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Oklahoma
Below you are links to
informational sites related to the Oklahoma Gun laws and regulations. (
Legal lawyer stuff as follows:
Center-fire- Greenfield Industries are not responsible nor
endorses any information found on listed links. blah, blah,
blah. You get the picture. Take everything you read with a
grain of salt.) We have even included some
comical links such as the
Brady Campaign , because everybody enjoys a little
fictional reading from time to time.
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Although one of the
youngest states in the nation, Oklahoma is a land that reaches
far back in time. Oklahoma's recorded history began in 1541
when Spanish explorer Coronado ventured through the area on
his quest for the "Lost City of Gold." The land that would
eventually be known as Oklahoma was part of the 1803 Louisiana
Purchase. Beginning in the 1820s, the Five Civilized Tribes
from the southeastern United.
States were relocated to Indian Territory over numerous
routes, the most famous being the Cherokee "Trail of Tears."
Forced off their ancestral lands by state and federal
governments, the tribes suffered great hardships during the
rigorous trips west. The survivors eventually recovered from
the dislocation through hard work and communal support.
Gradually, new institutions and cultural adaptations emerged
and began a period of rapid developments often called the
"Golden Age" of Indian Territory. Following the destruction of
the Civil War, Oklahoma became a part of the booming cattle
industry, ushering in the era of the cowboy. Western expansion
reached the territory in the late 1800s, sparking a
controversy over the fate of the land. Treaties enacted after
the Civil War by the U.S. government forced the tribes to give
up their communal lands and accept individual property
allotments to make way for expansion. There was talk of using
Indian Territory for settlement by African-Americans
emancipated from slavery. However, the government relented to
pressure, much of it coming from a group know as "Boomers,"
who wanted the rich lands opened to non-Indian settlement.The
government decided to open the western parts of the territory.
To settlers by holding a total of six land runs between 1889
and 1895. Settlers came from across the nation and even other
countries like Poland, Germany, Ireland and Slavic nations to
stake their claims. And African-Americans, some who were
former slaves of Indians, took part in the runs or accepted
their allotments as tribal members. In the years that
followed, black pioneers founded and settled entire
communities in or near Arcadia, Boley, Langston and Taft. On
November 16, 1907, Oklahoma became the 46th state.
Statehood had become a sure thing, in part due to a discovery
which made Oklahoma the "place to go to strike it rich" --
oil. People came from all parts of the world to seek their
fortunes in Oklahoma's teeming oil fields. Cities like Tulsa,
Ponca City, Bartlesville and Oklahoma City flourished.
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