Oklahoma State Facts & Information

Oklahoma, state in the western area of the south central United States. It is bordered by Colorado and Kansas on the north and Missouri and Arkansas on the east. South and west of Oklahoma is Texas, and on the western edge of Oklahoma’s Panhandle lies New Mexico.

Oklahoma is a land of great diversity, a transitional state both physically and culturally. Topographically it varies from the wooded mountains of the more humid east to the sparse and dry country of the western plains. The changing landscape of Oklahoma is reflected in its economic activities, which range from the raising of wheat in western and central areas to the lumbering that is carried on in the Ouachita Mountains in the southeastern part of the state.

The name Oklahoma was derived by combining the Choctaw words for “red” and “people.” Part of the state’s area had been originally put aside for settlement of Native Americans and was known as Indian Territory. The other section of the state, Oklahoma Territory, was gradually opened for white settlement toward the end of the 19th century. Oklahoma earned its nickname, the Sooner State, from the fact that some land-hungry settlers, known as the Sooners, jumped the starting gun that was to open one section of the territory to settlers and rushed in to take land before they were legally entitled to do so.

Oklahoma was admitted to the Union on November 16, 1907, as the 46th state. Resulting from the combination of Indian and Oklahoma territories, the state retains marked features of its Native American heritage in the makeup of its population and the Indian place-names in the state. Oklahoma City is the state’s capital and largest city. The Official State Website is http://www.ok.gov/

Oklahoma's background, formation, and organization are unique among the states. Developed out of two separate territories, Indian and Oklahoma, numerous changes have occurred in Oklahoma jurisdictions and boundaries.

The region alternated between French and Spanish possession until 1803 when it became part of the United States' Louisiana Purchase from France. A few forts and settlements cropped up along the Red River as the area successively fell under the territorial jurisdiction of Indiana (1803), Missouri (1812) and Arkansas (1819).

As early as 1804, efforts were made to negotiate the removal of southeastern tribes to west of the Mississippi River. The period of largest removal occurred between 1825–42 when the federal government forced relocation to what eventually became western Arkansas and eastern Oklahoma. The region was established as a home, “as long as the grass shall grow and rivers run,” for the Five Civilized Tribes (Creek, Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, and Seminole) displaced from their previous homes in the south and southeast by the U.S. government and its citizens. The route traveled became known as the “Trail of Tears” because of the grief and loss experienced by Native Americans during their uprootings. Once relocated, the five tribes again set up their own governments as they had in their previous homes, established a newspaper, built towns, and organized schools and farms. Forts Gibson, Washita, and Towson were erected to protect the Native Americans from intruding U.S. citizens and raiding plains tribes.

When the United States acquired the Republic of Texas in 1845, what would later become Oklahoma's panhandle ostensibly belonged to Texas. In 1850 Congress purchased the panhandle strip, but this “No Man's Land” remained separate from Indian Territory or any other territory or state. During the 1850s, railway companies pressured the government to open the unassigned lands of the panhandle strip, but Congress confined Indian Territory to present-day Oklahoma in 1854, excluding the panhandle strip. Prior to the Civil War, the Chickasaw and Choctaw nations had leased the southwestern third of the present-day state to the United States as hunting grounds for the plains tribes.

During the Civil War, internal dissention among the tribes arose as some members served the Union, while others supported the Confederate cause, and still others tried to stay neutral. A much larger percentage favored the Confederate cause, and the Five Civilized Tribes officially supported the Confederacy.

At the conclusion of the Civil War, the federal government, partly to make provision for free blacks to own land and partly as a response to Native American support of the Confederacy, demanded a new set of treaties in 1866. These treaties reduced the original size of the reservations and permitted other tribes to be moved into the territory. Within the next seventeen years, many other tribes were relocated to Oklahoma. The greater part of the Cherokee Outlet (along the northern border with Kansas) and a desirable tract in the center of Oklahoma remained “Unassigned.”

Between 1865 and 1889, cattlemen, railroaders, soldiers, and settlers lived within Indian Territory's borders before settlement was legally permitted. Some had taken advantage of the loopholes in the law allowing artisans and professionals to contract with tribes for labor.

In 1872 the first railroad was established through the area connecting Missouri, Kansas, and Texas. Indian Territory was called “the promised land” as it offered fine grazing land and the possibility of free land. Major trails such as the Chisholm, Great Western, East Shawnee, West Shawnee, Couch, Payne, and Plummer ran between cattle land in Texas and grazing and farm land in Kansas.

In April 1880, in defiance of federal authorities, David L. Payne crossed the Kansas/Oklahoma border and marched with a band of twenty-one “Boomers” (those who promoted opening of the territory for settlement) to the center of Indian Territory, commonly called “Oklahoma country.” The trail they blazed was followed by other Boomers over the next five years.

