McGee Creek (Oklahoma)

Last updated

McGee Creek is a tributary of Muggy Boggy Creek, an important waterway in southeastern Oklahoma. It flows primarily in Atoka County, Oklahoma. Muddy Boggy Creek, in turn, flows into the Red River of the South.

Contents

Headwaters and tributaries

McGee Creek's headwaters may be traced to various points north and west of the unincorporated community of Wesley, Oklahoma. Wesley is located in northwestern Atoka County, Oklahoma. From there it flows in a generally southeasterly direction toward its confluence with Muddy Boggy Creek.

Tributaries, from south to north, include Medicine, Blue, Cat, Potapo, Panther, Bog Springs, Bear, Bugaboo, Little Caney, Grassy, Greasy, Ray, Ingersol, Doyal, and Nolleytubby creeks.

No information regarding the length of the creek, volume of water it carries, or officially determined point of origin, if any, is available. [1]

Watershed characteristics

McGee Creek and its tributaries flow through Sharp Hollow, Ray Hollow, Whiskey Hollow, Wildcat Canyon, and Bugaboo Canyon before reaching McGee Creek Lake, as well as through McGee Valley (as the western end of Jacksfork Valley is known), which is thought to be named for the creek. Two hollows—Grassy Hollow and Prairie Hollow—are now submerged beneath McGee Creek Lake.

The terrain of the McGee Creek watershed is very rough, hilly and isolated. This geographical characteristic means the region has few roads and is sparsely populated. Large portions of the watershed are now occupied by McGee Creek Lake and the McGee Creek State Park, McGee Creek State Natural Scenic Recreation Area, and McGee Creek Wildlife Management Area which surround it.

Protected areas surround the lake on all sides. McGee Creek Wildlife Management Area covers 10,000 acres. Terrain within the WMA ranges from steep to moderately steep. The wildlife management area surrounds the western arm of the lake. The adjacent state natural scenic recreation area, also called the Bugaboo Canyon natural scenic area, consists of approximately 8,900 acres. It surrounds the eastern arm of the lake. [2]

Impoundment

McGee Creek is impounded by McGee Creek Lake. Groundbreaking ceremonies were held on July 10, 1982, and the project was dedicated on August 22, 1986. The lake was built to help establish flood control in the Muddy Boggy and Red River basins, and to supply the city of Oklahoma City with water. Water from the lake reaches the state capital via an 18-mile-long aqueduct to Atoka Lake, from which it is piped to the Oklahoma City metropolitan area.

McGee Creek reservoir consists of two major arms: an eastern arm, which is the flooded valley of McGee Creek, and a western arm, which is the flooded valley of Potapo Creek.

The reservoir extends about 14 miles up McGee Creek and about 12 miles up Potapo Creek. Its shoreline measures 80.30 miles, and its volume is 100,146 acre feet. The lake's maximum depth is 103.50 feet and its surface area is 3,709 acres.

The lake dam is 1,968.5 feet long and 160.7 feet high. The dam was built one mile below the confluence of McGee and Potapo creeks and 3.4 miles above McGee Creek's confluence with Muddy Boggy Creek. In addition to the dam, a significant dike was constructed to block several small "saddles" on the west side of the reservoir rim. This dike is 4,800 feet long and 59 feet high. [3]

History

French fur trappers and traders named the most significant rivers and waterways in eastern Oklahoma during the 1700s. Several, such as the Poteau River and Kiamichi River, retain their original names. The French are thought to have called Muddy Boggy Creek the Vazzures. This was a corruption of the French word vaseaux, which meant boggy or "miry", because of the deep mud or mire in the channel bottom. Later, English-speaking traders named the stream, using the English translation. [4] Many years later Choctaw Indians, who reestablished the Choctaw Nation in the region beginning in the 1830s, found that fish and game remained abundant along McGee and Muddy Boggy creeks, and considered the area a prime hunting ground. [5]

No French name is known to have been assigned to McGee Creek, and it is possible they considered it as merely an extension of the Vazzures. The name “McGee Creek” first appears on official maps during the late 1890s, along with those of its principal tributaries. [6]

Its present-day name is thought to be derived from that of local farmer Charles McGee, who lived on the bank of the creek during the latter days of the Indian Territory. His farm, located in what one local resident at the time called “rich bottom land”, produced several hundred bushels of corn, Irish potatoes, and sweet potatoes each year. [7]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pushmataha County, Oklahoma</span> County in Oklahoma, United States

Pushmataha County is a county in the southeastern part of the U.S. state of Oklahoma. As of the 2020 census, the population was 10,812. Its county seat is Antlers.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Atoka County, Oklahoma</span> County in Oklahoma, United States

Atoka County is a county located in the U.S. state of Oklahoma. As of the 2020 census, the population was 14,143. Its county seat is Atoka. The county was formed before statehood from Choctaw Lands, and its name honors a Choctaw Chief named Atoka. The county is part of Choctaw Nation reservation lands.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Atoka, Oklahoma</span> City in Oklahoma, United States

Atoka is a city in and the county seat of Atoka County, Oklahoma, United States. The population was 3,107 at the 2010 census, an increase of 4.0 percent from the figure of 2,988 in 2000. As of 2021, the population has grown to 3,188.

