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Thread: Council Grove

  1. Default Council Grove

    Have you ever seen this historical marker?



    It's around NW 10th and Council Road. See the full story at Doug Dawgz Blog: Council Grove

  2. #2

    Default Re: Council Grove

    Cool history Doug!

  3. #3

    Default Re: Council Grove

    My office is at 10th and Council and I never knew that marker was there. I am definitely going to check it out, maybe at lunch today. Thanks for all of the great information Doug.

  4. #4

    Default Re: Council Grove

    Nice work Doug...you need to take people on history fieldtrips, I think!

  5. Default Re: Council Grove

    Quote Originally Posted by CCOKC View Post
    My office is at 10th and Council and I never knew that marker was there. I am definitely going to check it out, maybe at lunch today. Thanks for all of the great information Doug.

    You work at the liquor store?

  6. Default Re: Council Grove

    I've continued to expand the article this morning as I find additional stuff. If you looked at it early this morning, it is quite different now ... and I'm still looking for more data. Pretty neat, finding something right under one's nose! History is fun!

    Thanks to all for the nice comments.

  7. #7

    Default Re: Council Grove

    So now we know where Council Road gets its name from.

  8. #8

    Default Re: Council Grove

    I used to own land in that area. The text on the official plat for the land (written in the early 1900s and still on file) makes interesting reading; it excludes “negroes” from buying or homesteading any property in the area.

    My-my, things have sure changed in the last hundred years… Can you imagine what would happen if somebody added something like that to an official document in this day-and-age.

  9. Default Re: Council Grove

    Quote Originally Posted by FRISKY View Post
    I used to own land in that area. The text on the official plat for the land (written in the early 1900s and still on file) makes interesting reading; it excludes “negroes” from buying or homesteading any property in the area.

    My-my, things have sure changed in the last hundred years… Can you imagine what would happen if somebody added something like that to an official document in this day-and-age.
    My opinion on that is that it would get them where they belong. But, historically and unfortunately, that sort of thing wasn't uncommon at all in days gone by.

  10. #10

    Smile Re: Council Grove

    Quote Originally Posted by Kerry View Post
    So now we know where Council Road gets its name from.
    Beat me to it.

  11. #11

    Default Re: Council Grove

    I read somewhere that the foundation of Chisolm's trading post is still there, but I have no idea where to look.

  12. #12

    Default Re: Council Grove

    If in existance, it is probably under several inches or more of dirt.

  13. #13

    Default Re: Council Grove

    Isn't Council Grove Elementary over there around 10th and Council? I always wondered what that name was all about.

  14. #14

    Default Re: Council Grove

    Nice work Doug!

    You continue to pique my interest into OKC history. A nagging question in my mind has been: Most cities are built upon existing trading posts or ports, such as Tulsa, St Louis, New Amsterdam, McAlester, etc. Chisolm's trading post, Council Grove and Ft. Reno are all west of OKC. Why was OKC "chosen" as a settlement with an overnight population of 10,000?

    Answer please?

  15. #15

    Default Re: Council Grove

    while trails were the original trading routes through oklahoma, the railways were playing a vital transportation role by 1889. -M

  16. Default Re: Council Grove

    Quote Originally Posted by PapaJack View Post
    Nice work Doug!

    You continue to pique my interest into OKC history. A nagging question in my mind has been: Most cities are built upon existing trading posts or ports, such as Tulsa, St Louis, New Amsterdam, McAlester, etc. Chisolm's trading post, Council Grove and Ft. Reno are all west of OKC. Why was OKC "chosen" as a settlement with an overnight population of 10,000?

    Answer please?
    I know of no reasons that "Oklahoma" (not then "City") was chosen other than:
    1. The AT&SF railway way decided to have a station in the middle of the state
    2. We were it.

    Proximity to a river may/may not have been part of Santa Fe's decision, I don't know.

    Here's a drawing from the Historical Atlas of Oklahoma (2006) showing the state in 1889, apparently before the Land Run ...

    Larger image: http://i8.photobucket.com/albums/a49..._staterail.jpg



    I'm sure there was more but that has to be the core reason. I don't know that much about the Land Run, though.

