The Red River
Source: The Handbook of Texas Online
The Red River is in the Mississippi drainage basin and is one of two Red Rivers in the nation. It is the second longest river associated with Texas. Its name comes from its color, which in turn comes from the fact that the river carries large quantities of red soil in flood periods. The river has a high salt content. The Spanish called the stream Río Rojo, among other names. It was also known in frontier times as the Red River of Natchitoches and the Red River of the Cadodacho (the Caddo Indians). Randolph B. Marcy and George B. McClellan identified the Prairie Dog Town Fork as the river's main stream in 1852.
If one accepts their judgment the total
length of the Red River is 1,360 miles, of which 640 miles is in
Texas or along the Texas boundary. The drainage area of the
river
in Texas is 30,700 square miles. In 1944 Denison Dam was
completed on the Red River to form Lake Texoma, which extends
into Grayson and Cooke counties, Texas, and Marshall, Johnson,
Bryan, and Love counties, Oklahoma, and was once the
tenth-largest reservoir in the United States. Principal
tributaries of the Red River, exclusive of its various forks,
include the Pease and Wichita rivers in north central Texas, the
Sulphur River in Northeast Texas, and, from Oklahoma, the
Washita. The Ouachita is the main tributary in its lower course.
The Red River of Texas heads in four main branches: the Prairie
Dog Town Fork, Elm Creek or the Elm Fork, the North Fork, and
the
Salt Fork. Water from the river's source in Curry County, New
Mexico, forms a channel, Palo Duro Creek, in Deaf Smith County,
Texas, which joins Tierra Blanca Creek northwest of Canyon to
form the Prairie Dog Town Fork of the Red River. This main
channel flows east through Palo Duro Canyon, then across the
rest
of the Panhandle.
The Prairie Dog Town Fork forms Palo Duro Club Lake and Lake Tanglewood in Randall County before it crosses southwestern Armstrong and northeastern Briscoe counties. Out of the canyon and into broken country, it flows eastward across central Hall and Childress counties for 160 miles. When the Prairie Dog Town Fork crosses the 100th meridian at the eastern line of Childress County, its south bank becomes the state boundary between Texas and Oklahoma and thus the northern county line of Hardeman and Wilbarger counties.
Twelve miles northeast of Vernon the North Fork joins the Prairie Dog Town Fork to form the Red River proper (at 34°24' N, 99°32' W). Elm Creek, or the Elm Fork of the Red River, rises in northern Collingsworth County and drains into the North Fork of the Red River near the Greer-Kiowa county line in Oklahoma south of Altus Reservoir. The Salt Fork rises in north central Armstrong County, crosses part of Oklahoma, and joins the Prairie Dog Town Fork at the extreme northern point of Wilbarger County, Texas, sixteen miles northwest of Vernon.
At this junction an ancient buffalo trail and the Western Trail once crossed the stream. Below the junction of the North Fork and the Prairie Dog Town Fork, the Red River proper continues to mark with its south bank the state line between Texas and Oklahoma and thus forms the northern county line of Wilbarger, Wichita, Clay, Montague, Cooke, Grayson, Fannin, Lamar, Red River, and Bowie counties.
The river becomes the state line between Texas and Arkansas at the northeastern corner of Texas. Afterward, it leaves Texas and enters Arkansas, then continues eastward, forming the northern boundary of Miller County, before turning south-southeast to form the eastern boundary of the county. It then flows southeast across Louisiana.
It forms the line between Caddo and
Bossier parishes and then proceeds southeast across Red River
and
Natchitoches parishes, forms portions of the lines between
Natchitoches and Grant and Grant and Rapides parishes, crosses
northeastern Rapides and northwestern Avoyelles parishes, forms
parts of the lines between Avoyelles and Catahoula, Avoyelles
and
Concordia, and Concordia and Pointe Coupe parishes, and finally
reaches its mouth (at 31°01' N, 91°45' W) on the
Mississippi
River forty-five miles northwest of Baton Rouge and 341 miles
above the Gulf of Mexico. Though the river once emptied
completely into the Mississippi, more recently a part of its
water at flood stage flows to the Gulf via the Atchafalaya.
