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==History== ===Settlement and founding=== After the land opening of 1893, developers wanted to attract railroads to build through the former [[Cherokee Outlet]] to transport the large wheat crops to markets. The Kansas and Oklahoma Construction Company, through its subsidiary the Cherokee Investment Company, bought {{convert|100|acre|ha}} along its route, platted the town which it named Cherokee, and held a sale of lots on February 9, 1901. Cherokee officially incorporated in July 1901. Two years later, the [[Kansas City, Mexico and Orient Railroad]] (later owned by the [[Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway]]) constructed a line through Cherokee. To gain access to the railroad, residents of the nearby community of Erwin, which already had a post office by that name, relocated to Cherokee. Erwin then ceased to exist and Cherokee took its place. This post office was renamed "Cherokee" in March, 1903.<ref name= EOHC-Cherokee>{{cite web|last1=Everett|first1=Dianna|title=Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture - Cherokee|url= http://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry.php?entry=CH015 |website=Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture|publisher=Oklahoma History Center|access-date=May 9, 2016}}</ref> By 1905, a second railroad, the [[Denver, Enid and Gulf Railroad|Denver, Enid, and Gulf]], built a line through the community. The community was soon transformed into a dominant regional center for agricultural services, banking, wholesale-retail trade, and transportation, providing markets and services to the surrounding smaller communities, such as [[Ingersoll, Oklahoma|Ingersoll]], [[Burlington, Oklahoma|Burlington]], [[Driftwood, Oklahoma|Driftwood]], [[Byron, Oklahoma|Byron]], and [[Amorita, Oklahoma|Amorita]]. The town grew around its twin railroad depots, and by 1909 Cherokee had three banks, three newspapers, three mills (flour, alfalfa, and planning), a concrete block plant, and a school desk factory. There were also Baptist, Catholic, Christian, Friends, Methodist, and Presbyterian churches.<ref name=EOHC-Cherokee/> [[Alfalfa County, Oklahoma|Alfalfa County]] itself - named after Governor [[William H. Murray|'Alfalfa Bill' Murray]]<ref>[http://digital.library.okstate.edu/chronicles/v002/v002p075.html "Origin of County Names in Oklahoma." ''Chronicles of Oklahoma''. Volume 2, Number 1 (March 1924).] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170814135738/http://digital.library.okstate.edu/chronicles/v002/v002p075.html |date=2017-08-14 }} Retrieved November 22, 2016.</ref> - was created at the time of statehood in 1907, when the state reorganized several counties out of part of what was once the much larger [[Woods County, Oklahoma|Woods County]]. Cherokee's status as the official county seat of Alfalfa County was confirmed in January 1909. The city's incorporation was reconfirmed in March of that same year.<ref name=EOHC-Cherokee/> ===Years of prosperity=== The Masonic hospital was relocated from nearby [[Aline, Oklahoma|Aline]] in 1918. A new high school building was completed in 1921. There were a variety of industries to provide employment, including: Cherokee Mills Company which produced flour, the McDowell Standard Battery Company's factory, an ice plant, and a planing mill. With a successful bond election, a new county courthouse was completed in 1924. The 1920s also saw a variety of other public projects, including street improvements and public water supply. In addition, oil-field activity within the county during the late 1920s and the mid-1930s contributed to the city's prosperity, with a half-dozen oil companies maintaining storage facilities near the railroad yards. At the onset of the [[Great Depression in the United States|Great Depression]], Cherokee had become "an important urban and trading center."<ref name=EOHC-Cherokee/> Cherokee was better situated than most communities to weather the downturn of the depression. With its many hotels, including: The Hotel Cherokee, Hotel Henderson, the Ideal Hotel, Jobe's Hotel, and the Orient Hotel, the city's business owners worked hard to promote the town as a convention destination. They were successful in attracting a variety of organizations including the Oklahoma State Holiness Association, the [[Woman's Christian Temperance Union]], and the 4-H Clubs in 1933, the Baptist Association and the Tri-County Masonic Association in 1935, and the Oklahoma Press Association Regional Meeting and the Northwestern Oklahoma Baptist Association Annual Dinner in 1936.