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Bryan County, Oklahoma

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Profiles

  • William Howard "Bill" Bain (1920 - 2004)
    William Howard "Bill" Bain, Sr., 84, of Big Spring, died on Saturday, July 17, 2004, in a local hospital. Funeral services will be held at 3:00 PM Tuesday, July 20, 2004 at the Nalley-Pickle & Welch R...
  • Laura Elizabeth Dickinson (1914 - 2001)
    Reference: Find A Grave Memorial - SmartCopy : May 5 2020, 3:06:16 UTC
  • Jacob H. Hartzler (1868 - 1943)
    Jacob H. Hartzler was born May 14, 1868 in Ohio to Jonathan Y. Hartzler (1837-1897) and Elizabeth Bontrager Hartzler (1836-1913).The 1880 Federal Census for Union, Ohio (Logan County) shows Jacob Hartz...

Please add profiles of those who were born, lived or died in Bryan County, Oklahoma.

History

The area now known as Bryan County was occupied by the Choctaw Tribe in 1831-1832, and became part of Choctaw Nation's Blue County. In 1845, the tribe opened Armstrong Academy for boys near the community of Bokchito. The academy served as Chahta Tamaha, the Choctaw capital, during the Civil War. Bloomfield Academy, a school for Chickasaw girls opened in 1852, just south of the present town of Achille.

The Chickasaw tribe bought part of the Choctaw allocation prior to the Chickasaw migration to Indian Territory. The western quarter of today's Bryan County thus became part of the Chickasaw District in 1837. When the two tribes formally separated into two distinct nations in 1855, the Chickasaw District became the Chickasaw Nation.

The Butterfield Overland Mail and Stage route followed the older Texas Road across the present county during the late 1850s. General Albert Pike established Fort McCulloch for the Confederate Army near the present town of Kenefic on the Blue River. Although no Civil War battles occurred in the vicinity, the fort was garrisoned by more than a thousand Indian troops allied with the Confederates.

Several new towns were created after the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railway (Katy) built a north-south line through this area in 1872. One such town was Colbert, which became the seat of Blue County and the largest town in the Choctaw Nation. The St. Louis, San Francisco and New Orleans Railroad, later bought by the St. Louis and San Francisco Railway (Frisco), built an east-west line in 1903.

Just prior to statehood, when all tribal governments were dissolved, Blue County was extinguished. Bryan County was officially established on November 16, 1907, and Durant became the county seat.

The Bridge War, also called the Red River Bridge War or the Toll Bridge War, was a 1931 bloodless boundary conflict between the U.S. states of Oklahoma and Texas over an existing toll bridge and a new free bridge crossing the Red River between Grayson County, Texas and Bryan County, Oklahoma.

Adjacent Counties

Cities, Towns & Communities

  • Achille
  • Albany
  • Allison
  • Armstrong
  • Banty
  • Bennington
  • Blue
  • Bokchito
  • Brown
  • Caddo
  • Cade
  • Calera
  • Cartwright
  • Cobb
  • Colbert
  • Durant (County Seat)
  • Hendrix
  • Kemp
  • Kenefic
  • Kiersey
  • Mead
  • Platter
  • Roberta
  • Romia
  • Sand Point
  • Silo
  • Utica
  • Yamaby
  • Yuba

Links

Wikipedia

Genealogy Trails

Fort Washita

Fort McCulloch

National Register of Historic Places

OK Gen Web

RAOGK

Roots Web

US Gen Net



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