Drummond family (Oklahoma)

[1] The Victorian-style Fred and Adeline Drummond House was built in 1905 in Hominy, Oklahoma, by Frederick and Addie.

Some families sold their allotments to the Drummonds to cover the costs of their debt to the Hominy Trading Company.

[5] Michael Snyder, a professor at Oklahoma State University, argues that the Drummond's various business meant "they were kind of pulling money from the Osage in a lot of different ways" and that the three brothers “definitely made a lot of money” acting as guardians.

"[5] Strained relationships with family members and neighbor resentment towards Jack Drummond as an Osage County "land hog" led him in 1924 to start buying land in the opposite part of the state in Marshall County, Oklahoma.

Pope, a white rancher who had inherited one and a half headrights after his Osage wife Nah-me-tsa-he (who was thirty years his senior) died.

[10] In the 1930s Jack Drummond helped form a statewide cooperative marketing association so ranchers in the state could take advantage of government-backed loans.

[12] The show brought tourism to Pawhuska, Oklahoma, where sales tax revenue increased by 30–50% after the opening of Ree Drummond's Mercantile store.

The Osage County Board of Commissioners voted unanimously that the Drummonds' petition did not merit a hearing.