Holding the Claim
Introduction
Text-to-speech Audio
Sculpture depicting a land rush settler camping out with his horse to stake his land claim. Part of a series of sculptures by Harold T. "H" Holden depicting Cherokee Strip history.
Images
Holding the Claim
Holding the Claim plaque
Backstory and Context
Text-to-speech Audio
This public sculpture depicts a settler camped out with his horse to stake his land claim. A series of bronze reliefs and accompanying interpretive signs depict an Indigenous "Plainsman," "Chisholm" representing the "era of the cattle trails," a cowboy "Wrangler," an Oklahoma land rush "Boomer," and a "Pioneer" driving a horse-drawn plow and seeking to "prove up" his claim. There also is an oil worker "Dressing the Bit."
The monument and accompanying relief plaques were sculpted by Harold T. "H" Holden, who grew up in Enid. Holden attended Oklahoma State University and the Texas Academy of Art in Houston. He was elected into membership in the Cowboy Artists of America in 2012.
It is the fourth in a series of monuments that "H" was commissioned to sculpt to depict the history of the Cherokee Strip in Oklahoma and Kansas. It is a companion to "Boomer," the first of the series located outside the Cherokee Strip Conference Center in Enid, which also is depicted in the "Boomer" plaque accompanying "Holding the Claim." Newkirk, Perry, and Ponca City, Oklahoma, also erected monuments marking the centennial of the settlement of the Cherokee Strip.
Sources
Harold T. Holden--Western Artist. Accessed February 9th, 2024. https://hholden.com/index.cfm.
Harold T. Holden, Cowboy Artists of America. Accessed February 9th, 2024. https://cowboyartistsofamerica.com/harold-t-holden/.
Prescott, Cynthia Culver. Pioneer Mother Monuments: Constructing Cultural Memory. Norman, Oklahoma. University of Oklahoma Press, 2019.
Photo by Cynthia C. Prescott
Photo by Cynthia C. Prescott
Photo by Cynthia C. Prescott
Photo by Cynthia C. Prescott
Photo by Cynthia C. Prescott
Photo by Cynthia C. Prescott