Monday, August 7, 2023

Why The Rush?- Oklahoma Land - September 16, 1893

By Kimberly Grist



What do a cannon firing, soldiers with fixed bayonets, and perhaps as many as 100,000 eager and many impoverished hopeful landowners bring to mind? You would be correct if you guessed the September 16, 1893, Oklahoma land run.

Photo: “One Minute Before the Start,” Oklahoma Land Run, September 16, 1893. Credit: L. D. Hodge; Wikimedia Commons.

The U.S. economy had been devastated by the Panic of 1893 and undergoing an economic depression. As a result, many were out of work and hungry. They were starving for an opportunity, and more than six million acres of free land was an enormous temptation.


https://clo.ok.gov/agency/history/

Many waited in line for days to register at the land office in Arkansas City, Kansas, probably similarly crowded as those pictured above at the land office in Perry, Oklahoma Territory, another registry location for the Cherokee Strip land run.

The chaos that preceded and followed the cannon shot at noon on September 15, 1893, mirrored the desperation of many pioneers who participated in the event in hopes of staking a claim for 160 acres of free land.


(Scene from the 1931 movie Cimarron)


http://www.hanksville.org/sand/realprop/images/west140.jpg

According to a New York Herald article published on September 17, 1893:

SOLDIERS CLEAR A TRAIN
“More than fifteen thousand persons wanted to go in on the first train from Orlando, which had a capacity for fewer than two thousand. With a wild shout, the crowd rushed forward. The soldiers on the ground were swept from their feet, and for a moment, it seemed as if the mob would capture the train, for men and women were around and over the engine and tender, upon and under the platforms, and even upon the roofs of the coaches.

However, the blue-coated guardians soon recovered and cleared the train with fixed bayonets and compelled everybody to show certificates before entering.

On every side, men and women fought and struggled to get near the cars. Women had their clothes torn off, and men were knocked down and trampled upon. Scores of persons were injured, yet the struggle continued until the train was filled, and it was repeated on a smaller scale with each succeeding train.”




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Will her road lead to the Promised Land?

Orphaned as a young girl, Ella longs for a life she’s only read about in books. To escape a desperate situation, she heads west as a mail-order bride to a man searching for a marriage of convenience. His marriage will provide the inheritance to finance the family’s business venture in Oklahoma. Newspapers claim the unchartered territory is a land where streams flow with milk and the heavens rain down a supply of honey. She's making her run toward Hope, Love, and Family.
 
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Fans of historical romance set in the late 19th -century will enjoy stories combining History, Humor, and Romance, emphasizing Faith, Friends, and Good, Clean Fun.
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