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Enid History and Facts
History and Facts About Enid, Oklahoma
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ENID HISTORY

The Cherokee Outlet opened by "land run" on September 16, 1893.


The Federal Government had granted seven million acres of land to the Cherokee Nation in treaties of 1828 and 1835. The United States guaranteed to the Cherokee Nation that this land would be a perpetual outlet west for tribal hunting grounds, measured 58 miles wide and extending 220 miles along the northern border.

After the Civil War, because part of the Cherokee Nation had supported and fought for the Confederacy, the federal government demanded that a new treaty be written. The new treaty reduced the original reservation lands and permitted "friendly tribes" to be moved into the eastern end of the Outlet.

With the start of the cattle drives following the Civil War the Cherokee Indians began to use their western land to make a money. The Cherokee leased the land to the cattlemen that wanted to fatten their cattle on the grasses before taking them to Kansas.

Settlers, wanting to own their own land, viewed this use of the area as a waste of fertile farmland and pressured the government to purchase the land from the Cherokee. Congress eventually paid the $8,505,736 or about $1.40 per acre, and announced the opening of the Outlet to homesteaders.

President Grover Cleveland designated September 16, 1893 as the date of the "run" for 6,000,000 acres. On that day, 100,000 land hungry persons gathered for the land run into the Cherokee Outlet by horse, train, wagon and even on foot. From Caldwell, Kansas 15,000 people gathered to make "the Run" south into what is now Oklahoma. Caldwell was 1 of 9 places where potential settlers awaited cavalry soldiers' gunshots to start the biggest land rush in the United States.

Before the land run, the Rock Island trains had been stopping at what is now North Enid. They had a depot there and the railroad had named the town Enid. There has long been several versions of how Enid got its name, but clearly the most recognized and plausible theory was that Enid was named by M. A. Low who was a vice-president and general counsel for Rock Island. In the early 1930s, George Rainey, who was one of the preeminent historians on the Cherokee Strip, in researching his book on the Cherokee Strip traced down several versions on how Enid got its name. He came to the clear conclusion that it was Low who named the station as an alternative to the its initial name Skelton Station. Low knew that no town would ever want the name Skeleton. He had been reading Lord Tennyson's Idylls of the King on the trip railroad trip from Kansas. Enid was a prominent character in Tennyson's book. She was the second most fair lady of the realm, second only to Guinevere. He thought that would make a great name for the new town. (per Gary L. Brown, historian)

At the end of the run, farms were quickly being established, and the cities of Enid, Perry, Alva, and Woodward had been formed out of what had been only prairie land and train depots the day before.

The original train depot, before the run, was located in North Enid. Soon after the run, a second Enid town site was plotted south of the original one. In the beginning, the railroad refused to stop at the south township which caused a struggle between the two towns that were only three miles apart. The feud was eventually resolved through some unsavery tactics and the south Enid began to receive train service. Because a post office had already been established in the south town called Enid, a post office later built in the north town had to be designated North Enid.

At the time of the 1893 Land Run, there were 7 original counties called: O, L, K, P, Q, M and N. "O" County was provided with a county seat reserve of 320 acres, a plot of four acres for a court house, and one acre for a government land office. The county seat was Enid, and eventually "O" County became Garfield County. The settlers of each county were given the right to select the name of their county after the run. The names selected were Garfield, Grant, Kay, Noble, Pawnee, Woods and Woodward.

The first Methodist circuit rider to arrive in Enid was the Reverend O.R. Bryant. This courageous young minister preached to a small congregation of early settlers on Sunday, September 17, 1893, the day after the great run into the Cherokee Strip. The service was held on the courthouse lawn and was the first Protestant sermon delivered in Enid. This was the beginning of the First Methodist Church in Enid.

Through all the hardships of life on the prairie, including the Dust Bowl, Enid became the center of commerce for all of Northwest Oklahoma. Enid was the center for farming, cattle, oil and industry and even an automobile called the Geronimo was once manufactured here.




ENID KUDOS

The June-July, 2009 issue of “Outdoor Life” in the mail at work and the cover story is a list of the 200 best towns for sportsmen in the United States.
Four Oklahoma towns made the top 200. The magazine listed Bartlesville at No. 54, Poteau at No. 145, Enid at No. 168 and Elk City at No. 182.
The magazine based its ratings on socio-economic subcategories such as median household income, median home value, cost of living, unemployment rate, mean commute time and amenities such as schools and hospitals.
Outdoors-related subcategories used in the rankings included the gun friendliness of each town’s state, huntable and fishable species nearby, the town’s proximity to public hunting land and fishable waters and the potential for taking a big game trophy-caliber game animal or fish nearby.


