Oklahoma Events Theodore Roosevelt, who favored single statehood for Oklahoma, was president
when the Twin Territories joined to form the state in
1907. He visited the area
during the
Territorial Era and
after statehood. His most eventful
trip occurred
in 1905,
when he
accompanied John R. Abernathy and others on a wolf hunt in
southern Oklahoma Territory. Roosevelt first became
interested in Abernathy in
January
1903 when Sloan
Simpson, a friend from Fort Worth, Texas,
described
Abernathy's ability to catch wolves with
his bare hands.
Roosevelt thought that
Simpson was exaggerating, but
several months later the story was corroborated by
another
of the president's friends
from Texas, Cecil A. Lyon. Roosevelt accepted
his friends'
invitation to participate in one of
Abernathy's wolf
hunts. On April 5, 1905, Roosevelt traveled through Indian Territory on his way to a
Rough Riders reunion in San Antonio, Texas, making
short
speeches at several
towns
along the railroad between
Vinita and Durant. After
attending the reunion,
Roosevelt
returned to Oklahoma Territory, arriving in Frederick on
Saturday,
April 8. While giving a speech to the thousands
gathered
to greet him, he
noticed
Comanche Chief Quanah Parker and
called him to the
speaker's stand to
shake his hand.
Immediately after the speech, the hunting party left for
the Big
Pasture, an area of 480,000 acres of open range in
present
Tillman, Comanche,
and
Cotton counties. Members of the
party included the
president's personal
physician, Dr.
Alexander Lambert, several former Rough Riders, a number
of
cattle ranchers, and Quanah Parker. Although no hunts were planned for Sunday, they took place on each of the
next four days. Roosevelt impressed the other participants
with his riding
ability during the
wolf chases, as he was
the only one who could keep pace
with
Abernathy. At least
one other
member of the party attempted to catch a wolf, but
only
Abernathy succeeded. He caught several wolves using a
technique of waiting
until the wolf
leapt at his
outstretched arm and then grasping its lower
back
teeth or
tongue before it could
bite down, thus keeping the animal's canines
from doing
any major damage. Roosevelt was impressed with
Abernathy's
ability
and greatly enjoyed the hunts as well
as other camp activities. On Thursday
evening, April 13,
1905, the
president left Frederick to continue his adventures
on a
bear hunt in Colorado. BIG PASTURE The Big Pasture, approximately 480,000 acres bounded on the south by
the Red River, was situated in present Comanche, Cotton, and Tillman
counties. The Big Pasture served as a geographical, political, and
economic link tying Indian communal landholding to the open-range cattle
business and non-Indian settlement to Oklahoma statehood. In modern times,
Native control of the land traces to the Quapaw, who ceded it to the
United States in 1818. The Choctaw and Chickasaw accepted the area upon
their removal in the 1820s and 1830s but lost it as a result of the
Reconstruction Treaty of 1866. By the terms of the Medicine Lodge Treaty
of 1867 a reservation that included the Big Pasture was set aside for the
Kiowa, Comanche, and Apache. The land became part of Oklahoma Territory in
December 1906, when it was sold by sealed bids to settlers in the last of
several land openings dating to 1889. Topographically, the Big Pasture, at
the eastern edge of the Great Plains, is comprised mostly of flat
grasslands with wooded draws along two creeks, some of the last
significant timber west to the foothills of the Rocky Mountains. The
grasslands topography and the tract's location bordering Texas combined
with frontier economics to initiate the designation "big pasture" for a
wider area ostensibly under Kiowa-Comanche-Apache control. Beginning in
the 1880s Texas cattle barons, including William Thomas Waggoner, Samuel
Burk Burnett, C. T. Herring, E. C. Sugg, and others, leased grasslands for
grazing from the agency in charge of the reservation. It was the heyday of
profitability for the range cattle business and the twilight of the trail
drives that had drovers and cowboys herding cattle from Texas across
Indian country to railheads in Kansas. From 1892, under terms of the
Jerome Agreement, the Kiowa-Comanche-Apache Reservation faced
dismantlement, and opening to non-Indian settlement. However, it took
until the turn of the twentieth century for the machinations of United
States' tribal affairs to culminate with the land opening, by lottery,
between July 9 and August 6, 1901. The government set aside the last
remnants of the reservation, which came to be commonly called the Big
Pasture, to be held by the tribes in common for their surplus cattle.
