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Census Info 
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Indian Territory
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Oklahoma Territory
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Oklahoma
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Census Taker
 
 
        CENSUS RECORDS 
Oklahoma 
(Statehood 1907)  
In 1803 with the Louisiana Purchase, the United States assumed control of the area that became Oklahoma. Indian people already inhabited the land. Wichita, Plains Apache (today's Apache Tribe), Quapaws, and Caddos were here during the Spanish and French colonial period. By the 1800s, Osage, Pawnees, Kiowas, Comanches, Cheyennes, and Arapahos had also migrated into the region or visited. Some Delawares, Shawnees, Kickapoos, Chickasaws and Choctaws regularly came to hunt for Oklahoma's abundant bison, beaver, deer and bear. 
In 1830 with the expansion of white settlement into the Trans-Appalachian West the Indian Removal Act was passed, forcing all Eastern Indians to move to new homelands west of the Mississippi River in the "Indian Territory." The Five Civilized Tribes purchased new lands in today's Oklahoma, but some
relocated farther north. 
The passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act in 1854 led to renewed white
settlement in these territories, and the immigrant tribes located there were
soon under pressure to move on. In 1859, Texas also forced out all remaining
tribes. The Civil War temporarily ended the removals. Present Indian nations
that received new homelands in today’s Oklahoma during 1830-1862 period were: 
  
  
    
      Absentee Shawnee 
        Alabama-Quassarte 
        Caddo 
        Cherokee 
        Chickasaw 
        Choctaw 
        Delaware 
        Eastern Shawnee 
        Kialegee 
        (Muscogee) Creek 
         | 
      Ottawa 
        Quapaw 
        Seminole 
        Seneca-Cayuga 
        Thlopthlocco 
        Tonkawa 
        United Keetoowah 
        Wichita 
        Wyandotte  
        Yuchi (Euchee) 
        Also see ITGenWeb | 
      
  
   
  Another white surge of settlement into the West came at the end of the
  Civil War and again Indian tribes were pressured onto reservations. Many of
  the tribes living in Kansas and Nebraska received new reservations by the
  Omnibus Treaty in 1867 while the Plains Tribes accepted reservations by the
  Medicine Lodge Treaty. The last people to receive a reservation were Geronimo
  and his fellow Chiricahua prisoners of war. Tribes assigned to Oklahoma
  reservations during this period 1867-1892 were: 
  
    
    
      
        Apache 
          Arapaho 
          Cheyenne 
          Citizen Potawatomi 
          Comanche 
          Delaware 
          Ft. Sill Apache 
          Iowa 
          Kaw 
          Kickapoo | 
        Kiowa 
          Miami  
          Modoc 
          Osage 
          Otoe-Missouria 
          Pawnee 
          Peoria  
          Ponca 
          Sac and Fox 
          Shawnee 
          Also see ITGenWeb | 
        
    
     
    Basically stated the eastern half of what became the state of Oklahoma
    was known as Indian
    Territory and the western half was known as Oklahoma
    Territory prior to statehood in 1907. See maps <http://www.okgenweb.net/maps/images/ok1900xp.gif>
    and <http://www.okgenweb.net/maps/itmap.htm> 
    Also see Indian
    Affairs: Laws and Treaties 
GENEALOGICAL SOCIETIES AND
     COMMERCIAL SITES:   with census for sale
 
  - Arrow Print Company
    
      - 1860 population schedule of the United State census Indian lands west of Arkansas (Oklahoma) by Frances Jerome Woods, c1964
 
     
   
  - Ashton Books
    
      - 3812 Northwest Sterling, Norman, OK 73073-1240  Sharron Standifer Ashton
 
      - Indians and Intruders is available ($22.50 postpaid)
 
     
   
  - Broken Arrow Genealogical Society
    
      - P.O. Box 1244, Broken Arrow, OK 74013-1244
 
      - 1904 Census of Broken Arrow, OK ($7.00)
 
      - 1910 Federal Census Schedules for the Town of Broken Arrow, 145 pg, 
        
 surname index ($12.50) 
     
   
  - Oklahoma Genealogical Society - online list of publications
 
  - Oklahoma Roots Research
    
      - 1860 census of the free inhabitants of Indian lands west of Arkansas (Oklahoma 
        
 Indian Territory) by Ellsworth, Carole.  Gore, Okla. c1984] 
     
   
  - Oklahoma Historical  Society    [OHS]
    
      indicates OHS has either a printed or microform copy in their library
     
   
  - Constance Schofield
  
  
  
    - 441154 E. 166 Rd., Bluejacket, OK 74333  $35 postpaid
 
   
  
  
  
  Southwest Oklahoma Genealogical Society   - online list of publications
  
    - 1890 Oklahoma & Indian Territory Census of Union Veterans and Widows,
        
 compiled and indexed by Linda Norman Garrison 1991 
    - 1895 Census of the Comanche Indian Tribe, Kiowa Indian Agency, Anadarko,
        
 Oklahoma Territory, by Faye Washburn 1994 
    - 1905 Census of the Comanche Indian Tribe, Kiowa Indian Agency, Anadarko,
        
 Oklahoma Territory, by Faye Washburn 
    - 1917 Census of the Comanche Indian Tribe, Kiowa Indian Agency, Anadarko,
        
 OK, by Linda Norman Garrison, Indexed by Polly Lewis Murphy 
   
Bryan Co.
  
    - Bryan County Heritage Research Library
      
 Bryan County Heritage Assn., Inc.
       P.O. Box 153, Calera, Oklahoma 74730-0153 
   
Cleveland Co.
  
Craig Co.
  
LeFlore Co.
  
Genealogy Research Service
 - online list of publications
McClain Co.
  
  
    - McClain County Historical Society
      
 203 W Washington, Purcell, OK 73080, 405-527-5894 
   
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
 McCurtain Co.
 
Pittsburg Co.
  
Pontotoc Co.
  
Stephens Co.
  
    - Stephens County Genealogical Society
        
 301 North 8th, Street, Duncan, OK 73533, 405-255-8718 
   
Census View - Actual Census on CD
Heritage
    Quest microfilm and census CDs
National Archives  
      also rents microfilm rolls.
SK Publications
University of Oklahoma Press
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