![]() Demographics Historical population CensusĪs of the census of 2010, there were 1,215 people, 468 households, and 321 families residing in the town. Oklahoma State Highway 3 leads southeast 34 miles (55 km) to Oklahoma City.Īccording to the United States Census Bureau, Okarche has a total area of 1.9 square miles (4.9 km 2), of which 1.6 acres (6,662 m 2), or 0.14%, is water. Route 81 leads south 14 miles (23 km) to El Reno and 16 miles (26 km) to Interstate 40, and 10 miles (16 km) north of Kingfisher. Okarche is located on the boundary of Kingfisher and Canadian counties. The Union Pacific Railroad now operates on the former Rock Island route. The Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad entered its final bankruptcy in 1975. Okarche now has four-lane divided highway access to neighboring communities, including the Oklahoma City metro area. The Northwest Highway ( OK-3) was opened as a gravel-surfaced road in 1939 and fully paved by 1947. When federal highway numbering was implemented in November 1926, the Meridian Highway through Okarche was designated US-81 and fully paved in the Okarche area by 1931. Bilingual worship would continue for about two decades. Worship and education was conducted principally in German until American entry into World War I in 1917. John's Lutheran Church was founded in 1892 and Holy Trinity Catholic Church in 1893. Catholic and Lutheran churches with schools were established as immigrants sought to keep faith and customs from the old country alive in their new home. Many had come to America in the wave of 1.5 million German immigrants to the United States in the 1880s and lived in states to the north such as Iowa, Nebraska, or Missouri before coming to Oklahoma Territory. The town's population hovered in the 400s for more than three decades after statehood had risen to over 1,200 by 2010.īy the late 1890s, German immigrants were a greater part of the population and German a widely used language of the community. ![]() The Southern Arapaho and Cheyenne Native American tribes had been relocated to Oklahoma from the northern Great Plains in the late 19th century. The name of the town is a portmanteau, derived from parts of three words, Oklahoma (OK), Arapaho (AR), and Cheyenne (CHE). The town was incorporated in 1905 – two years before statehood. Cheyenne and Arapaho lands were opened to settlement by land run on April 19, 1892. The Okarche post office was established June 28, 1890. The railway depot where Okarche was platted was completed at that time. Construction proceeded southward from Caldwell, Kansas, and was completed to Pond Creek by April 1889 and to El Reno in January 1890. Railway assets would be turned over to the CRI&P in June 1890. The Chicago, Kansas and Nebraska Railway was given a 100-foot (30 m) right of way through the territory and authorized to take additional right of way for stations every 10 miles (16 km) of track. Congress approved construction of a railroad through Indian Territory. Highway 81 would follow roughly the same route through Oklahoma Territory. Later the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad and the state road which would become the Meridian Highway and U.S. ![]() įrom 1867 to 1884, cattle were driven through the area on the Chisholm Trail from Texas to railheads in Kansas. The site of the future town of Okarche was just inside the eastern border of the Cheyenne and Arapaho reservation. After the Civil War, parts of Indian Territory were designated for resettlement of Plains Indians. The location was in territory assigned to the Creek and Seminole people when removal of tribes from the southeastern United States began in 1830. Okarche is located on land that, before 1830, was within the historic area of the Wichita people. ![]() The population was 1,215 at the 2010 census, a 9.5 percent increase from 1,110 at the 2000 census. Okarche ( / oʊ ˈ k ɑː r tʃ i/ oh- KAR-chee ) is a town in Canadian and Kingfisher counties in Oklahoma, United States, that is part of the Oklahoma City Metropolitan Area.
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