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Unit 4 Territorial Days. The Race by Oklahoma Artist Charles Banks Wilson. Chapter 14 Oklahoma Territory. Land of the Red Man Provisional Governments Rural Life The Organic Act No Man’s Land Territorial Government Territorial Governors Territorial Schools. DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
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Unit 4 Territorial Days The Raceby Oklahoma Artist Charles Banks Wilson.
Chapter 14 Oklahoma Territory Land of the Red Man Provisional Governments Rural Life The Organic Act No Man’s Land Territorial Government Territorial Governors Territorial Schools
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS • Trace the status of “No Man’s Land” from the time that Indian tribes were removed to Indian Territory to the time of statehood. • Explain how provisional governments work and why they are not completely effective. • How does government by the consent of the people in the operation of Oklahoma Territory’s provisional government compare with government by consent of the people in the present United States?
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS • Compare and contrast the nine territorial governors and their accomplishments. • How did the Organic Act of May 2, 1980, affect Oklahoma? • What is another name for the Public Land Strip and where was it located? • How did the settlers in the Public Land Strip protect themselves from outlaws? • What are “school lands?”
Seven members of an early Oklahoma family dressed in their finest “Sunday” clothes were photographed by J. V. Dedrick in 1909 in front of their dugout home.
Cowboys “chow down” after a hard day on the cattle drive in Oklahoma’s No Man’s Land.
Territorial Governors G. W. Steele, 1890-1891 R. Martin, 1891 A. J. Seay, 1892-1893 C. Renfrow, 1893-1897 C. M. Barnes, 1897-1901 W. M. Jenkins, 1901 C. W. Grimes, 1901 T. B. Ferguson, 1901-1906 F. Frantz, 1906-1907
One-room schools were where children went to learn in rural Oklahoma. A single school might have several grades.
The first rural school building in Oklahoma was located 10 miles southwest of Stillwater. Construction was completed on October 15, 1889.