The Falls of Wichita Falls

The Falls of Wichita Falls An Environmental History of the Red Rolling Plains - Plains Histories

Paperback (31 Mar 2023)

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Publisher's Synopsis

In Texas, Wichita Falls lies at the nexus of many strains of American environmental history. Covering Progressive Era land ethics, water management, boom and bust oil towns, colorful municipal boosters, and many other topics. The Falls of Wichita Falls analyzes a local history with dramatically national implications.

Beginning with Teddy Roosevelt's famous wolf hunt in Frederick, Oklahoma and covering the long twentieth century up through the emergence of Indian Casinos, Jahue Anderson's incisive book challenges the myth of rugged individualism as the central feature of the Red Rolling Plains cultural landscape.

Crucially, Anderson examines how local indigenous environmental knowledge was washed out by moonshot plans to irrigate a valley, a project that ultimately failed to improve living conditions. The dreams of an "irrigated valley" gave way to a cultural landscape of oil derricks, military installations, suburbs, and a complex system of reservoirs and pumping stations built on the Little Wichita River to bring water to people living in the Big Wichita River Valley.

The Falls of Wichita Falls sketches an environmental blueprint that encapsulates a thirsty city and its people, the commodification of natural resources, and the endemic ideological postures shaping how Americans attempt to subdue the land of the American west.

Book information

ISBN: 9781682831564
Publisher: Texas Tech University Press
Imprint: Texas Tech University Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 976.4745
DEWEY edition: 23/eng/20220715
Language: English
Number of pages: xiii, 204
Weight: 363g
Height: 229mm
Width: 152mm
Spine width: 13mm