Birch Lake

USA / Oklahoma / Barnsdall /
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The area in which Birch Lake is located was once occupied by prehistoric Indians and later was considered as Cherokee Indian Territory. In 1870 (through a series of treaties and negotiations) the Osage Nation relinquished control of the Kansas lands and were forced to move to this area. This land consisted of 500,000 acres in what is now Osage County, Oklahoma.

James Bigheart, who became one of the great Osage chiefs helped negotiate with the U.S. Government over mineral rights on the tribal lands. By an act of Congress in 1906, the Osage Nation retained ownership of minerals and the discovery of oil later made the Osages the richest Indians in the United States.

In 1905, the Midland Valley Railroad reached the present site of Barnsdall. A town soon began to develop and in 1906 a post office was established and named for Chief Bigheart. In 1921, the town was renamed in honor of T. N. Barnsdall who was considered the worlds first oil refiner and was the founder of the refinery at the present site of the Bareco plant at Barnsdall.
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Coordinates:   36°31'33"N   96°11'19"W
This article was last modified 17 years ago