<ref name=EOHC-Cherokee/> By 1936, the city boasted eleven gasoline stations, five automobile dealerships, five garages, plus three lumber yards. There were also four grain elevators in operation, plus an ice cream factory. In addition, Cherokee had nine restaurants, five groceries, two bakeries, two banks, two hardware stores, two department stores, as well as approximately two dozen other retail businesses. Two newspapers, the ''Alfalfa County News'' and the ''Cherokee Messenger'', informed the public.<ref name=EOHC-Cherokee/> The [[Works Progress Administration]] (WPA) completed construction of a [[National Guard Armory]] in 1937, along with a public library in 1939. Its proximity to the Great Salt Plains area attracted sporting activities including bird-hunting excursions, which boosted the economy by bringing in hundreds of travelers.<ref name=EOHC-Cherokee/> Construction of a dam on the [[Salt Fork Arkansas River|Salt Fork of the Arkansas River]] begun in 1938 - completed in 1941 - would create the [[Great Salt Plains Lake]], making the area even more desirable as a hunting and tourism spot.<ref name="EOHC-GSPSP-NWR">{{cite web|last1=Hedglen|first1=Thomas L.|title=Great Salt Plains State Park and National Wildlife Refuge|url=http://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry.php?entry=GR036|website='Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture|publisher=Oklahoma Historical Society|access-date=May 27, 2016|date=2009}}</ref> ===1950s onward=== The population of Cherokee would peak in 1950, at 2,635, according to the U.S. Census, and continue to trend downward at each enumeration from that decade onward.<ref name="DecennialCensus"/> By 1970, 125 businesses remained operating in a city of 2,119 inhabitants. The county took over the operation of the former Masonic hospital in 1976. A new industrial park was established in that same decade. By 1990, the population had fallen to below 2000 - to 1,787 - for the first time since the city was recognized as the county seat. The Santa Fe Railroad maintained its trunk line running north–south through the mid-1990s, and the city's east–west line, by then part of the [[BNSF Railway|Burlington Northern Santa Fe]], ceased operations shortly thereafter.<ref name=EOHC-Cherokee/> The city of Cherokee has a city manager form of government. It maintains three parks plus a swimming pool.<ref name=EOHC-Cherokee/> Cherokee continues to be the home of one of three public school districts (in addition to Burlington and Timberlake) to educate the county's children.<ref name="CPS"/><ref name="EOHC-AlfalfaCo">{{cite encyclopedia |last1=Everett|first1=Dianna |entry=Alfalfa County |entry-url=http://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry.php?entry=AL007 |encyclopedia=Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture |publisher=Oklahoma Historical Society |access-date=May 27, 2016|date=2009}}</ref> Cherokee has one high school. The school mascot is the Cherokee Chiefs.<ref name="CPS">{{cite web|title=Cherokee Chiefs - Home|url=http://cherokee.k12.ok.us/|website=Cherokee Public Schools|access-date=May 9, 2016}}</ref> ===National Register of Historic Places designations=== Cherokee is the home of several sites listed on the [[National Register of Historic Places]] (NRHP), including the [[Cherokee Friends Church]], constructed in 1919, and the [[Cherokee IOOF Lodge No. 219]], built in 1931. Other Cherokee sites listed with the NRHP are the Farmers' Federation Elevator (ca. 1917), the Alfalfa County Courthouse (ca. 1921), the Cherokee National Guard Armory (ca. 1936), and the Hotel Cherokee (ca. 1929) - which currently serves as the county history center.<ref name="NRHP">{{cite web|title=National Register of Historic Places|url=http://focus.nps.gov/nrhp/Download?path=/natreg/docs/All_Data.html|website=National Register Information System database download center (Cherokee, Oklahoma)|publisher=National Park Service U.S. Dept. of the Interior|access-date=May 5, 2016|archive-date=May 25, 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160525191812/http://focus.nps.gov/nrhp/Download?path=%2Fnatreg%2Fdocs%2FAll_Data.html|url-status=dead}}</ref>
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