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Locality: Hugo, Oklahoma

Phone: +1 580-326-6630



Address: 309 N B St 74743 Hugo, OK, US

Website: www.friscodepot.org

Likes: 1019

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Frisco Depot Museum 27.05.2021

COVID-19 update: We have been closed since mid-April. We will begin to gradually open on November 6. For the remainder of the year, we will open to the public on Fridays and Saturdays, 10am to 4pm. Suggest that visitors wear masks although it is not required. Out of town visitors can call me at 580-743-6033 to schedule special tours at other times.

Frisco Depot Museum 08.05.2021

Just in case Notice:.. The violation of privacy can be punished by law. NOTE: Facebook is now a public entity. All members must post a note like this. If you do not publish a statement at least once, it will be tacitly understood that you are allowing the use of your photos, as well as the information contained in your profile status updates. I HEREBY STATE THAT I DO NOT GIVE MY PERMISSION. Copy and Re-post

Frisco Depot Museum 24.04.2021

RED RIVER RAFT. Before there were Indian settlers, or European explorers, or the United States, there existed the great Red River Raft. Origin of the raft remai...ns conjecture. The most widely accepted theory holds that floodwaters from the Mississippi River engulfed the mouth of the smaller Red, forcing large amounts of driftwood upstream. Repeated floods over thousands of years shoved together dislodged trees, scrubs, and earth into a logjam serpentining northward, creating natural debris during high tide, collecting huge quantities of it when the waters receded. Reports read as if witnesses struggled to describe what they saw. Thomas Freeman and Peter Custis, commissioned by Pres. Thomas Jefferson in 1806 to explore the southern part of the Louisiana Territory, found the great raft north of present Natchitoches, Louisiana, just below the mouth of Twelve-Mile Bayou. The men described an amalgamation of red cedar, cottonwood, and cypress trees covered with bushes, grass, and weeds so tightly bound that "[a] man could walk over it in any direction." The raft covered the entire width of the river and extended to the bottom of the channel. "An almost impenetrable mass," Freeman wrote in his journal, dammed the river. Later eyewitnesses estimated the great raft's length anywhere from eighty to 150 miles. Whatever the truth, and one can easily conclude the size varied over time, the immensity of the raft convinced Freeman that no amount of human effort could dislodge it from the river. Impossible or not, voices for westward expansion demanded the impossible be done. The U.S. Army estimated the cost of adequately supplying Forts Towson, Washita, and Arbuckle over land exceeded the costs of removing the raft. Other interests argued that the dammed river stifled commerce from northwestern Texas and Indian Territory down to the Gulf of Mexico, helped Indians dominate trade along the northern part of the Red River and, as a result, discouraged white settlement. Removal would promote white migration by uncovering thousands of fertile acres, now rendered useless, for agriculture. The federal government's first serious attempt at clearing the Red River began in 1833 when Capt. Henry M. Shreve, of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, and 159 men using Shreve's invention, the "snag steamboat," tore logs from the tail of the raft, causing them to float downstream. By 1836 Shreve triumphantly declared a cleared path of seventy-one miles. The captain included in his report a request for an additional thirty thousand dollars for boats to patrol against the raft's reforming. Experience taught that work was possible for only three, and possibly four, months out of the year. Heavy spring rains brought floodwaters crashing down stream, merging uprooted trees with old logs, reforming the raft. Conversely, by midsummer water levels were so low that the men found the going impossible. Congress chose to ignore Shreve's request, and by August 1839 the great raft had fought back, barring the Red River to travel. After that, the ability to resume the attack seemed to wane at the federal level. During the next thirty-two years the government spent more than $633,000 to fund schemes of dubious value. Several contractors attempted to either recreate what Captain Shreve had done, or dig a new main stream around the raft, or excavate reservoirs, all with little success. Workers died of disease and fever; many simply deserted. At times the river attacked the machinery with such viciousness that boats and cranes washed downstream. Perhaps Thomas Freeman had been right. Lt. E. A. Woodruff, also an army engineer, thought not. With congressional approval, he began a major attack on the raft in the spring of 1872. Woodruff utilized Shreve's snag boats and combined them with saw boats and crane boats to assault the tail of the great raft as Shreve had done in 1833. When boat crews could not smash into entanglements or saw them apart, men blew them into smaller pieces with nitroglycerine. Every day found the raft relinquishing itself, and success dismantling it came within a year. Woodruff was determined not to repeat the past mistake of allowing it to reform. Once they cleared the channel, engineers began digging reservoirs, dredging the main channel, and constructing dams to hold future floodwaters. Inspired by Woodruff's success, Congress appropriated funds to patrol the river with boats that could prevent the raft from reforming. By 1900 the Red River was permanently open for trade from Indian Territory to the Gulf. The great Red River Raft was gone.

Frisco Depot Museum 19.04.2021

MYSTERY....Teacher is Virginia Baines. Why are some of these kids the eventual HHS class of 1959 and some 1958?? Photos were always ONE class. She taught third grade at ROBERT E. LEE. Can anyone name every kid?

Frisco Depot Museum 31.03.2021

As of 3/21/2020, the museum will be closed due to the crona-virus epidemic. We have been advised to close all non-essential activities. Will re-post when the museum is re-opened for visitors. Norm Pence, Manager