Early 2009, Enid was cited as leading by example in thinking green recently when it was given the designation of Tree City USA during ceremonies at the state Capitol. Enid was one of 23 Oklahoma cities given the designation, and it’s the only city being given the designation for the first time. Vance Air Force Base has been designated a Tree City USA the past 16 years.

July 22, 2007
City of Enid is one of the least expensive places to live in the nation, report cites.
The most expensive carton of milk in the United States is in Honolulu, while the cheapest is in Twin Falls, Idaho. The price for a half gallon of whole milk in Honolulu is $2.74, while the cost in Twin Falls is $1.39. A 6-ounce can of tuna in Denver is 70 cents, but an optometrist visit is $83.29, higher than the national average of $79.01. Those figures are in the latest nationwide cost-of-living report by Council for Community and Economic Research. The survey considered the price of various, everyday items people buy — from necessities, such as food, to luxury items, such as movie tickets, as well as health care, goods and services and housing. The report was published in May. The report, which sets the national cost of living score at 100, shows Enid is one of the least expensive places to live in the United States, with a score of 87.6.

July 2007, Expansion Management and the National Policy Research Council have listed Enid in their list of Top 20 small metro areas for recruitment and attraction of business.

February, 2007. Garfield County has been named one of the top 10 rural counties in which to live in Progressive Farmer Magazine. Garfield Co was named this because of outstanding health care availability, the resonable price of land, the teacher-student ratio of 13.9:1 and low crime and low pollution rate. The Progressive Farmer rating is a quality-of-life issue. There are 2,500 counties in the US that are classified as rural.

Main Street Enid received national accreditation again this year (2006) by meeting standards established by the national organization. Enid joins only 625 programs across the nation to receive the national accreditation. The accreditation process evaluates commercial revitalization programs based on criteria established by the Washington DC based organization.

Enid was featured on ABC’s “Good Morning America” Wednesday, 11 Jan 06 as one of the top five “up-and-coming” areas of the United States. judged on location, desirability, new developments, average home prices and percentage of increase over the last two years. Enid competed against 3,700 other communities around the country to earn a spot on the list.

The March 2004 issue of Inc. Magazine rated Enid, Oklahoma as one of the top 25 small metro areas for doing business (cities 150,000 and under). The May 2003 edition of Expansion Management magazine rated Enid a “5-Star Community” based on quality of life. One of Americas' finest cities Enid, Oklahoma; voted one of the top fifty cities in the United States.

Ranked the 28th best place in the nation to raise a family in a Reader's Digest poll, Enid is known as the hub for Northwest Oklahoma for medical treatment, education, entertainment, and shopping.



ENID FACTS


Enid is located in Northwest Oklahoma
Located in Garfield County
Estimated population of about 47,045
Enid sits at an elevation of 1,246 feet
It has a land area of about 75.43 sq miles
Enid is in the Central time zone
The area code is 580
The median household income is $34,356
The average home in Enid costs only $99,000
Median rent is $437 per month
Median home value $59,200
The latitude of Enid is 36.395N. The longitude is -97.878W
The number of violent crimes recorded by the FBI in 2003 was 201.
The number of murders and homicides was 1.
The violent crime rate was 4.3 per 1,000 people.
Vance AFB south of town had an economic impart on Enid of $220.9 million in 2006. Vance's payroll is more than $111 million with 3,455 employees counting both military and civilian, plus 816 indirect jobs. By 2011 an Armed Forces Reserve Center will add 40 more jobs plus National Guard troops from Enid, Alva, Woodward, Blackwell, Cherokee and Watonga which means approximately
200-300 people adding to Enid's weekend economy

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Cherokee Strip Regional Heritage Center

Southern Heights Heritage Center and Museum

Enid Family History Center (Genealogy Records)
419 North Eisenhower St.
Enid, OK 73703
Family History Centers are branch facilities of the Family History Library in Salt Lake City. Centers provide access to most of the microfilms and microfiche in the Family History Library to help patrons identify their ancestors
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ENID LEGENDS

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