top of page
Deer in the Red River Bottom Excellent I

How about  a ​

Scenic Tour

of ​Grandfield

and the

Big Pasture?

a Geneal Discussion
Grandfield Oklahoma is located smack-dab in the middle of what has been  known as the Big Pasture, since the mid-1800's. 480,000 acres fun and excitement. Come along as we take a scenic tour of the Big Pasture and learn about things to see and places to go. Interactive Maps are included like the main one below to help us find these amazing sites and locations. Come on, let's go!
139.JPG
Local Area Map
Like most maps on this website, this map is totally interactive. You may "drag" your location to any destination anywhere. There are similar maps that are simply an image, taken from this map that are not interactive but show locations which may be accessed here, by "dragging" the map to your destination.
Enjoy Incredible Dining Experiences at the incomparable "Morning Star Steak House," the outstanding "Morning Star Buffet," of the exceptional "Winner's Circle Bar & Grille!" How else could you know what you've been missing?

Kiowa Red River  Casino & Hotel

The Kiowa Red River Casino!
Kiowa Casino.JPG
Kiowa Casino 2.JPG
Kiowa Casino Dining 2.JPG
Kiowa Casino Dining 1.JPG
Kiowa Hotel.JPG
Kiowa Casino & Hotel Map

The

Comanche Red River Casino

Comanche Red River 1.png
The Comanche Red River Casino!
Aces.png
CRR Bar 3.png
CRR Red River Bar.png
CRR Hotel3.JPG
This is an interactive map! You can drag your location, zoom in or out and use the little man to go to a street view or...click on the button below to get directions...
Comanche Red River Casino Map
Cotton County Courthouse
(2012.088.17, Lewis A. Danner Collection, OHS).
Early Oklahoma Town Sites

Early Platted Towns - Cotton County

The federal government platted five townsites for the Big Pasture opening, Randlett, Eschiti, Ahpeatone, Quanah, and Isadore, with the latter two in present Tillman County (actually, Eschiti was also in Tillman County). Randlett is the only original town still incorporated. Other incorporated Cotton County towns are Devol (five- and-one-half miles east of Grandfield), Temple, and Walters (the county seat)(Oklahoma Historical Society, Cotton County, ibid).
Cotton County Court House.jpg
Randlett
Eschiti
Eschiti After the Fire.jpg

Eschiti after the 1908 fire, the Wichita Mountains can be seen in the background

Eschiti - 1907..."located on the north ½ of section 3 Township 4 south, Range 14 west I.M. The Government established a post office in Eschiti, October 31, 1907, with Hiram F. Cruble (Crable, disambiguation) as postmaster. Some frame buildings were erected by the pioneers who bought the lots at auction some months before the post office was established. Cheap, frame dwellings were built as times were “hard” following the panic of 1906" (Corwin, Hugh, Lawton Constiution, ibid), 1

Eschiti

the Location of Eschiti shown to the right. The Eschiti Methodist Church Cemetery as well as the Eschiti Municipal Cemetery are still in place and recognizable at ground level. One Mile east, a half-mile north and pass thru the existing Grandfield Memorial Cemetery. Travel one=quarter mile further east to visit a one-hundred-ten year old ghost town cemetery! Fascinating!
Eschiti Location.png
Ahpeatone
Ahpeatone Map.png

"Ahpeatone"

The Ahpeatone Methodist Church and Ahpeatone School can still be seen, one-hundred-fifteen-years after their founding. just follow the map to visit a time forgotten!
Early TIllman County Map.JPG
Quanah
While the Isadore School (district 213) operated 11-miles east and one-and-a-half miles south of Frederick (or 11 miles north and 8 1/2 miles west of today's Grandfield) the dream of consolidation for Isadore with Harmony and Cameron never transpired, rather all moved to Hollister in 1928. The Isadore Cemetery is all that remains. Are we starting to sense a theme here? OOOoooooooooo......BOO!
Isadore
Quanah started in 1906 seven miles west and 1 mile north of Grandfield. It was chartered with the opening for settlement of the Big Pasture area. It had no post office or train depot, and faded away not too long after it had started. Not even a cemetery remains...or maybe there are remains...let's find them, shall we?
Isadore and Quanah locations.png

Isadore

Quanah

The Big Pasture (OHS)

