Stillwater
By Stan Tucker and Winfrey D. Houston
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About this ebook
Stan Tucker
Stan Tucker loves his hometown of Stillwater and was excited to learn and share its history with others. Jacob Burckhardt, a Swiss historian, defined history as �the record of what one age finds worthy of note in another,� and in this volume Tucker attempts to share with others the record of what this era finds worthy of the past. The photographs and stories featured in Images of America: Stillwater demonstrate what makes Stillwater one of Oklahoma�s greatest places to call home.
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Stillwater - Stan Tucker
History.
INTRODUCTION
The area that encompasses the Valley of Still Water was unknown to all but the Native Americans that possessed the land. They considered the sky their father and the earth their mother. They respected the land, as it gave them the necessities of life. They grew crops for food and hunted the buffalo for meat and hides. But while this land was the lifeblood of the Native Americans, it was also being coveted by land-hungry Europeans. While some were escaping the government’s regulations, others just wanted freedom to do as they pleased. They saw this land as an opportunity to start anew and build new lives for their families.
In the year 1540, a century before Europeans set foot at Jamestown, the Southwest, including Oklahoma, was being discovered by Francisco Vasquez de Coronado, on an expedition representing Spain and an ill-fated search for gold, silver, and precious stones. On their trek between the fabled cities of Cibola, in present-day New Mexico, and Quivera, near present-day Wichita, Kansas, he and his party traveled through Oklahoma, entering from the Texas Panhandle between the Washita River and the Canadian River, through Roger Mills County.
Other explorers had traveled through the same area on the Old Spanish Road. This trail entered Oklahoma near present-day Sweetwater and went through Sayre, following the North Fork to the Red River, then east to present-day Lake Texoma in southern Oklahoma. Hernando de Soto and his expedition explored northeast Oklahoma from Sallisaw, following the Grand River north to the Missouri, Kansas, and Oklahoma border.
Trading began in earnest with the arrival of the French. Caddo Indians integrated with the French, trading their goods for guns and ammunitions. After some time, Caddos and Frenchmen married; thus, the French considered Caddos, along with some other tribes, their subjects. More active trading was being developed as a result of the arrival of Bernard de la Harpe in 1719. Other expeditions by Mallet and LaBruyere created even more trade and cemented the relationship between the newly arrived Europeans and the natives.
The late 1700s brought nervous tension between the new American republic and the Napoleonic French on the western side of the Mississippi River. The United States of America needed control of the Mississippi, and Napoleon needed money. Through some good fortune and bargaining on both sides, Pres. Thomas Jefferson agreed to the Louisiana Purchase for a cost of $15 million.
In 1832, American writer Washington Irving toured the area, coming through the Still Water Valley, and wrote about it in his book A Tour on the Prairies. This was the beginning of the quest for white settlement in the Unassigned Lands of the territories. The area, which now encompasses Stillwater, lies in the center of this land. While the Five Civilized Tribes from Tennessee, Georgia, Florida, North Carolina, Alabama, and Mississippi were moved against their will along the Trail of Tears, they were given lands in present-day Oklahoma. The Unassigned Lands were set aside by the federal government for the nomadic tribes that roamed the plains. Some of the other nearby tribes were the Osage, Kaw, Otoe-Missouria, Ponca, Iowa, Pawnee, Pottawatomie, and the Sac and Fox.
All these events set the stage for the next chapter in Oklahoma’s history. The Boomer movement, whereby white settlers moved into the Unassigned Lands near present-day Stillwater, drew national attention to the need for opening the area to settlement.
This led to the Great Land Run of 1889, one of the most important events in the nation’s history. While some towns along the railroads gained thousands, Stillwater only garnered a handful. Overnight, Guthrie, Norman, and Oklahoma City each reached a population of more than 10,000. Four years later, Perry, 25 miles northeast of Stillwater, became a city of 30,000 overnight. By this time, Stillwater had grown to 1,200, but it would lose half of its population in the 1893 Cherokee Strip Run.
The group that stayed might have been small, but they were determined. With few amenities, the residents were hardy and tough, and the town grew slowly but steadily. Although some towns’ populations grew rapidly by the thousands, Stillwater was different; lacking railroads, residents often thought outside the box to survive. These new residents were complete strangers and had to learn to work together to build the town they had envisioned.
Their first year was hard. Because of a major drought, they struggled to grow vegetables and feed for their stock. The only crops that seemed to grow were turnips. Thus that first year became known as the Year of the Turnips.
The fight for the county seat and the battle to be selected the site of the new land-grant college, Oklahoma Agricultural & Mechanical College (OAMC), both cemented Stillwater as a permanent city. To gain the county seat and the college required the leaders to outsmart other communities.
The following years were fruitful, as the town grew steadily. While other nearby towns, such as Perry (formerly known as Wharton), took one day to reach a population of 30,000 because of their location in the Cherokee Strip Land Run, Stillwater took over 100 years.
But that steady growth proved to be the best way for a city to survive. By retaining both the county seat and the college, Stillwater was now able to turn its sights to building upon those assets. Attracting shopkeepers, doctors, attorneys, churches, and more became much easier when, in 1900, the railroad finally made its way to the community. This was followed in the coming years by new industry to compliment the college and its workforce.
Today, Stillwater boasts a population of over 45,000. Oklahoma Agricultural & Mechanical College became Oklahoma State University in 1957, and there are now more than 23,000 students on the Stillwater campus. The city’s largest employer is also OSU, with over 6,000 on its payroll. Stillwater Medical Center has become a regional hospital providing medical services for all of north-central Oklahoma, and it employs almost 1,000 people. The school system now comprises 10 schools, with approximately 750 employees on its payroll. Other industries include Armstrong Flooring Company, National Standard, Stillwater Designs/Kicker (making high-end automobile audio equipment), and Asco Industries, which manufactures parts for the aerospace industry.
Stillwater is also the world headquarters of Eskimo Joe’s, a restaurant and clothing store that has been Oklahoma’s No. 1 tourist attraction. Eskimo Joe’s boasts the second-best-selling T-shirt in America. This coupled with the ever-growing campus of OSU, whose newly revamped Boone Pickens Stadium holds over 60,000 Cowboy fans, keeps Stillwater an active and growing city.
The dream of the early pioneers has paid off, and Stillwater is a place that people are proud to call home.
One
A GLORIOUS PRAIRIE
THE VALLEY OF STILL WATER
While most people relate the founding of Stillwater to the Great Land Run of 1889, the first