Re: Where is Oklahoma...................
I define states by their history. Oklahoma is not a southern state in that it was never a part of the Confederacy. Indeed, the state didn't exist until 42 years after the end of the Civil War, but it existed as a territory. Even after subsequent land runs in 1889 and 1890s, it was still a territory until statehood in 1907. Oklahoma was heavily settled by Europeans looking for farmland, northerners who were looking for cheaper farmland (my ancestors were among those from Minnesota and Nebraska who came to Oklahoma in 1892) and northeastern industrial tycoons who came for oil. Oklahoma was flooded by southerners in the 1920s who were fed up with an impoverished deep south looking for opportunities on tenement farms, mines and in oil fields.
Historically, Oklahoma is not southern. Present day, Oklahoma reflects southern political and religious leanings, but after my recent visits to Tennessee, Alabama and Mississippi, Oklahoma is far from southern culturally. There is a resemblance, but Oklahoma oozes a style all its own. In order to understand Oklahoma's true story, you must look beyond the news and delve into its eclectically odd but intriguing cultural qualities and western charm. To me, it doesn't get any better than that.
Continue the Renaissance!!!
Bookmarks