McGee Creek Reservoir is a reservoir in Atoka County, Oklahoma. It impounds the waters of McGee Creek and several smaller streams, including Potapo, Panther, Little Bugaboo, Bear, Blue, Mill, and Crooked creeks, all of which are tributaries of Muddy Boggy River. According to the Bureau of Reclamation (BuRec), the reservoir was designed to extend 14 miles (23 km) up McGee Creek and 9 miles (14 km) up Potapo Creek when the water is at "conservation level.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kiamichi River</span> River in Oklahoma, United States

The Kiamichi River is a river in southeastern Oklahoma, United States of America. A tributary of the Red River of the South, its headwaters rise on Pine Mountain in the Ouachita Mountains near the Arkansas border. From its source in Polk County, Arkansas, it flows approximately 177 miles (285 km) to its confluence with the Red River at Hugo, Oklahoma.

Lane is an unincorporated community and census-designated place in Atoka County, Oklahoma, United States.

Farris is an unincorporated community in Atoka County, Oklahoma, United States. It lies east of the county seat of Atoka on Highway 3 near the county border. From 1914 to 2013, Farris had its own school district with a K-8 school, but after years of declining enrollment, controversies over the district's management, and an "F" rating from the Oklahoma State Department of Education in December 2012, the district voted to dissolve the school district and join the district in nearby Lane in early 2013. Students above the eighth grade attend Atoka High School in Atoka, some twenty miles west of Farris.

Boggy Depot is a ghost town and Oklahoma State Park that was formerly a significant city in the Indian Territory. It grew as a vibrant and thriving town in present-day Atoka County, Oklahoma, United States, and became a major trading center on the Texas Road and the Butterfield Overland Mail route between Missouri and San Francisco. After the Civil War, when the MKT Railroad came through the area, it bypassed Boggy Depot and the town began a steady decline. It was soon replaced by Atoka as the chief city in the area. By the early 20th century, all that remained of the community was a sort of ghost town.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Choctaw Country</span>

Choctaw Country is the Oklahoma Department of Tourism and Recreation's official tourism designation for Southeastern Oklahoma. The name was previously Kiamichi Country until changed in honor of the Choctaw Nation headquartered there. The current definition of Choctaw Country includes ten counties, being Coal, Atoka, Bryan, Choctaw, McCurtain, Pushmataha, Le Flore, Latimer, Haskell, and Pittsburg counties. The department created the term as one of six designated travel regions within the state. However, other definitions of Southeastern Oklahoma may include additional counties.

The Battle of Middle Boggy, also known as the 'Battle of Middle Boggy River or Battle of Middle Boggy Depot, took place on February 13, 1864 in Choctaw Indian Territory, 4 miles (6.4 km) south of what is now Allen in Pontotoc County, Oklahoma. Advancing down the Dragoon Trail toward Fort Washita, Union Colonel William A. Phillips sent out an advance of approximately 350 men from the 14th Kansas Cavalry and two howitzers to attack a Confederate outpost guarding the Trail's crossing of Middle Boggy River. The Confederate force was led by Captain Jonathan Nail and composed of one company of the First Choctaw and Chickasaw Cavalry, a detachment of the 20th Texas Cavalry and part of the Seminole Battalion of Mounted Rifles. The outpost was about 12 miles (19 km) from Muddy Boggy Depot, which was held by the Confederates. The Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture says that the battlefield was 15 miles northeast of the depot, whereas the battlefield marker says the distance was 12 miles. The Confederate force at the outpost, consisting of 90 poorly armed men, were caught off guard when Willetts attacked them. Outnumbered and outgunned, the Confederates held off the Union cavalry attack for approximately 30 minutes before retreating to the rest of Lt. Col. John Jumper's Seminole Battalion, who were not at the main skirmish. The Confederates retreated 45 miles (72 km) southwest down the Dragoon Trail. The Union advance continued south toward Ft. Washita the next day, but when the expected reinforcements did not arrive Philips' Expedition into Indian Territory stalled on February 15, near old Stonewall.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Little River (Red River tributary)</span> River in Oklahoma and Arkansas, United States

The Little River is a tributary of the Red River, with a total length of 217 miles (349 km), 130 miles (210 km) within the Choctaw Indian Reservation in southeastern Oklahoma and 87 miles (140 km) in southwestern Arkansas in the United States. Via the Red, it is part of the watershed of the Mississippi River. Six large reservoirs impound the Little River and its tributaries. The drainage basin of the river totals 4,204 square miles (10,890 km2), 2,204 square miles (5,710 km2) in Oklahoma and 2,036 square miles (5,270 km2) in Arkansas. The Little River and its upper tributaries are popular for recreational canoeing and kayaking.

