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Welcome
to
this OK/ITGenWeb Special Project Page!
No Man's
Land
encompasses the OK Panhandle counties of
Beaver,
Texas, and Cimarron.

No-Mans
Land
of early Oklahoma history became what is now known
as the Panhandle and
touches Kansas, Texas, New Mexico, and Colorado. Its
history begins
about 1850 when Texas relinquished claim
to that territory
in compromising over the slavery question. Little or
no settlement had
been made there then. The Santa Fe Trail traversed
what is now Beaver
County in 1822. An 1850 map shows it as merely part
of the public lands
neighboring on the Cherokee Outlet. It was already a
haven for outlaws
for Texas had paid little attention to the extreme
northern part of her
territory.
The
type of
population in the panhandle are responsible for its
high rank in many
respects. There are practically no Negroes and very
few Indians. Those
Indians that are there have settled along the
railroads and have come
as enterprising individuals rather than tribes or
bands which were
forced to locate there as is true in the rest of the
state. The few
negroes who are there were not slaves to be released
after the Civil
War because it was north of 36 degrees and 30' and
the latter fact
makes the history of No-Mans Land what it is. The
outlaws who drifted
into that territory because it was so long
unorganized and unprotected
drifted out when the opposite condition began to
prevail leaving the
original settlers who had come, like the type
already mentioned more as
individuals than as groups, who had gradually
filtered in from
settlements in surrounding states and territories.
Probably because
there were no large groups led or driven into this
territory statistics
show they are more capable of individual self
government than other
peoples to be found in the state. The population for
the whole
panhandle rose slowly but steadily until 1900, sank
between 1900 and
1910, and has risen very gradually since.
One of
the
agreements made in 1866 as a result of the Civil War
was the
right-of-way to railroads across the "Indian
Country". One of these,
the Santa Fe, followed the old Santa
Fe
Trail across Beaver County. In 1879 the
Jones and Plummer
Cattle Trail from Toscasco to Dodge City first
crossed Beaver Creek,
and at this crossing a fur trader built a sod store.
Several years
later this place became Beaver City. The name
Beaver, first given to
the creek, later to all No-Mans Land and finally to
the present Beaver
County was probably in honor of a chief of the
Choctaw Indians. An 1880
map shows this country a 'Public Land" strip
surrounded by states and
territories.
In 1885
and
86 the general tide of immigration into southwestern
Kansas and
southeastern Colorado swarmed over into No-Mans
Land. By 1887 the
population had reached 6000 yet there was no way for
the settlers to
claim the land upon which they lived, no way to make
marriages legal in
the territory, no laws to govern tax foreclosures,
the organization of
corporations, etc. More than that the desperados and
horse thieves who
had come there because of this condition were not
pleasant neighbors
for the peaceful settlers who held their land merely
by common consent
and good faith. The main trouble was that during dry
years these
settlers often had to leave their holdings for a
time in order to
subsist and if someone "jumped their claim" while
they were gone there
was no way of forcing off the intruder.
Under
the
circumstances there was nothing the people could do
but organize their
own government. The main hindrance to this was the
constant rivalry and
meddling of townsites and ambitious politicians. A
meeting was held in
Beaver City on 26 October 1886 which organized a
"Claimants Board" to
protect land claims. The inhabitants had only the
"squatters rights"
Federal law to work from. In November of the same
year a meeting was
held in the sod schoolhouse in Beaver City for the
purpose of
manufacturing "quit claim" deeds at which the
foundation was built for
the organization of a new territory known as the
Cimarron Territory.
At the
same
time a scheme was being worked on by those who
wished to delay or
prevent the settlement of the "Indian Country" by
white people to make
No-Mans Land a part of Kansas.
The
first
election in the new Cimarron Territory was held 22
February 1887. The
nine delegates chosen at this convention met in the
same sod
schoolhouse on March 4 and organized a first
legislative body of the
Cimarron Territory. This territory was divided into
five counties -
Benton, Beaver, Palo Duro, Optima, and Sunset. Laws
were made governing
land, marriages, taxes, foreclosures, etc. What
public property there
was at the time had been secured by private freewill
contributions.
The
next
three years were marked by the rivalry of political
organizations
divided over purely local issues. J. E. Dale and
Orville G. Chase both
reported in Washington, showed credentials, and
asked to be recognized
as the official delegate to Congress from an
Organized Territory.
Either would have been seated if it had not been for
the opposition of
the other. As it was Congress could not decide which
to recognize and
that more than anything else kept No-Mans Land from
eventually becoming
a separate State.
In 1890
the
Organic Act which organized the Indian Territory
made No-Mans Land part
of that territory. It also made it all one of seven
counties and called
it Beaver County. Beaver County then had a
population of 64,000. Among
other things this county then boasted a newspaper
published in Beaver
City known as the Beaver Herald. This paper is still
being published.
The town of Rothwell was then a rival of Beaver City
and had caused
much of the political dissension. Beaver City
succeeded in becoming the
county seat.

This
item
can be found in the vertical files for Texas County in
the Oklahoma
Historical Society's Genealogy Library. It appears to
have been part of
the Oklahoma Writer's Project, written on 22 July
1936. The opinions
expressed by the writer of the article in no way
represent the opinions
of the coordinator, OKGenWeb, or the USGenWeb
projects. However, it is
a fascinating view of the county from the 1930's.
Thanks
to
Mark Adkinson, former host of Texas County OKGenWeb.

Photographs
of
No
Man's Land
submitted by Nancy
Brister



HELLO
-
WELCOME!
My
name
is LaRae Halsey-Brooks,
and my
daughter,
Eireann Brooks, and I are the Co-Coordinators
for the No Man's Land ITGenWeb Project page.
If
you
would like to contribute your information
to this page, please let us know!
If you
are
interested in sponsoring a county in the OKGenWeb
Project,
or have questions regarding the OKGenWeb Project,
please contact:
OKGenWeb
State Coordinator: Linda Simpson
Asst State Coordinator: Mel Owings
For more
information, you may also visit the Adopt
A County
page.

To post
your
Queries, Biographies, Bible Records, Deeds,
Obituaries,
Pensions, and Wills, please visit the new Rootsweb
message board
for No Man's Land.
No Man's Land Message Board



Indian
Blanket
- Oklahoma State Wildflower
This
page
was last updated
Wednesday, 03-Apr-2013 23:21:01 MDT
©
1998-2012
by the No Man's Land Page Coordinator
for the OKGenWeb Project
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