A major settlement transition occurred in 1889. The previous sixty years had marked the arrival in Indian Territory of sixty-five different tribes, including the Five Civilized Tribes. However, agitation for opening these lands to nonnative settlement increased until the federal government purchased a clear title to the central tract, called “Unassigned Lands,” and on 22 April 1889 the first official “run” for these homestead lands occurred. Prospective homesteaders lined up along the South Canadian River and Indian Territory boundary lines to await the signal to begin. Others, called “Sooners” (because they did not wait), jumped the gun. This contributed to many court cases where land ownership was contested and also gave rise to the state's nickname—the Sooner State.

An estimated 50,000 people settled the tract in a day, marking the shift from native to nonnative settlement. Oklahoma City became a tent colony with over 10,000 people. Other large towns settled that day were Guthrie, Kingfisher, and Norman.

Many land run trails into the area led southward from Kansas. These included the Wild Horse, Ponca, Black Bear, and Caldwell trails. Stage routes ran south from Kansas, west from Arkansas, and east from Fort Reno. The Butterfield Stage route left Fort Smith, Arkansas, and ran southwest to the Red River. A wagon road closely followed the North Canadian River through Potawatomie land. Through a joint effort of a number of railroad companies, a line was completed from Guthrie to Kingfisher and beyond to Seward.

The present-day state of Oklahoma was divided into two governmental divisions, Oklahoma Territory and Indian Territory, in May 1890. Indian Territory encompassed the eastern half of the state and the Cherokee Outlet along the Kansas border. Oklahoma Territory included the panhandle, called “No Man's Land,” and an area that stretched from the southwestern section, including Greer County northeast to the Kansas border, called “Unassigned Lands.” County governments began to emerge in Oklahoma Territory.

During the 1890s cattlemen were prohibited from the practice of leasing grazing grounds from the tribes. Congress forced the Native Americans to accept individual land allotments for each member of their tribes instead of holding the land in common. The Dawes Commission was established in 1893 to register individual Native Americans, allot the land, and assist and supervise the government in changing from a tribal to a state organization. In response to vehement demand, additional tracts were opened for land runs or homesteading in 1891, 1892, 1895, 1904, and 1906.

By 1900 Oklahoma Territory had burgeoned to encompass more than the western half of the present state, while Indian Territory was dwindling to a smaller part of the eastern section. Greer County, formerly under Texas jurisdiction, became legally attached to Oklahoma Territory in 1896. In June 1906 Congress provided for the admission of Oklahoma Territory and Indian Territory to the Union as one state, if both nonnatives and natives approved. On 16 November 1907, President Theodore Roosevelt proclaimed Oklahoma the forty-sixth state. Oklahoma City supplanted Guthrie as the capital in 1910.

Mineral and ore deposits drew many settlers, some directly from Europe. Coal and petroleum products still represent a large portion of the state's output. With the spectacular rise of the petroleum industry, the state entered a prosperous era that helped it survive declines in the livestock industry and in the value of dry-farming produce. By the 1930s, six railroads served the state, converging in Oklahoma City.

The state's population of those with Native American heritage remains one of the highest in the United States. The dual history of native relocation and nonnative settlement remains important in the use of records kept for genealogical research.

  • Newspapers & Periodicals - The Newspapers & Periodicals Collection lets you discover a wealth of information about your ancestors from many historical newspapers, magazines, and other periodicals. These types of sources can often supplement public records and provide information that is not recorded anywhere else. Here, you can learn more about your ancestor's possible daily activities by placing them in the context of their time.
  • Directories & Member Lists - Directories and member lists are typically compilations of information about people who belonged to various associations and groups or lived within city boundaries. They can be thought of as the predecessors to the modern-day phone book and usually list names, addresses, and sometimes the occupations of your ancestors.
  • Stories, Memories & Histories - Stories and histories compiled by others researching a person or area can be an amazing source of information about your ancestors. Not only do they generally contain dates and places of vital events like birth, marriage, and death, but they often relate stories and memories that help you really get to know the character of your ancestors.
  • Family Trees - Ancestry has thousands of family trees shared by other members. They can help you identify how ancestors are related and give you clues about birth, marriage, and death information. Family trees are an excellent resource for filling in gaps in your research or even to simply know where to begin.
  • Pictures - One of the more exciting discoveries in doing family history research is finding a photograph of your ancestors or their residence. Finding historic postcard photos and drawings of towns and important events throughout history can also give you a visual look into your ancestors lives.
  • Reference Materials & Finding Aids - Reference materials, including dictionaries, encyclopedias, and other how-to books, can be tremendously helpful in finding and interpreting historical documents. Many of these books can help you learn where to look for more information and how to use what you've already found to uncover more clues.