  17. Default Re: Council Grove

    Quote Originally Posted by dismayed View Post
    Isn't Council Grove Elementary over there around 10th and Council? I always wondered what that name was all about.
    Yes, it's at 7721 W. Melrose, Melrose being between NW 10th & W Reno.

  18. Default Re: Council Grove

    Quote Originally Posted by Kerry View Post
    If in existance, it is probably under several inches or more of dirt.
    Also, don't forget that Lake Overholser didn't exist then and the North Canadian's route may have been changed when the Dam was constructed in 1919, I think. Now, that would be a cool undertaking of the city ... a reconstruction of the trading post (if any such images exist).

  19. #19

    Default Re: Council Grove

    Quote Originally Posted by LIL_WAYNE_4_PREZIDENT08 View Post
    You work at the liquor store?

    No, I don't work at the liquor store but my accounting office is across the street and down a block. The liquor store comes in handy January-April (jk).

    I drove by the marker yesterday. It is about half a mile west of me at Eagle which is the entry to the western lake road. I did not walk up to it as I was dressed in a suit and it looks as if the closest parking may be at the dam. I swear I have driven by that spot dozens of times and never noticed it.

  20. Default Re: Council Grove

    Here's a little more information relating to your question, PapaJack, from the book below published by the University of Nebraska Press (1982):



    The book shows drawings of the Santa Fe's 1880 and 1900 maps ... I've not pinpointed when the route through Oklahoma City was constructed yet but I think it was done in 1885 ...





    At page 134, this text appears (I've highlighted the relevant part):



    The page from the book, above, says that the Santa Fe brought in 11 special trains on April 22, each carrying 1000 people! To be sure, some of them got off at Guthrie and perhaps other places. But, back to my point:

    No Santa Fe railroad and/or no Santa Fe depot, no Oklahoma City.

    Here's an image of the Santa Fe routes as of 1891 ...

    Larger image: http://i8.photobucket.com/albums/a49...topeka1891.jpg



    Here is an unidentified image from and in the Greater Oklahoma City Chamber of Commerce's files ... it's hard to tell (a) where this train was and/or (b) if it was doctored by an early day photographer in some way. Somehow, it just doesn't look quite right to me. But, either way, it was probably not dissimilar to real life scenes in Okc at the Santa Fe depot. Thanks to Dean Schirf and the Greater Okc Chamber for this photo.

    Larger image: http://i8.photobucket.com/albums/a49...ntrain_coc.jpg



    Dean has allowed me to scan a bunch of "new" (to me) images from the Chamber's files (most of them were donated to the Oklahoma History Center, but some were retained) and I'll be updating a couple of my "Trains" blog posts within a week or sooner with those images. He also has some nice images of his own.

  21. #21

    Default Re: Council Grove

    If I remember correctly the Santa Fe rail line stopped in what is now downtown. The stop was called "Oklahoma Station." Oklahoma Station eventually became Oklahoma, Indian Territory (IT). Okla, IT eventually became Oklahoma City and of course IT became the state of OK, and the area that is now Capitol Hill was once South Oklahoma, essentially a completely separate city. South Oklahoma and Oklahoma City eventually merged into Oklahoma City.

  22. #22

    Default Re: Council Grove

    Great stuff, Doug! I am sure you enjoyed being an attorney, but I seriously think you missed a calling as an historian!

  23. #23

    Default Re: Council Grove

    Now, that would be a cool undertaking of the city ... a reconstruction of the trading post (if any such images exist).
    that would be awsome.

  24. #24

    Default Re: Council Grove

    Quote Originally Posted by Doug Loudenback View Post
    Have you ever seen this historical marker?



    It's around NW 10th and Council Road. See the full story at Doug Dawgz Blog: Council Grove
    I have seen this marker before its just east of 10th and Council down by the creek just after N Eagle lane I'm not even sure if you can see it from the road.

  25. Default Re: Council Grove

    If you aren't looking for it, you would probably drive right by. There are roadside photos in my blog article: Doug Dawgz Blog: Council Grove

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