Oklahoma Land Run

US #1092 was issued in conjunction with Oklahoma’s Semi-Centennial Exposition, which ran from April 22 to November 16, 1957.

On April 22, 1889, the first land rush into the Unassigned Lands of Oklahoma kicked off at high noon.

After a great deal of pressure from “boomers,” whites who wanted Indian land opened for settlement, the government changed its policy. On March 2, 1889, President Grover Cleveland signed the 1889 Indian Appropriations Act, buying three million acres of land in Oklahoma from the Creek and Seminole tribes.

US #4121 was issued for Oklahoma’s 100th statehood anniversary.

Under this new act, 1.9 millions acres of land would be opened to white settlers under the tenets of the Homestead Act. Settlers were anxious to stake their claims on what was considered some of the best unoccupied public land in the United States. Settlers amassed at the Oklahoma border, ready to seize prime land. At high noon on April 22, 1889, a pistol shot marked the start of the run, as thousands of settlers streamed into the newly opened territory.

US #4121 – Silk Cachet Combination First Day Cover.

By evening, 50,000 white families had moved to Oklahoma. In the course of a single day, the cities of Guthrie and Oklahoma City had come to be, with populations over 10,000 each. As Harper’s Weekly described, “At twelve o’clock on Monday, April 22d, the resident population of Guthrie was nothing; before sundown, it was at least ten thousand. In that time streets had been laid out, town lots staked off, and steps taken toward the formation of a municipal government.”

US #4121x – Oklahoma Statehood First Day Cover.

Before the land run officially started, several people snuck over the boundary into the unoccupied territory and hid, so they could claim some of the best pieces of land. These people became known as “Sooners” (a term that would become the nickname for the state). From this sprung hundreds of legal cases. While the cases were initially brought before local land offices, they were eventually taken to the Department of the Interior. The issue was over what was considered “legal time of entry.” Later in the year, the act that initially opened the lands was amended to include less strict rules for this purpose.

US #UX130 was issued 100 years to the minute after the Oklahoma Land Run.

In the hours and days after people staked their claims, some immediately set out to improve their land, while others went to file their claims. Children kept busy too – selling creek water to people waiting in line for 5¢ a cup or collecting buffalo dung to use as fuel for cooking. Within two weeks, the first schools were opened and run by volunteers until school districts could be established. After just one month, Oklahoma City had five banks and six newspapers.

US #UX130 – Silk Cachet First Day Cover.

A little over a year later the Oklahoma Organic Act created the Oklahoma Territory and on November 16, 1907, Oklahoma became the 46th state to join the Union.

Click here to see what else happened on This Day in History.

Did you like this article? Click here to rate:
Share this Article

5 Comments

  1. This land grab by whites was just the next step in Indians being cheated after nearly all of North America was already stolen. Native Americans were again shown they were not considered equal or not really human to the whites doing the stealing and the all white goernment which used its might to cheat Indians again. Shame on the government!!!!

  2. History has dozens of examples of new people displacing the current inhabitants of
    vast areas of the Planet. The Middle East has the Assyrians over running Sumerians,
    the Persians displacing other inhabitants of land in their empire. The Franks displacing
    the Anglos, Saxons and Celts who moved to British Isles and Ireland displacing those peoples.
    The Norsemen settling in Northwest France and then settling in England. The Huns
    displacing the inhabitants of Central Europe. So the displacement of the Native Americans
    (who, by the way were not Native to the Americas, but came from Siberia 20,000 or so
    years ago) is nothing new to History. It may seem in 21st Century eyes as wrong, but in
    17th and 18th Century eyes was just a part of History.

    1. Nice explanation. We all need to dig a little bit derper.
      The article did state the government bought the land from the Indians. So maybe it was equitable for both at the time.

  3. It really is a fool’s errand to try to judge the past by the mores and laws of the present. Who knows how those in the future will judge our present?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *