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Hal Clark’s great-grandfather, Harry Clark (front, second from the left) stops for a meal during a cattle roundup in the 1880s. Courtesy photo


T


he land has a tendency to beckon those searching for a deeper purpose in life. For the early pioneers who abandoned the familiar and answered that call, sweat and sacrifice


turned open fields into a living legacy for future generations. One hundred years later, an Oklahoma farmer is tilling the


same dirt as his ancestor, a rancher is using the same brand as her great-grandfather and, as a point of honor, have the same blood pumping through their veins. At the end of 2015, the State Historic Preservation Office


(SHPO) at the Oklahoma Historical Society listed 1,482 properties families have owned and operated within the state for at least a century. “That is a significant number of families who made it through


dust bowls, the Great Depression, droughts and awful winters— things that today most of us can’t even begin to imagine,” Shea Otley, Oklahoma Centennial Farm and Ranch coordinator, says. Not only are these farming and ranching families important


to the state’s past, they are vital to the future of Oklahoma’s rural economy. For the SHPO, the Centennial Farm and Ranch Program award recipients are examples of the perseverance of agricultural families in Oklahoma.


Henry C. Hitch (left), rides in Pioneer Day, 1964. Photo courtesy of Joshua Gray/ Bumpin’ Fresh and Hitch Enterprises, Inc.


Ladd Hitch, 1979. Photo courtesy of Joshua Gray/ Bumpin’ Fresh and Hitch Enterprises, Inc.


12


George Simon Hawkins stands with his grandson Max Hurst. Courtesy photo


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