22 GHOSTLANDS
So much is gone now. Gone are the big petroleum companies
and  the     forests     of  derricks    as  the     vast    oil     fields  have    been
increasingly    depleted.   Gone    is  the Million Dollar  Elm.    Gone    are
the railroads,  including   where   Al  Spencer and his gang    pulled  off
the last    train   robbery in  Oklahoma,   in  1923.   Gone,   too,    are the
outlaws,    many    of  whom    died    as  spectacularly   as  they    lived.  And
gone     are     virtually   all     the     boomtowns   that    smoldered   from
morning  until   night.  Little  remains     of  them    but     shuttered
buildings   colonized   by  bats    and rodents and pigeons and spiders,
while   in  the case    of  Whizbang    there   is  nothing save    stone   ruins
submerged   in  a   sea of  grass.  Several years   ago,    a   longtime    resident
of  one of  the boomtowns   lamented,   “Stores gone,   post    office  gone,
train   gone,   school  gone,   oil gone,   boys    and girls   gone—only   thing
not gone    is  graveyard   and it  git bigger.”
Pawhuska    is  filled  with    its share   of  abandoned   buildings,  but it
is  one of  the few towns   that    remain. It  has a   population  of  thirty-
six hundred.    It  has schools,    a   courthouse  (the    same    one where
Ernest  Burkhart    was tried), and several restaurants,    including   a
McDonald’s. And Pawhuska    is  still   the capital of  the vibrant Osage
Nation, which,  in  2006,   ratified    a   new constitution.   The nation
maintains   its own elected government  and has twenty  thousand
members.    The majority    are scattered   in  other   parts   of  the state   or
the country,    but around  four    thousand    reside  in  Osage   County,
above   the underground reservation.    The Osage   historian   Louis   F.
Burns   observed    that    after   “only   shreds  and tatters remained”   of