Native American

Indian Census Collection

Because of the federal government's removal policy, sixty-five different tribes have made their home in present-day Oklahoma. The sources for research are enormously varied from the kinds of materials generally associated with county-state record patterns. In addition to the sources held in the National Archives and its Southwest regional branch in Ft. Worth, materials for research on both natives and nonnatives who lived in the Twin Territories can be found at all agencies of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, including those in Anadarko, Ardmore, Concho, Okmulgee, Pawhuska, Pawnee, Miami, Shawnee, Tahlequah, Talihina, Wewoka, and Stewart. What is covered here are some general categories of records found regarding Native Americans in the state. For a more extensive and detailed discussion see Blessing, Oklahoma Records and Archives, and Koplowitz Guide to the Historical Records of Oklahoma, or George J. Nixon, “Records Relating to Native American Research: The Five Civilized Tribes,” in The Source.

Some copies of census records on Native Americans are available at the Oklahoma Historical Society library and the FHL. These censuses are alphabetically arranged by BIA agency, then tribal name, and then date of enumeration. Since agency changes were made, a specific tribe may have been under the jurisdiction of two or more agencies. Beginning about 1916, the registration of individuals' names may be alphabetically arranged within the tribe's census schedule.

Land allotment records can be a valuable source for Native American ancestors. To obtain a parcel of land, each applicant had to include documentation of descent. Final rolls list those who received land allotments. When the land was to be sold or the individual died, all heirs were identified since transfer of land required permission from all heirs. This data usually was registered in allotment or family registers. Later lists of heirs may be located in records entitled “Heirship Records.” Each person is usually identified by age or birth date and relationship. Most allotted land eventually returned to tribal jurisdiction, for few individuals received patents to their holdings (see also Land Records).

Enrollment records, on which land allotments were based, were drawn up by the Dawes Commission for the Five Civilized Tribes. Under the Dawes Commission, information was abstracted onto data cards entitled Enrollments Cards for the Five Civilized Tribes: 1898–1914 (Washington, D.C.: National Archives, 1981). Cards were made from both approved and rejected applications of Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, Creek, and Seminole tribe members. Microfilm of these packets and records is available at the Oklahoma Historical Society, the National Archives, and the FHL. Original applications are housed at the National Archives and its Southwest regional branch in Fort Worth. A guide and index to these records is included in the Commission to the Five Civilized Tribes' publication, The Final Rolls of Citizens and Freedmen of the Five Civilized Tribes in Indian Territory, 2 vols. (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, n.d.).

Another valuable source is the Guion Miller records, which are contained on 348 reels of microfilm entitled Eastern Cherokee Applications of the U.S. Court of Claims, 1906–1909 (Washington, D.C.: National Archives, 1981). A separate index is available for this collection of court records for individuals who applied for government compensation for lands confiscated from the Eastern Cherokees during the 1800s, mainly in North Carolina. Claims include data with documentation showing claimant's lineage back to the Eastern Cherokee. It was also required that the claimant prove no other tribal affiliation.

Second only to the National Archives in Native American research for Oklahoma is the Indian Archives Division of the Oklahoma Historical Society. Included are federal and state government records and private collections, particularly the extensive work of Grant Foreman. The society's collection is listed and described in Lawrence Kelly's “Indian Records in the Oklahoma Historical Society Archives,” The Chronicles of Oklahoma 54 (1976): 227–44. Other issues include data relating to the Native Americans in Oklahoma and their records. Among many such articles are “Public Land Policy of the Five Civilized Tribes” 23 (1945): 107–18; “Provincial Indian Society in Eastern Oklahoma” 23 (1945): 323–37; and “Cherokee Allotments in the Outlet” 59 (1981): 401–21.

The Archives and Manuscripts Division of the Oklahoma Historical Society has approximately 3,000,000 pages and 6,000 bound volumes from Indian Agencies in Oklahoma for 1870 through 1930. The archives is the national repository for records of the Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Creek, and Seminole nations for the period 1860 through 1906. The archives also maintains agency records for Cheyenne, Cantonment, Pawnee, Quapaw, Chilocoo, Shawnee, Kiowa, and Arapaho, as well as Mekusukey Academy records and many special collections. There are 1,400 volumes of the Executive Library Cherokee Nation in the collection. The newspaper collection includes The Cherokee Advocate which began publication in 1844.

