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  2. Oklahoma panhandle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oklahoma_Panhandle

    The Oklahoma panhandle (formerly called No Man's Land, the Public Land Strip, the Neutral Strip, or Cimarron Territory) is a salient in the extreme northwestern region of the U.S. state of Oklahoma. Its constituent counties are, from west to east, Cimarron County, Texas County and Beaver County. As with other salients in the United States, its ...

  3. Cherokee Outlet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cherokee_Outlet

    Oklahoma, the Cherokee Outlet, and Indian reservations established in the state and in the Cherokee Outlet. The Cherokee Outlet, or Cherokee Strip, was located in what is now the state of Oklahoma in the United States. It was a 60-mile-wide (97-kilometer) parcel of land south of the Oklahoma–Kansas border between 96 and 100°W. The Cherokee ...

  4. Northwestern Oklahoma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northwestern_Oklahoma

    The passage of the Organic Act in 1890 assigned No Man's Land to the new Oklahoma Territory. No Man's Land became Seventh County under the newly organized Oklahoma Territory, land was soon renamed Beaver County. [3] Northwestern Oklahoma took its current form when Oklahoma Territory and Indian Territory joined the Union in 1907 as the single U ...

  5. Beer City, Oklahoma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beer_City,_Oklahoma

    "No Man's Land" was the 170-mile strip of land, a "neutral strip", that was left with no state or territorial ownership from 1850 until 1890. [4] [5] The town started as a cluster of white tents, which gave it its original name, White City. [2] Kansans moved to the area in Oklahoma to start White City due to strict alcohol prohibition laws in ...

  6. No man's land - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No_man's_land

    No man's land is waste or unowned land or an uninhabited or desolate area that may be under dispute between parties who leave it unoccupied out of fear or uncertainty. The term was originally used to define a contested territory or a dumping ground for refuse between fiefdoms . [ 1 ]

  7. Oklahoma Territory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oklahoma_Territory

    The 1890 Oklahoma Organic Act organized the western half of Indian Territory and a strip of country north of Texas known as No Man's Land (now the Oklahoma Panhandle) into Oklahoma Territory. Native American reservations in the new territory were then opened to settlement in a series of land runs in 1890, 1891, and 1893.

  8. Goodwell, Oklahoma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goodwell,_Oklahoma

    In 1933, the No Man's Land Historical Society was established and took control of the museum. [ 6 ] On June 24, 2012, two Union Pacific trains collided head-on and caught on fire about 1 mile (1.6 km) east of Goodwell.

  9. Geography of Oklahoma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geography_of_Oklahoma

    With 39,000 acres (160 km 2), the Tallgrass Prairie Preserve in north-central Oklahoma is the largest protected area of tallgrass prairie in the world and is part of an ecosystem that encompasses only 10 percent of its former land area, once covering 14 states. [14]