Located in
Garfield County in Allison Township, Garber lies on State Highways 16/74, three
miles north of their junction with U.S. Highways 64/412 and sixteen miles east
of Enid. Originally part of the Cherokee Outlet, the county opened to settlement
in September 1893 by land run. Homesteaders in Allison Township, surrounding
Garber, began raising wheat, vegetables, and livestock. Many residents were of
Bohemian (Czech) or German ancestry.
In October 1899
the Garber Town Company, owned by Milton C. and Burton A. Garber, platted the
town. Their father, Martin, had homesteaded in an adjacent township and operated
a store and post office. The brothers bought 180 acres near the Enid and Tonkawa
Railway (later the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railway), which built a
North Enid-to-Billings branch in 1899. A post office called McCardie had
functioned near the chosen site. The Garbers moved their enterprises to the new
town. The usual small-town, agriculture-oriented businesses soon appeared. By
1905 four grain e6levators served the area's prosperous wheat farmers. From 1899
the Garber Sentinel informed the residents, and the Free Press began publication
in 1949.
Petroleum development significantly
affected life in Garber. Nearby, drilling began as early as 1904-05. The Garber
Oil and Gas Company (partly owned by Burton A. Garber) actually brought in a gas
well in 1905. The Garber Rield, one of the more important and consistent in the
state, was opened in 1916 when the Hoy well came in at two hundred barrels per
day. Peak production came in November 1925, and by 1940 a well in Section 18,
T22N, R3W still held a state record for initial production, 27,000 barrels per
day. Oil-well supply companies set up yards in town to provide tools, derricks,
tanks, and other equipment. Booms happened again in 1925 and 1927, the latter
continuing through the 1930s. Three refineries operated by 1929. By 1920 the
boom had grown Garber to an unofficial population count of 2,200 (the U.S.
Census registered 1,446). The town attained status as a first-class city. The
oil industry made many Garberites wealthy and continued to provide residents
with employment and income, although the area's inhabitants still rely on wheat
and cattle.
Burton Garber, president of the Farmers State Bank and the
Garber and Company store, died in 1936. Milton C. Garber, a respected lawyer,
jurist, and newspaper publisher in Enid and Oklahoma member of the U.S. House of
Representatives from 1923 to 1933, died in 1946. George E. Failing, inventor,
established his tool and supply company in Garber in 1918.
Garber has always been a fairly substantial town.
The peak 1920 population declined slowly over the next half-century but climbed
from a low of 905 in 1960 to 1,011 in 1970, due to oil exploration. The 2000
census recorded 845 inhabitants, with over 3,000 people living within 15 minutes
of downtown Garber.
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