The Bureau of Indian Affairs, Muskogee Agency, 4th Floor, Federal Building, Muskogee, Oklahoma 74401, maintains records of the Cherokee and other tribes. The Cherokee Registration Office, P.O. Box 119, Tahlequah, Oklahoma, 74464, has records pertaining to the Cherokees.

A few selected private collections in the Indian Archives Division, Oklahoma Historical Society include transcripts of the Office of Commissioner Indian Affairs and Superintendent of the Five Civilized tribes in the Grant Foreman transcripts, Frederick B. Severs Collection for the Creek Nation, Grant Foreman's numerous collections and WPA project interviews, John H. Adair Collection of early Cherokees, and the G. A. Root collection of newspaper clippings for Oklahoma Land openings.

The following publications include valuable source material:

Other Ethnic Groups

A series entitled “Newcomers to a New Land” was sponsored by the Department of Libraries and the Oklahoma Library Association. These books analyze the role and impact of major ethnic groups in the state. The following are among volumes in the series:

Search Oklahoma Historical Records - Databases include Court, Land, Wills & Financial Records; Birth, Marriage & Death Records; Voter Lists & Census Records; Immigration & Emigration Records; Obituary Records; Military Records; Family Tree Records; Pictures; Stories, Memories & Histories; Directories & Member Lists and much more....

Oklahoma County List

 

Oklahoma deeds, probates, and civil court records are located at the county clerk's or clerk of the courts office. Marriage records before statewide recording may be found at the county clerk as well, but records of births and deaths are not available until statewide recording began. Official certificates come from the State Department of Health (see Vital Records). The State Election Board, Oklahoma Museum of Election History, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73105, holds precinct registers and/or other records for thirty-four counties.

The largest percentage of Oklahoma's extant public records were generated in the twentieth century and are generally intact. Send inquiries to the county official at the courthouse address for the appropriate county. Some dates in the following chart were obtained from Blessing, Oklahoma Records and Archives, and Koplowitz, Guide to Historical Records of Oklahoma. There are a few discrepancies in county record beginning dates between Koplowitz and Blessing; in such instances, Koplowitz's dates have been used.

Oklahoma Discontinued Counties

 

This section provides an list of Oklahoma counties that no longer exist. They were established by the state, provincial, or territorial government. Most of these counties were created and disbanded in the 19th century; county boundaries have changed little since 1900 in the vast majority of states.

  • Day County Formed in 1892 from Cheyenne & Arapaho lands. Abolished in 1907; now Ellis County area. Day County in Oklahoma Territory, was abolished at statehood, comprising the northern portion of Roger Mills County and the southern portion of Ellis County. Named for William R. Day
  • A County "A County" was the original designation for Lincoln County, Oklahoma Territory. It included some of the former Absentee Shawnee, Iowa, Kickapoo, and Sac & Fox Lands administered by the Sac & Fox Agency.
  • B County "B County" was the original designation for Pottawatomie County, Oklahoma Territory. It included some of the former Absentee Shawnee, Kickapoo, and Pottawatomie Lands administered by the Sac & Fox Agency.
  • C County "C County" was the original designation for Blaine County, Oklahoma Territory
  • D County "D County" was the original designation for Dewey County, Oklahoma Territory
  • E County "E County" was the original designation for Day County, Oklahoma Territory
  • F County "F County" was the original designation for Roger Mills County, Oklahoma Territory.
  • G County "G County" was the original designation for Custer County, Oklahoma Territory.
  • H County "H County" was the original designation for Washita County, Oklahoma Territory.
  • I County "I County" was the original designation for Caddo County, Oklahoma Territory
  • K County "K County" was the original designation for Kay County, Oklahoma Territory
  • L County "L County" was the original designation for Grant County, Oklahoma Territory.
  • M County "M County" was the original designation for Woods County, Oklahoma Territory.
  • N County "N County" was the original designation for Woodward County, Oklahoma Territory.
  • O County "O County" was the original designation for Garfield County, Oklahoma Territory.
  • P County "P County" was the original designation for Noble County, Oklahoma Territory.
  • Q County "Q County" was the original designation for Pawnee County, Oklahoma Territory.

Oklahoma Burned Courthouses

 

The destruction of courthouses greatly affects genealogists in every way. No only are these historic structures torn from our lives, so are the records they housed: marriage, wills, probate, land records, and others. Once destroyed they are lost forever. Even if they have been placed on mircofilm, computers and film burn too. The most heartbreaking side of this is the fact that many of our courthouses are destroyed at the hands of arsonist. However, not all records were lost.

   Below is a list of Oklahoma Counties and the years the Courthouses were subjected to a disaster. This does NOT mean that ALL RECORDS were lost. Often, folks took their documents again in for recording after a disaster and later deeds will contain long chains of title, etc.

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