In the summer of 1541 the Coronado expedition explored the upper
reaches of the Prairie Dog Town Fork in Palo Duro and Tule
canyons. In the summer of 1542 the Moscoso expedition crossed
the
Red River in Louisiana on its way into East Texas. In 1690
Domingo Terán de los Ríos crossed Texas from
southwest to
northeast and reached the Red River, possibly as far down as the
great raft and the Caddo Indian settlements in the area of
present Texarkana. French traders used the river as an approach
to establish a lucrative trade with the Caddos and associated
tribes by the early eighteenth century.
Farther up the river the Taovaya Indians had villages near the site of Spanish Fort in what is now Montague County, villages that in the middle eighteenth century were under French influence and flew a French flag. Diego Ortiz Parrilla, in charge of a Spanish punitive expedition, was defeated at the villages in 1759. In 1769 Athanase de Mézières was appointed lieutenant governor of the Natchitoches District with jurisdiction over the Red River valley. He was to suppress the traffic in stolen horses and Indian captives centered in the Taovaya villages, whose inhabitants by 1772 were trading with Englishmen from the east and Comanches on the High Plains.
In 1778 Mézières visited the
Red
River villages and proposed a Tlascalan Indian settlement among
them. Neither this proposal nor a suggestion in 1792 that a
Spanish mission be built on the Red River was carried out. In
1841 the Texan Santa Fe expedition mistook the Wichita River for
the Red River. In 1852 Randolph Barnes Marcy commanded an
exploring expedition to the headwaters of the Canadian and the
Red rivers, and a year later published a report on the trip,
Exploration of the Red River of Louisiana in the Year 1852. The
Red River War of 1874-75 ended Indian hostilities in the area.
The Red River has been a boundary almost since the first
Europeans came to the area. In the 1700s the river was generally
regarded as the dividing line between France and Spain, and a
royal cedula in 1805 proclaimed the river the northern and
eastern boundary of the Spanish province of Texas. After the
Louisiana Purchase by the United States, several expeditions
were
sent up the Red River to explore that tributary of the
Mississippi, and a struggle began between the United States and
Spain over where the boundary should be.
In 1804-05 William Dunbar explored the river as far up as the mouth of the Washita. In 1805 Dr. John Sibley supplied the United States with a detailed description of the area up the river and westward as far as Santa Fe, New Mexico. The Red River was again formally set forth as the northern boundary of Texas in the Adams-Onís Treaty of 1819. This treaty, as ratified by Spain and the United States in 1821 and by Mexico in 1822, established the Red River as the southwestern boundary of Louisiana-as far northwest as the 100th meridian, "as laid down on the Melish Map."
Illegal infiltration continued across
the river into Texas until the opening of Anglo-American
colonization in 1821, when the river became the thoroughfare by
which many pioneer settlers moved into Texas. Others came down
the military road to Fort Towson and crossed the river at
Jonesborough and Pecan Point. Many settlers along the river
raised cotton in the rich blackland of Northeast Texas, despite
its tendency to overflow, and the Red River County area was
sufficiently settled to send delegates to the Convention of
1836.
The Republic of Texas recognized the Red River as a boundary
when, in an act of December 19, 1836, Congress made the eastern
boundary coterminous with the western boundary of the United
States, as fixed by the treaty of 1819. The area between the
true
100th meridian and the 100th meridian according to the Melish
Map
extended from the Red River north to 36°30" latitude and
was more than 100 miles in width, embracing an area of 16,000
square miles.
According to strict construction of the treaty of 1819, this strip belonged to Texas. The Supreme Court of the United States, however, on March 16, 1896, held that Texas was stopped from claiming this strip, for the following reasons: (1) In the Compromise of 1850, wherein Texas ceded all territory north of 36°30" latitude and west of the 100th meridian, Texas had agreed to the true meridian and not the Melish meridian. (2) The true 100th meridian had been made the eastern boundary of Lipscomb, Hemphill, and Wheeler counties when they were legally formed. (3) The true 100th meridian as ascertained had been acquiesced in, recognized, and treated as the true boundary by various acts of Texas, and both governments had treated it as the proper boundary in the disposition they made of the territory involved. The view was virtually conceded as to all the strip, except for 3,840 square miles east of the true 100th meridian and between the forks of the Red River.
