over
Oklahoma. Before long, his efforts would earn him the nick-name of “The Hanging
Judge,” as order was restored to the area.
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Judge Isaac
Parker, the "Hanging Judge" finally
tamed
Indian Territory with his
harsh discipline.
This image is available for photographic
prints
HERE!
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As more and more
white settlers began to move into
Indian Territory the
government would break its “permanent” arrangement with the Native
Americans. The tribes
were forced to accept a
number of new treaties which further limited the amount of land each of
them held.
In the fall of 1878, the Post Office Department extended
its service from Fort Smith,
Arkansas
to the Sac and Fox agency in
Indian Territory,
where the post office was located inside the Perryman ranch. The post
office was officially established on March 25, 1879, near what would later
become 41st Street and Trenton Avenue in Tulsa. Josiah Perryman became the
first postmaster to the town's 200 residents.
White
settlers continued to push forward into the territory and in 1882 the
St. Louis and San
Francisco Railroad extended its line to Tulsa to serve the cattle
business. A stock yard, with cattle-loading pens and chutes, was
built near the tracks, and cattle were driven from the Indian Nations and
Texas to be shipped to Northern and Eastern markets.
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In no time
at all, the railroad surveyor began to lay out a number of streets near
the railroad tracks. In the beginning, because Tulsa was located in
the Creek Nation, it had no legal government or taxes, no public schools,
water systems or street regulations, and Tulsa was considered a wide open
town.
Continued Next
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From the Rocky Mountain General Store
Route
66 Postcards -
Legends of America and
the
Rocky Mountain General Store has collected numerous
postcards
for our Route
66 enthusiasts. For many of these, we have only one available. To see this varied collection, click
HERE!
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