Oklahoma (U.S. state)

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Flag of the State of Oklahoma

Oklahoma is the 46th state of the United States of America.

It is perhaps best known to the rest of the world for its frontier history, famously represented in Oklahoma!, the title song from the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical of the same name, based on a novel of pioneer days.[1]

A major producer of oil and gas, Oklahoma once had a producing oil derrick on the grounds of its state Capitol.

Geography

Oklahoma is the 20th largest state in land area at approximately 69,900 square miles. The capital and largest city is Oklahoma City, with other major cities including Tulsa and Lawton. Oklahoma is bordered by Texas and New Mexico to the south and west, Kansas and Colorado to the north, and Missouri and Arkansas to the east.

Oklahoma has a diverse landscape and is divided into 10 distinct regions:[2]

Oklahoma, which has experienced 3,376 tornadoes between 1950-2005[3],is located in a geographical region known as Tornado Alley.

History

Prior to the area being discovered by Europeans, Oklahoma was occupied by a civilization noted for building mounds of earth across the landscape. The most notable archaeological evidence of this are the Spiro Mounds, located in eastern Oklahoma, which yielded artifacts dating between 850 and 1450 AD.[4] It is unknown if the Spiro peoples had any interaction with the European explorers, beginning with Coronado's expedition in 1541. Spanish explorers would continue to explore the area for the fabled Seven Cities of Cibola until they were challenged by the French in the late seventeenth century. In 1803, the territory that would become Oklahoma was sold by the United States as part of the Louisiana Purchase.

Around 1820, the federal government started using Oklahoma as a destination for Native American tribes being relocated from the east coast. Known as Indian Territory, the area became the new home of more than sixty tribes. The largest groups to be resettled were the Five Civilized Tribes (Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, Creek, and Seminole). Although some of the tribes signed removal treaties, the voluntary nature of them made the relocation a slow process. In 1830, the Indian Removal Act was passed, which granted the federal government greater authority to forcibly remove the tribes to their new territory. Exposed to disease, lack of supplies, and military pressure, there was great suffering among the tribes during their removal and their ordeal is referred to as the Trail of Tears.

The outbreak of the Civil War in 1861, federal troops abandoned Indian Territory and it was coveted by the Confederacy to bolster their food supply. The Five Civilized Tribes, which owned black slaves and supported slavery adhered to the Confederacy. A minority were Unionists and a violent internal civil war took place. By mid-1862, the Union had moved into Indian Territory and the Confederates surrendered in June, 1865. Going to war against the United States proved to be the downfall of Indian independence. The Five Tribes were punished and new tribes were moved in and given some of their lands, including the Arapahoe, Kiowa, Apache, Wichita, Caddo and Osage. By 1885 some 45 new tribes had moved in. The buffalo disappeared and most Indians became cattle ranchers. Railroads were built, and Texas ranchers moved large herds north. The Dawes Act gave Indians title to land individually (rather than tribally), and they started to sell it off.

Unoccupied lands were open to white settlement, with over 50,000 coming on April 22, 1890. Some settlers came "sooner" than the official timetable allowed. Overnight cities sprang up, including Oklahoma City, Kingfisher. Edmund, and Guthrie. Guthrie became the new capital of the Territory of Oklahoma, in the west, with Indian Territory in the east. The combined population reached 1 million, but they resisted being joined together. Finally the two territories were joined and the State of Oklahoma was admitted to the Union in November, 1907, with a democratic constitution that prohibited liquor, provided for the initiative and referendum, created strong county governments, regulated railroad rates, and limited the governor to one elected term. The Democrats came to power and moved the capital from Republican-dominated Guthrie to Democratic Oklahoma City.

Politics

Oklahoma is a relatively conservative and the state had recently become a Republican stronghold in presidential elections, while splitting the vote in state and local elections. The two U.S. senators are Tom Coburn (R) and Jim Inhofe (R). It has five representatives; four Republicans and one Democrat.

Brad Henry (D) has been governor of Oklahoma since 2003. The Republicans control the Oklahoma House of Representatives (57 to 44), while the Senate is evenly split between the parties (24 to 24).

Notes

  1. Broadway - The American Musical: Oklahoma. Educational Broadcasting Corporation. 2004. PBS. Retrieved: September 5, 2007
  2. The Geography of Oklahoma. NSTATE LLC. 2007. Netstate.com. Retrieved: September 5, 2007
  3. Oklahoma Climatological Survey
  4. Oklahoma Historical Society - Spiro Mounds Archaeological Park. Retrieved on 2008-01-07.