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Absaroka (proposed state)

Absaroka, (pronounced ab-SOR-o-ka), from the Crow word meaning “children of the large-beaked bird", named after the Absaroka Range, was an area in the United States, comprising parts of the states of Montana, South Dakota, and Wyoming, that contemplated secession and statehood in 1939. The region's complaints came from ranchers and independent farmers in remote parts of the three states, who resented the New Deal and Democratic control of state governments, especially the government of Wyoming. One of the leaders of the secessionist movement was A. R. Swickard, the street commissioner of Sheridan, Wyoming, who appointed himself "governor" and started hearing grievances in the "capital" of Sheridan.

In a craze for state secession felt by the public, state automobile license plates bearing the name were distributed, as well as pictures of "Miss Absaroka 1939".

The movement was unsuccessful and fairly short-lived. The chief record of its existence comes from the Federal Writers' Project, which included a story about the plan as an example of Western eccentricity.

Absaroka

Absaroka may refer to:

  • Absaroke or Absaroka, a Native American people also known as the Crow
  • Absaroka (state), parts of the states of Montana, South Dakota, and Wyoming, that contemplated secession and statehood in 1939
  • USS Absaroka (ID-2518), a steamer in the United States Navy
  • Absaroka Range, a sub-range of the Rocky Mountains in the United States of Montana and Wyoming
  • Absaroka sequence, a cratonic sequence that extended from the end of the Mississippian through the Permian periods
  • Absaroka County, the fictional location of Longmire (TV series)

Usage examples of "absaroka".

Captain Lasto had deposited the five of them in a large clearing on the west side of the Absaroka Range, within several hundred yards of the Lamar River.

He could see the meandering course of the Lamar River to the northwest and the Absaroka Range to the east.

Montana, Roy once hiked up Pine Creek Trail into the Absaroka Range, which overlooks Paradise Valley and the Yellowstone River.

The second consisted of information on the bid by Clean Mountain Enterprises to annex a large section of the Absaroka Range in Wyoming.

Captain Laslo had deposited the five of them in a large clearing on the west side of the Absaroka Range, within several hundred yards of the Lamar River.