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[O71]Oklahoma Land For Sale
by Art Gib, Art
Oklahoma's Growth

Today, Oklahoma has the third highest per capita income growth in the nation. But it wasn't always so. Oklahoma industries had to struggle to get to where they are today and become the economic power they are today.

In the early 19th century, several Native American tribes were forcefully relocated from several southern states and placed in Oklahoma. Because of this, there are 25 Native American languages spoken in Oklahoma alone, the most of any state in the Union. Because of the harsh conditions many tribes endured during the relocation, the event has come to be known as the Trail of Tears.

By the end of the 19th century, more than 30 tribes had been allocated to Oklahoma. In the early 20th century, attempts were made to create an all American Indian state. The name Oklahoma, a Choctaw word meaning "land of the red man," and Sequoyah, meant to honor the Cherokee man of the same name, were put forth in proposals to the U.S. government, but these attempts at statehood failed.

Statehood eventually came in 1907 when shortly after several oil pools were discovered. This resulted in rapid population growth and a strong start to Oklahoma's economy as its people began to become wealthy. For most of the century, Tulsa was known as the "Oil Capital of the World."

During this same time the terrorist Ku Klux Klan group gained a strong presence. Furthermore, Jim Crow laws (laws designed to oppress Blacks and prevent them from integrating with Whites) were rampant. Despite the oppression, Oklahoma became home to one of the most prosperous Black communities in America.

A combination of poor farming techniques and drought lead to a struggling farming industry during the 1930's. This resulted in a massive soil and water conservation effort that saw the creation of over 200 reservoirs across the state.

Today, Oklahoma's economy is strong thanks to the strength of the afore mentioned aviation, energy, telecommunications, and biotechnology industries.

Holding Oklahoma Land for Sale

With the economy staying strong and the population growing, if you own Oklahoma land you might want to hang on to it for a little while longer. However, if you are looking for Oklahoma land for sale, then now is a great time to buy!

Considering the inflated prices that real estate is experiencing almost universally today, it seems incredible that the US government ever sold land off at pennies per acre and even gave it away for free, but that's exactly what happened to much of Oklahoma in the late 1800s. What was once reserved as Indian Territory was opened up to white settlers in the biggest, most chaotic land grab in American history.

Despite the solemn commitment Congress made in 1828 to a number of Native American tribes that the area eventually becoming Oklahoma would forever be reserved as Indian Territory, and land they had been forced to occupy after being driven out of their ancestral lands, Congress reneged on that promise. Forcing the Cherokees to put up their Oklahoma land for sale, and to accept a paltry $7,000,000, the US government claimed back 7,000,000 acres. The tribes who occupied the lands were known as the Five Civilized Tribes; the Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, Creek and Seminole - who allied themselves with the South during the Civil War.

Following the war, the US government regarded these tribes as defeated enemies. This animosity, combined with increasing pressure to open up the Indian Territory to white settlers, resulted in literally dirt cheap Oklahoma land for sale, and eventually, free land to whomever could claim it first.

The newly available Oklahoma land for sale was sold first-come, sold by bid, or won by lottery, or by means other than a run. The settlers, no matter how they acquired occupancy, purchased Oklahoma land for sale from the United States Land Office. The Oklahoma Land Run of 1889 was the most prominent of the land runs, although there were several others.

Between 1889 and 1895 there were seven land races in Oklahoma. By the time of the land rush of 1893, the rush for the Cherokee Strip, America was languishing in the worst economic depression it had ever seen. The US government hoped that holding land races for free land, rather than offering Oklahoma land for sale would stimulate the economy by creating farms and crops at a low cost.

This was one of the factors that swelled the number of hopeful land-racers that day. Many would be disappointed. There were only 42,000 homesteads - far too few to accommodate the estimated 100,000 who raced for land that day. Additionally, many of the "Boomers" - those who waited for the cannon's boom before rushing into the land claim - found that most of the choice plots of Oklahoma land had already been claimed by "Sooners" who had snuck into the land claim area before the race began.

The impact of the land rush was immediate, transforming the land almost overnight. Unlike Rome, many cities of Oklahoma were built in a day. William Willard Howard recorded his observations of the Oklahoma land races in Harper's Weekly in May of 1889. He said "At twelve o'clock on Monday, April 22d, the resident population of Guthrie was nothing; before sundown it was at least ten thousand.

In that time streets had been laid out, town lots staked off, and steps taken toward the formation of a municipal government. . . Never before in the history of the West has so large a number of people been concentrated in one place in so short a time. To the conservative Eastern man, who is wont to see cities grow by decades, the settlement of Guthrie was magical beyond belief; to the quick-acting resident of the West, it was merely a particularly lively town-site speculation."
Article Source : How Has Society Changed

Art Gib has sinced written about articles on various topics from Supplements, Teachers and self improvement and motivation. Remax Oklahoma () is committed to providing you with
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