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04/2006. xxi, 138 pages. 26 illustrations, 2 tables, 1 map
0896725588
978-0-89672-558-4
$21.95 cloth
Plains Histories Series
Coming soon: online ordering! In the meantime, please call 800.832.4042 or 806.742.2982 to order.
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American Outback: The Oklahoma Panhandle in the Twentieth Century By Richard Lowitt
To settle and remain in the American Outback, the unforgiving land of the Oklahoma Panhandle, was an achievement. Prosperity and risk were present in equal measure. Comprising land that Kansas, Colorado, and New Mexico did not want, and that Texas, after entering the Union as a slave state, could not have, the Oklahoma Panhandle was dubbed No Mans Land. This geographical anomaly, 165 miles long and only 35 miles wide, belonged to no one and, before statehood, served as a haven for desperadoes and villains. Only with the creation of the Oklahoma Territory in 1890 was the area finally claimed by a government entity.
The history of the Oklahoma Panhandle is an integral part of the history of the Great Plains. In the 1930s the Panhandle attracted attention as the heart of the Dust Bowl. Later the area became a world leader in the production of natural gas, and in the 1990s corporate mega hog farms moved in, creating a new set of challenges. As the twenty-first century unfolds, despite concerns about water, pollution, and population growth, the Panhandle remains the most prosperous part of the state, with wheat, meat, and energy as the largest contributors to its economy.
Richard Lowitt is professor emeritus of history at the University of Oklahoma. He is the author of many works on twentieth-century American history, including
One Third of a Nation: Lorena Hickock Reports on the Great Depression (co-edited with Maurine Beasley).
An American Outback: The Oklahoma Panhandle, 1907 to 1930 The Oklahoma Panhandle in the 1930s to 1940s Optima Dam: A Failed Effort to Irrigate the Oklahoma Panhandle From Petroleum to Pigs: the Oklahoma Panhandle in the Last Half of the Twentieth Century
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