Muddy Boggy Creek, also known as the Muddy Boggy River, is a 175-mile-long (282 km) river in south central Oklahoma. The stream headwaters arise just east of Ada in Pontotoc County. It is a major tributary of the Red River in south central Oklahoma. Clear Boggy Creek is a major tributary which enters the Muddy Boggy at a location known as River Mile 24 in Choctaw County. The river is inhabited by over one hundred species of fish.

Clear Boggy Creek, also known as the Clear Boggy River, is a 132-mile-long (212 km) creek in southeastern Oklahoma that is a tributary of Muddy Boggy Creek.

Jumbo is an unincorporated community in western Pushmataha County, Oklahoma, United States, 10 miles north of Miller.

Jack's Fork County, also known as Jack Fork County, was a political subdivision of the Choctaw Nation of Indian Territory. The county formed part of the nation's Pushmataha District, or Third District, one of three administrative super-regions.

Johns Valley is a geographic feature and place name located in the Kiamichi Mountains in northwestern Pushmataha County, Oklahoma. The valley] is formally classified by geologists as a “basin” due to its complete encirclement by mountains.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pushmataha District</span>

Pushmataha District was one of three provinces, or districts, comprising the former Choctaw Nation in the Indian Territory. Also called the Third District, it encompassed the southwestern one-third of the nation.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pushmataha County, Sequoyah</span> Proposed U.S. political subdivision

Pushmataha County was a proposed political subdivision created by the Sequoyah Constitutional Convention. The convention, meeting in Muskogee, Indian Territory in 1905, established the political and administrative layout of a prospective U.S. state it called the State of Sequoyah.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Atoka County, Choctaw Nation</span> Former political subdivision of the Choctaw Nation

Atoka County was a political subdivision of the Choctaw Nation of Indian Territory, prior to Oklahoma being admitted as a state. The county formed part of the Nation's Pushmataha District, or Third District, one of three administrative and judicial provinces called districts.

References

  1. Per correspondence from the Oklahoma Water Resources Board dated April 6, 2023, the agency has no specific information regarding McGee Creek.
  2. “McGee Creek WMA.” Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation. https://www.wildlifedepartment.com/hunting/wma/southeast/mcgee-creek-wma. Accessed on April 11, 2023. "McGee Creek Project, Oklahoma." Bureau of Reclamation. Undated; circa 1981. A physical copy is on file in the Antlers Public Library in Antlers, Oklahoma.
  3. "McGee Creek [Lake]". Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation. https://www.wildlifedepartment.com/fishing/wheretofish/southeast/mcgee-creek. Accessed on April 11, 2023. "McGee Creek Project". U.S. Bureau of Reclamation. https://www.usbr.gov/projects/index.php?id=351. Accessed on April 11, 2023. "McGee Creek Project, Oklahoma." Bureau of Reclamation. Undated; circa 1981. A physical copy is on file in the Antlers Public Library in Antlers, Oklahoma.
  4. Wright, Muriel H. "Some Geographic Names of French Origin in Oklahoma." Chronicles of Oklahoma. Volume 7, Number 2, pp. 188-193.
  5. Interview with Louis Pierce, who lived on Boggy Bend in Atoka County, in 1937. Pierce mentions McGee Creek specifically. Other interviewees, including Aaron McFarland and W.H. Mangers, mention the Muddy Boggy region generally. Indian-Pioneer Papers, Western History Collections of the University of Oklahoma Libraries.
  6. “Map of Choctaw Nation, Indian Territory: Compiled from Official Records of the United States Geological Survey,” dated 1900, published by the U.S. Department of the Interior. It is not known whether the French named McGee Creek as well, or considered it a branch of the Vazzures.
  7. Interview with Wilburn Thompson, Indian-Pioneer Papers, Western History Collections of the University of Oklahoma Libraries. Thompson was a Choctaw Indian who lived at Bruno, southwest of McGee Creek. He was interviewed in 1937 regarding life during territorial times. No information is available regarding Charles McGee. He does not appear on the Final Roll of the Five Civilized Tribes, nor does he appear in federal census records taken after statehood.