I don't know what point you're trying to make (first you said we're not comparable to Austin and Charlotte because they're much older settlements than 1889), but this is what Charlotte did in the last 40 years:
I have a feeling that you're actually backing up the urbanist point, and you're a good poster obviously. I just want to clear up that this is what happens when cities go through a boom period. OKC is different from Charlotte and Austin in that despite tearing down 2,000 buildings during urban renewal, we still have more historic building stock than those cities. AND we've already gone through multiple booms (incorporation/post-land run, oil discovery, 80s oil boom) similar to Charlotte in the 2000s and Austin today.
On that basis, disregarding the current booms that those cities are experiencing that make ours look like modest growth (which it still is), I would argue that we're a city that is more historically established. We really do have some decent history. We're also a city that's suffered innumerable tragic setbacks and for far too long we were in the shadow of Dallas.
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