The United States contended that the line following the course of the Red River eastward to the 100th meridian met the meridian at the point where it intersected the lower fork of the Red River; Texas contended that her boundaries extended along the Red River to the point where the upper fork intersected the 100th meridian. In other words, the question was which was the main fork of the Red River. The Supreme Court held that the disputed territory belonged to the United States. The decision, known as the Greer County case, resulted in the loss from Texas to what is now Oklahoma of 1,511,576 acres.
A quarter of a century later another
argument between Texas and Oklahoma occurred when oil was
discovered in the bed of the river. With the extension of the
Burkburnett Townsite pool, known as the Northwest Extension, it
was discovered that a part of the pool lay in the bed of the Red
River. This brought up the old question of Indian headright
titles and caused a controversy that reached the Supreme Court
and resulted in fixing the boundary of Texas at the bluff on the
Texas side. Militia of both Texas and Oklahoma, together with
the
Texas Rangers, engaged in several battles. The bridge was
burned,
oilfield equipment destroyed, and property confiscated.
The Red River has been significant also in commerce and
transportation. Though its variable current and quicksands
menaced settlers, gateways into Texas were established at Pecan
Point and Jonesborough in Red River County, Colbert's Ferry and
Preston in Grayson County, and Doan's Crossing in Wilbarger
County. Indian trading posts on the river became the termini of
important trails. In 1836 Holland Coffee had a post on the
Oklahoma side at the mouth of Cache Creek; in 1837 he settled at
Preston Bend in what is now northern Grayson County, Texas.
Abel Warren had a post in northwestern Fannin County in 1836, one on the Oklahoma side of the river near the mouth of Walnut Creek in 1837, and a later post at the mouth of Cache Creek. The Central National Road of the Republic of Texas was surveyed to reach the Red River six miles above Jonesborough at Travis G. Wright's landing, then the head of navigation on the Red River. In 1853 Colbert's Ferry was opened across the river in northern Grayson County for the route that was subsequently used by the Butterfield Overland Mail, the partial direction of which had been determined by Randolph B. Marcy in his exploration of the Red River in 1852. Early crossings were made at Rock Bluff, Doan's Crossing, and Colbert's Ferry.
As far as navigable, the river provided an outlet to New Orleans from Northeast Texas, and it became a highway for cotton, farm products, and eventually cattle boats. Sternwheelers, sidewheelers, and showboats plied the river alongside keelboats and pirogues. Before the railroad era, steamboats regularly navigated the Red River from New Orleans to the site of present Shreveport, but navigation of the upper river was hampered by the "great raft," a mass of driftwood and trees that obstructed the channel for seventy-five miles.
In 1834-35 Capt. Henry M. Shreve
removed the raft, but the river was not kept clear, and by 1856
the logjam again obstructed the river for thirty miles above
Shreveport, backed up the waters of Big Cypress Creek to form
Caddo Lake, and so made Jefferson the principal riverport of
Texas until the removal of the raft again in 1874.
With the westward movement of the frontier and the establishment
of the cattle trails to the north, the Red River became an
obstacle to cross on the way to market. Cowboys relied on
well-used crossings such as Ringgold, Red River Station, and
Doan's Crossing. Above Clay County the Red River provides
recreational use only in periods of heavy run-off. The Wichita
joins the Red River in Clay County, and from this point
downstream the river is used for recreation year-round, though
quicksand is common.
From Denison Dam at Lake Texoma to
Arkansas the river flows through remote, wild country. The
Ouachita National Forest and a portion of the Kisatchie National
Forest of Louisiana lie within the Red River basin. As a
boundary, the Red River remained in dispute as late as 1987. See
also BOUNDARIES.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Peter Zachary Cohen, The Great Red River Raft
(Niles, Illinois: Whitman, 1984). Harry Sinclair Drago, Red
River
Valley (New York: Clarkson-Potter, 1962). Carl Newton Tyson, The
Red River in Southwestern History (Norman: University of
Oklahoma
Press, 1981). C. A. Welborn, History of the Red River
Controversy
(n.p.: Nortex, 1973).
Diana J. Kleiner
This page was last updated January 9, 2014.