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===Founding to statehood=== Elk City's history dates back to the days immediately following the opening of the [[Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes|Cheyenne-Arapaho]] reservation in western [[Oklahoma Territory]] on April 19, 1892, when the first white settlers made their appearance. Prior to this time, many early ranchers had driven cattle over the [[Great Western Cattle Trail]] from [[Texas]] to [[Dodge City, Kansas]]; Elk City lies on the route of that trail. The creation of Elk City was an idea conceived by land promoters from [[Weatherford, Oklahoma]], when they learned that the [[Choctaw, Oklahoma and Gulf Railroad]] (CO & G) was coming to the area (in 1898, the CO & G Railroad completed its western route to Weatherford; beginning in 1901, it continued building west). They formed the Choctaw Townsite and Development Company. These men with great foresight determined that the area at the source of Elk Creek would be an ideal location for a town, so they came to the area to purchase lands from the homesteaders who had claims along the railroad. Probably the most important day in Elk City's history is March 20, 1901, the date the first lots were sold by the Choctaw Townsite and Development Company. By this time, hundreds of prospective purchasers had built a tent city. On that day, the townsite company sold $32,000 worth of property (about $870,000 in 2012 dollars) and continued doing a good business for some time thereafter.<ref name="elkcitychamber.com">{{cite web |url=http://www.elkcitychamber.com/history-of-elk-city |title=History of Elk City | elkcity |access-date=2007-09-19 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070702013050/http://www.elkcitychamber.com/history-of-elk-city |archive-date=2007-07-02 }}</ref> There is some confusion about how Elk City got its name. Elk City was so named because it is located at the [[river source|head]] of Elk Creek, which in turn was named by U.S. Army Captain [[Randolph B. Marcy]] who was leading an expedition to explore the [[Red River of the South|Red River]] in 1852. Marcy and his troops had left the [[Wichita Mountains]] and the waterway which he named Otter Creek during his exploration, and they were traveling northwest along the North Fork of the Red River. On May 31, in the official journal of the expedition, Marcy wrote about the productive soil, the dense grass, and the vertical red clay banks of a "bold running stream of good water." Continuing, he wrote, "From the circumstance of having seen [[elk]] tracks upon the stream we passed in our march today, I have called it 'Elk Creek'. I am informed by our guide that five years since, elk were frequently seen in the Wichita Mountains; but now they are seldom met with in this part of the country." Confusion also stems from the early post offices that served the residents of the town. Even though the town of Elk City has had only one name, its early settlers were served by a post office named Crowe, and later, one named Busch. Consequently, on many early maps of [[Oklahoma Territory]] the names of "'''Crowe'''" or "'''Busch'''" are seen instead of "'''Elk City'''". Finally, on July 20, 1907, shortly before statehood, the Busch Post Office had its name officially changed to Elk City Post Office. On August 13, 1901, the Choctaw, Oklahoma and Gulf Railroad (purchased in 1904 by the [[Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad]] in 1904) laid its last rail on the so-called "Choctaw Route", bringing rail access to Elk City. The first regular train service commenced seven days later on August 20, and city folk rejoiced, predicting that the dugouts, claim shacks, and prairie stables would soon disappear and be replaced by handsome residences, commodious barns, and granaries.<ref>{{cite web| url=https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/eqw10| title=Donovan L. Hofsommer, "The Wichita Falls and Northwestern Railway"| publisher=tshaonline.org| access-date=April 21, 2013}}</ref> By January 1902, Elk City had more than sixty businesses and a population exceeding 1,000.<ref name="elkcitychamber.com"/> Paving the streets with bricks also began in 1902.<ref name="elkcitychamber.com"/> Though not yet a year old, the town had become one of the largest in western Oklahoma. Even with two devastating fires (one on October 28, 1903, which destroyed more than a dozen businesses, and the other in March 1906 which burned sixteen businesses to the ground), Elk City continued to grow into a major transportation and commercial hub, and by statehood in 1907, the population had more than tripled to 3,000 people. The [[prairie]] community had become a [[boomtown]].
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