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==History== ===Founding=== Wright City, formerly known as Bismark and Wright, is located {{convert|10|miles|km}} northeast of Valliant and {{convert|2|miles|km}} north of Little River on [[Oklahoma State Highway 98|State Highway 98]] in western McCurtain County. The Choctaw Lumber Company, a subsidiary of the Dierks Lumber and Coal Company, founded the town ''circa'' 1909 as the site for a major processing plant that utilized abundant timber harvested from the region's virgin forests.<ref name ="EOHC-WrightCity">[http://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry.php?entry=WR002 Westbrook, Cecelia. ""Wright City." ''Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture''.] Accessed October 11, 2018.</ref> At the time of its founding, the community now known as Wright City was located in [[Towson County, Choctaw Nation|Towson County]], a part of the [[Apukshunnubbee District]], one of three administrative super-regions comprising the Choctaw Nation. ===Etymology=== On March 24, 1910, a post office charter was issued for Bismark, a name chosen by the Dierks brothers, the company founders, for a Nebraska town where they formerly operated a lumber outlet. The name of the town and post office changed to Wright during [[World War I]] because of public association of the Bismark name with that of the former German chancellor, [[Otto von Bismarck]], despite the discrepancy in spelling.{{efn|George Shirk states that this change was made on September 13, 1918.<ref name="Shirk">[https://books.google.com/books?id=KpAmsIFdutAC&dq=shirk%2C+george+place+names&pg=PA267 Shirk, George H. ''Oklahoma Place Names''. pp. 24-5. University of Oklahoma Press. Norman.] {{ISBN|0-8061-2028-2}} 1974, Available on Google Books. Accessed October 11, 2018.</ref>}} The new name was chosen to honor William Wiley Wright, the county's first war casualty. On May 18, 1920, the name was altered to Wright City.<ref name ="EOHC-WrightCity"/> ===Company town=== The "company town" included a sawmill, planer, railroad maintenance shops, housing stores, a bank, hotel,The Choctaw motion picture theater, a high school with athletic teams known as the LumberJax, an ice factory, and provision for fire and police protection. The lumber conglomerate also provided land for construction of a school and churches. The company, then known as Dierks Forests, Inc., divested itself of residential and other properties unrelated to the primary mission on August 13, 1965. In 1966 the town incorporated and elected its first officials. No longer just a "mill town," citizens took the initiative to create an independent, distinctive municipality. A business district was developed, utilities were upgraded and expanded, and new schools, a community building, and a medical center were built.<ref name ="EOHC-WrightCity"/> In 1969, the Weyerhaeuser Company of Tacoma, Washington, purchased the Dierks's holdings, including the Wright City production complex and continued the operations, which remained the primary economic base of the community until March 2009 when all operations of the mill ceased due to low demand for lumber and the worsening economy. The town population initially was included in a large census tract and not counted separately until 1950 when the residents numbered 1,121. In the 1920s the population was estimated to be less than five hundred. In 1980 the count stood at 1,168 but by 1990 had decreased to 836.<ref name ="EOHC-WrightCity"/> At the turn of the twenty-first century the town had 848 residents. The 2010 census showed a further decline to 766. ==="Pig tale"=== In 1956, events in the city raised the eyebrows of newspaper readers around the country. A drought drove pig-herding squatters from nearby hills to release seven or eight hundred hogs - all of them "rail thin" and starving - to graze near the city. Razorbacks ate flower gardens and had to be kicked out of the drugstore. In the Methodist Church, a sermon was stopped by the noise of nine pigs fighting in the basement.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1298&dat=19560910&id=6tNNAAAAIBAJ&sjid=ZooDAAAAIBAJ&pg=4805,5509061 | title=The Free Lance-Star - Google News Archive Search }}</ref>
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