Only in Oklahoma: 'Alfalfa Bill' boldly fought a war with Texas
By
GENE CURTIS
7/7/2007
A delay in opening free
bridges across the Red
River between Texas
and Oklahoma touched off a
controversy in 1931 that
became known as the Red
River bridge war.
Before the issue was
settled, Oklahoma Gov.
William H. "Alfalfa Bill"
Murray had declared martial
law, created a military zone
extending into Texas,
assumed personal command
of his troops, defied a court
order and dared a federal
judge to cite him for contempt.
The controversy developed
after a court order delayed the
opening of the free spans built
by the two states to replace
privately owned toll bridges.
There wasn't much
controversy over Murray's
opening of the new free bridge
on U.S. 81 between Terral,
Okla., and Ringgold, Texas.
And the new bridge on U.S. 77
between Marietta and
Gainesville, Texas, remained
closed because the approach
on the Texas side hadn't been
completed.
The war, fought mainly in
newspaper stories, involved
the new bridge on U.S. 69 and
75 between Durant and
Denison, Texas. That span
was the object of the
injunction against Texas Gov.
Ross Sterling and his highway
commission obtained by the
Red River Bridge Co., which
claimed the Texas Highway
Commission had promised to
buy the span for $60,000.
In response to the
injunction, Sterling ordered
all three new bridges
barricaded on the Texas side,
pending settlement of the
court action.
Within minutes after
Murray ordered the three
bridges opened on July 16, an
Oklahoma Highway
Department crew had gone to
the Texas side of the Terral
bridge and removed an old
truck that barricaded the
highway, acting on the theory
that Oklahoma owned half the
span lengthwise across the
stream. Before evening, the
action had been duplicated at
Denison.
Asked about possible
resistance at the Denison
span, Murray said, "There is
an old watchman there and I
have instructed that he not be
hurt. I directed highway
officials to take his
pocketknife and chewing
tobacco away from him."
Murray also wired the
Texas governor to advise him
of his removal of the
barricades and plans to have
his highway department tear
up the approaches to the toll
bridges.
"I feel you have extended
your authority beyond all
reason," Sterling responded,
and he directed Texas
Rangers to erect new
barricades at the
Denison-Durant free bridge,
where they stood guard
armed with shotguns in front
of a sign advising motorists
that the bridge had been
ordered closed by the U.S.
District Court.
But Murray claimed that
Oklahoma had jurisdiction
over the Texas banks of the
river by virtue of old Spanish
treaties, claiming the U.S.
Supreme Court had upheld
that authority. "So I wasn't
exceeding my authority,"
Murray said in response to
Sterling's criticism.
Several days later, Murray
activated some units of the
National Guard, placed the
approaches leading up to the
toll bridge under martial law
-- an order he extended into
Texas the next day -- and set
up a military camp near the
bridge.
An order obtained by
owners of the toll bridge in
federal court in Muskogee
didn't faze the colorful
Murray, who, wearing a large
hog-shooter pistol on his belt,
assumed personal command
of his troops.
When the judge threatened
Murray with a contempt
citation, Murray responded,
"He can't cite me; let him try
it." He also threatened to call
out the entire Oklahoma
National Guard if the federal
court interfered.
Guard Lt. Col. John
MacDonald told an attorney
he would accept service of a
federal court order but he
would pay no attention to it.
"I am taking orders from
only one man and he is the
governor of Oklahoma," the
colonel, also a state senator
from Durant, told the lawyer.
The governor said he would
keep the free bridges open
despite any order from any
court or other authority
except President Herbert
Hoover.
The controversy ended on
Aug. 6 after the Texas
Legislature, in special session,
passed a law allowing the Red
River Bridge Co. to sue the
state and the federal court
dissolved the injunction that
touched off the "war."
That free bridge served the
public well until 1995, when it
was dynamited and traffic was
shifted to a new bridge -- also
free.
Photographic research
by Rachele Vaughan
Gene Curtis 581-8304
gene.curtis@tulsaworld.com
Gene Curtis is a former managing
editor of the Tulsa World.
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