the Big Pasture

Lunch on the Suggs Ranch circa 1901.png

Lunch on the "Sugg's Ranch" OHS, ibid

Geronimo and Quanah.png
   Chiefs Quanah Parker & Geronimo
       The Big Pasture, approximately 480,000 acres bounded on the south by the Red River, was situated in present Comanche, Cotton, and Tillman counties. The Big Pasture served as a geographical, political, and economic link tying Indian communal landholding to the open-range cattle business and non-Indian settlement to Oklahoma statehood. In modern times, Native control of the land traces to the Quapaw, who ceded it to the United States in 1818. The Choctaw and Chickasaw accepted the area upon their removal in the 1820s and 1830s but lost it as a result of the Reconstruction Treaty of 1866. By the terms of the Medicine Lodge Treaty of 1867 a reservation that included the Big Pasture was set aside for the Kiowa, Comanche, and Apache. The land became part of Oklahoma Territory in December 1906 when it was sold by sealed bids to settlers in the last of several land openings dating to 1889. Topographically, the Big Pasture, at the eastern edge of the Great Plains, is comprised mostly of flat grasslands with wooded draws along two creeks, some of the last significant timber west to the foothills of the Rocky Mountains.
​
​
         The grasslands topography and the tract's location bordering Texas combined with frontier economics to initiate the designation "big pasture" for a wider area ostensibly under Kiowa-Comanche-Apache control. Beginning in the 1880s Texas cattle barons, including William Thomas Waggoner, Samuel Burk Burnett, C. T. Herring, E. C. Sugg, and others, leased grasslands for grazing from the agency in charge of the reservation. It was the heyday of profitability for the range cattle business and the twilight of the trail drives that had drovers and cowboys herding cattle from Texas across Indian country to railheads in Kansas. From 1892, under terms of the Jerome Agreement, the Kiowa-Comanche-Apache Reservation faced dismantlement, and opening to non-Indian settlement. However, it took until the turn of the twentieth century for the machinations of United States' tribal affairs to culminate with the land opening, by lottery, between July 9 and August 6, 1901. The government set aside the last remnants of the reservation, which came to be commonly called the Big Pasture, to be held by the tribes in common for their surplus cattle. Because the tribes did not need the surplus land, the government administered the continued leasing of the Big Pasture grasslands to Texas ranchers for the American Indian owners until 1906. The government periodically issued "grass payments" to the landowners at gatherings at the Anadarko Agency, where American Indians spent cash with traders and gave settlers a glimpse of Plains Indian and reservation life.
Spanning the turn of the century, land openings deposited settlers around the area, settlers and farmers clamored for the last scrap of Indian-controlled territory, and cattle barons became increasingly denigrated as "frontier aristocrats." Oklahoma statehood loomed, and the Big Pasture became a cauldron for a mix of struggles between Indian and white, cattleman and farmer, settler and ranger, that fed prejudice against commercial wealth. The anti-corporate sentiment was so strong that Oklahoma historian Edward Everett Dale, a cowboy and native of the region, concluded that a main root of Oklahoma populism had sprouted in the Big Pasture.
​
​
​
​
​
​
​
​
​
​
         Despite its obscurity, the Big Pasture's natural resources put it in the national limelight at least twice in the twentieth century. The area was the subject of the quarrel between Texas and Oklahoma regarding state boundaries, since the Red River was the south boundary of the Big Pasture as well as the point of contention over which state controlled what once was Greer County, Texas. Although the U.S. Supreme Court decreed the disputed land to be part of Oklahoma Territory in 1896, confusion over the precise boundary continued until 2000 when Congress, over the objections of the Kiowa, Comanche and Apache Intertribal Land Use Committee, approved the Red River Boundary Compact between the states.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
In April 1905 the Big Pasture became the stage for Pres. Theodore Roosevelt's wolf hunt with John R. ("Catch-'Em-Alive-Jack") Abernathy, (See images above) renowned for his ability to catch wolves with his bare hands. In 1906 the towns of Eschiti, Quanah, Isadore, Ahpeatone, and Randlett were platted in the Big Pasture proper. At the turn of the twenty-first century only Randlett survived. Other towns laying claim to the pasture area included Frederick and Davidson on the west, Walters and Temple on the east, and Grandfield and Devol, "the Gateway to the Big Pasture," in the south-central portion of the Big Pasture. U.S. Rep. John Hall Stephens of Vernon, Texas, wrote the legislation opening the Big Pasture to settlement. President Roosevelt signed it into law June 5, 1906. Over a six-day period in December of that year the Lawton land office of the Department of the Interior received 7,621 sealed bids totaling $2,286,300. Bids ranged from the minimum of $800 per quarter section to $7,376 bid by T. B. Best for a quarter section near the proposed Randlett townsite. Olive Jones, a woman, qualified as the first "entryman" on March 15, 1907, the first day the government accepted issued permits.
Richard Mize, OHS, ibid
IMG 9.1 Jack and Teddy Roosevelt.png
IMG 9.2 Teddy.PNG
IMG 9.3 Teddy.PNG
“It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does actually strive to do the deeds; who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat.”
― Theodore Roosevelt
A "rattler" the President killed!
the President and John (Catch-'em-Alive) Jack Abernathy
The President and "Rusty" (citation needed)
Cattle Barons Oklahoma.jpg
Iconic Image of Texas Cattle Barons, courtesy of the Texas Historical Society and the 6666-Ranch
Teddy Roosevelt's Wolf Hunt, 1905
Rock Restroom.JPG

Amazing Structures

Amazing Architecture
1 - Payne Filling Station Rock Building.
Rock Ticket Booth Football Field.JPG
Rock Filing Station c.1900
Rock Ticket Booth at the Football Field
HTC Grandfield Public Library 1946.jpg
The Grandfield Library 1948
Old Jail ~ 1910

The Old Jail - 1910

Cement Jail.jpg
Jail Best.JPG
Garage Made of Oil Cans

A Garage made of TIN CANS - Ripley's Believe-It-Or-Not!

Tin Can Garage.jpg
Live Music
146.JPG

Lake Jean Murray & Murray Park

Live Music, Food, and Rodeos

151.JPG
148.JPG
159.JPG
154.JPG
139.JPG
145.JPG
143.JPG
42.JPG
150.JPG
151.JPG
32.JPG
Rodeo Music.png
Rodeo!

Oh Yeah...Rodeo!!!

Free-Style Bull Fighting...No, Really...we ain't lyin'!

National Seniors Professional Rodeo

Association

NSPRA Patch.png
Turn n Burn poster.png
Rodeo Poster w Steves band add.JPG
Paul Birch Arena Sign.png
Rodeo USA logo.JPG
Rodeo Music.png
bottom of page