Because the tribes did not need the surplus land, the government
administered the continued leasing of the Big Pasture grasslands to Texas
ranchers for the American Indian owners until 1906. The government
periodically issued "grass payments" to the landowners at gatherings at
the Anadarko Agency, where American Indians spent cash with traders and
gave settlers a glimpse of Plains Indian and reservation life. Spanning
the turn of the century, land openings deposited settlers around the area,
settlers and farmers clamored for the last scrap of Indian-controlled
territory, and cattle barons became increasingly denigrated as "frontier
aristocrats." Oklahoma statehood loomed, and the Big Pasture became a
cauldron for a mix of struggles, between Indian and white, cattleman and
farmer, settler and ranger, that fed prejudice against commercial wealth.
The anticorporate sentiment was so strong that Oklahoma historian Edward
Everett Dale, a cowboy and native of the region, concluded that a main
root of Oklahoma populism had sprouted in the Big Pasture. Despite its
obscurity, the Big Pasture's natural resources put it in the national
limelight at least twice in the twentieth century. The area was the
subject of the quarrel between Texas and Oklahoma regarding state
boundaries, since the Red River was the south boundary of the Big Pasture
as well as the point of contention over which state controlled what once
was Greer County, Texas. Although the U.S. Supreme Court decreed the
disputed land to be part of Oklahoma Territory in 1896, confusion over the
precise boundary continued until 2000, when Congress, over the objections
of the Kiowa, Comanche and Apache Intertribal Land Use Committee, approved
the Red River Boundary Compact between the states. In April 1905 the Big
Pasture became the stage for Pres. Theodore Roosevelt's wolf hunt with
John R. Abernathy, renowned for his ability to catch wolves with his bare
hands. In 1906 the towns of Eschiti, Quanah, Isadore, Ahpeatone, and
Randlett were platted in the Big Pasture proper. At the turn of the
twenty-first century only Randlett survived. Other towns laying claim to
the pasture area included Frederick and Davidson on the west, Walters and
Temple on the east, and Grandfield and Devol, "the Gateway to the Big
Pasture," in the south-central portion of the Big Pasture. U.S.
Representative John Hall Stephens of Vernon, Texas, wrote the legislation
opening the Big Pasture to settlement. President Roosevelt signed it into
law June 5, 1906. Over a six-day period in December of that year the
Lawton land office of the Department of the Interior received 7,621 sealed
bids totaling $2,286,300. Bids ranged from the minimum of $800 per
quarter-section to $7,376 bid by T. B. Best for a quarter section near the
proposed Randlett townsite. Olive Jones, a woman, qualified as the first
"entryman" on March 15, 1907, the first day the government accepted issued
permits.

A
well-publicized
event occurred in April 1905. Pres.
Theodore Roosevelt,
accompanied by John R. Abernathy and
others, departed from Frederick to the Big
Pasture to
participate in a wolf
hunt. (see newspaper
article)
ROOSEVELT'S WOLF HUNT


The top picture is of the
monument that was erected to commerate The Big Pasture area and its
colorful history. This area was set aside in 1901 as Grazing Land,
which the bottom picture shows. This area was bordered on the south
by the Red River. The government set aside the last remnants of the
reservation, which came to be commonly called the Big Pasture, to be held
by the tribes in common for their surplus cattle. Because the tribes did
not need the surplus land, the government administered the continued
leasing of the Big Pasture grasslands to Texas ranchers for the American
Indian owners until 1906. 
President Theodore Roosevelt, Frederick, OT by Mike
Wimmer The painting is located outside the Oklahoma State Senate lounge on
the fourth floor of the Oklahoma State Capitol and can be viewed daily
from 8:30-5:30 when the Senate is not in session.
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