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==History== ===Hangman's Tree=== The area was a part of "No Man's Land" or the [[Oklahoma Panhandle]], where no laws from other states could reach. Outlaws could commit crimes in [[Kansas]] or [[Texas]], ride across the border and live protected from the laws. Violence, claim jumping, and thieving forced the honest settlers to form vigilance committees. Gate and Neutral City (located approximately five miles west) had carved a niche in badman history with hot lead. Low regard for property and human life was rampant across this lawless land. Between Gate and Neutral City, (the most wicked towns in No Man's Land) three trees grew, one of which had a low hanging branch. This branch was used in rendering the "hanging" punishment. The tree measured 15 ft. in circumference, is approximately 40 ft. tall, There is no record of how many were hanged on the tree but one man said he witnessed three of them at once. The accused was in place with a rope around his neck when one of the men drew a line in the sand with the heel of his boot stating "If anyone objects let him step across the line." One man by the name of G. C. (Nease Maphet) stepped across the line.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|title=A History of Beaver County, Vol. 2 (Beaver, Okla.: Beaver County Historical Society, Inc., 1971).|publisher=Beaver Co. Historical Soc, Inc.|year=1971|location=Beaver, OK|pages=147, 148, 149, 150, 151, 152}}</ref><ref name=":1">{{Cite web|url=http://www.bvrcowchipnews.com/history_news.htm|title=History News|website=www.bvrcowchipnews.com|access-date=December 30, 2017}}</ref> === Silica mine === Volcanic ash is believed by geologists to have come from a volcano in north-central [[New Mexico]]. During the volcanic age, immense quantities of materials were thrown out of these volcanoes and the ash or dust was carried by the prevailing winds and collected in depressions or drifts in the same manner that snow does. There is evidence in the deposits that settled here that the ash settled into a lake, which accounts for the uniform quality of the main deposits, which became a hill. A canyon cut through the center of the deposit and exposed the deposit as cliffs. According to a certified analysis the Gate deposit is composed of 73% silica, 14% alumina and smaller amounts of iron, calcium, magnesium and alkalis.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" /> === Indian Battle === The hills on the south side are where the cavalry took their stand. Buttons from uniforms and shells they used have been found there. One man told about the battle he was a part of that drove the renegade of Indians back to the reservation they were assigned.<ref name=":0" /> === Old Gate === In 1886, with the establishment of a post office, Gate City came to being. In 1894, an application was filed to move the post office for the third time. It was moved 113 rods southeast, to where several business were established and the name was changed to just Gate. Here Gate grew until the railroad came, in 1910. By this time Gate had two livery stables, a hotel, barber shop, pool hall, harness shop, grocery, real estate, hardware stores, bank, doctor's office and drug store, Masonic hall, numerous churches, furniture store, funeral home, bakery, U.S. Land office, millinery shop, lumber yard, two black smiths and a feed mill. When the railroad bypassed the town, the businessmen moved the town to the railroad, the present site of Gate.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry.php?entry=GA020|title=Gate {{!}} The Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture|website=www.okhistory.org|access-date=December 30, 2017}}</ref>
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