Ghost Town
Guide to the Ghost Towns of
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Treasures Ghost Town USA Column Index for Oklahoma |
Oklahoma
is part of the Great Plains, and squats in the heart of the country, slightly
south of the geographic center of the United States. The plains of Oklahoma
were once the home for the Osage, Kiowa, Apache and Comanche. Then in 1803,
the Louisiana Purchase turned the area over to the United States. Not much
was done there, as the territory was protected by the federal government as a
homeland for the Native Americans. In
the 1830s, the "Five Civilized Tribes" of Native Americans were
forced from their homelands in the Georgia, Florida, and Carolina region, and
forced to walk to what became known as Indian Territory. After the Civil War ended,
cattle became big business in Texas, and many cattle trails reached out to
the north towards the railroads in Kansas. The Chisholm Trail was only one of
the many cattle trails that wound their way through the Indian Territory
between 1866 and 1889. The excellent grazing in the future state was noted by
the cattlemen, and they clamored for land to be opened up for them. The land remained closed
to non-natives, until 1885, when Congress allowed the president to begin
negotiations with some of the native nations to allow white settlement. On
April 22, 1889, the first land run began. Thousands of folks had lined up
waiting for the cannon blast, and their chance to get some free land. By the
end of the day, hours-old Oklahoma City had a population of nearly 10,000
people. Other sections of land were opened on September 21, 1891, April 19,
1892, September 19, 1893, and finally on May 23, 1895, the last major land
run occurred. These runs were followed
by the federal government’s splitting Indian Territory, which created
Oklahoma Territory on March 2, 1890. Additional land was opened for
settlement, and on November 16, 1907, Oklahoma Territory and the remains of
Indian Territory joined together, becoming the 46th state - Oklahoma. Oklahoma's ghost towns were
created by a multitude of economies. But agriculture, cattle, railroad
construction, and oil were the biggest contributors to the many hundreds of
lost towns that lie scattered across the Great Plains in Oklahoma. A few
towns are listed below. PLEASE NOTE: Where photos are indicated thusly (PHOTO!), please use your
browser’s “BACK” button to return to this page. More photos will be added over time. |
|
Grady
|
On the Union Pacific Railroad,
east of US 81, and eight miles north of |
ANTIOCH
|
Garvin
Co. |
On SH 74, seven miles
south of Maysville, seven miles north of |
ARTHUR
|
Stephens
Co. |
On SH 7, four miles west
of Velma and 16 miles east-southeast of |
BIG CANYON
|
Murray
Co. |
Four miles south of
Dougherty. In 1904 it was founded as
Crusher, the name changed in 1911 to Arbuckle, and in 1922 to |
BOGGY DEPOT
(1ST
SITE) |
Atoka
Co. |
15 miles west of Atoka
and 2.5 miles north of "modern" Boggy Depot. |
BRIDGEPORT
|
Caddo
Co. |
This class D ghost
town is located along the South Canadian River just north of I-40, just west
of EXIT 101 (US 281), 21 miles east of Weatherford. |
CENTERVILLE
|
Kiowa
Co. |
I don’t have a lot of
history of this place, but we visited in April 1975. (Info & photos coming soon)
|
CLEMSCOTT
|
Carter
Co. |
An oil camp in the
Healdton Oil Field. On SH 53, two miles east of the junction with SH 76, at a
point seven miles south of |
COX
|
Grady
|
An oil camp
established in 1927, 16 miles southeast of |
CONDITVILLE
|
Stephens
Co. |
At the junction of SH 76/29, in the northeast
corner of the county. |
Grant
Co. |
Today, silence
reigns in Deer Creek, another slowly fading class D agricultural town in See our DEER
CREEK page for additional
details and photos. |
|
ERIN
|
Garvin
Co. |
Two miles south of
Lindsay, south of the |
FORT
|
Garvin
Co. |
Shown on a 1938 map on
SH 7, five miles west of I-35 and eight miles west of |
FORT |
Murray
Co. |
1851-1869 military
post ruins located seven miles west of |
Washita Co. |
Thirteen miles west of
See our FOSS page for additional details. This is
one of the towns featured in my newest book, GHOST
TOWNS: Yesterday & TodayTM. |
|
GAS
|
Stephens
Co. |
Shown on the 1938 map
west of |
GENE AUTRY
|
Carter
Co. |
Located a mile south
of SH 53 at a point seven miles east of Springer. It was first called Lou in
1883, then |
HOXBAR
|
Carter
Co. |
At or near |
HUNTVILLE
|
Kingfisher
Co. |
Ten miles southwest of
Kingfisher. Class A |
MEERS
|
Comanche Co. |
This class D
gold mining camp is located in the |
OIL
|
Carter
Co. |
A Healdton Oil Field
camp on SH 76, five miles north of Healdton. |
OMEGA
|
Kingfisher
Co. |
It and nearby Alpha
were "twin" towns, named after the 1st and last Greek alphabet
letters. This class D town is still shown on current maps just east of the
county line, and a couple miles north of State Highway 3, due west of
Kingfisher. |
PARR
|
Grady
|
Founded in 1883, this
lost town is six miles east of |
PAVILION
|
Murray
Co. |
A trading post/spa located at a spring south of |
PICHER |
Ottawa
Co. |
This former zinc mining town in the northeastern corner was
declared a superfund site and has been abandoned and the Federal Government has
purchased the properties and evicted all occupants. For other recently departed ghost towns, visit our ANOTHER
ONE BITES THE DUST page. This is one of the towns
featured in my newest book, GHOST
TOWNS: Yesterday & TodayTM. |
SMACKOVER
|
Kay
Co. |
Class A
oil boom shanty town which started in February 1923, just south of the |
Texola
|
Beckham
Co. |
Located just east of the Texas/Oklahoma state line and less than a mile
south of I-40, this one-time Route 66 class D stopover
is no longer active. Here the ghosts
are more populous than living people, and the empty building, and ruins
reflect on memories from 80-some years ago. See our Texola page for more details |
WHITE
BEAD |
Garvin
Co. |
Seven miles west of |
WOODFORD
|
Carter
Co. |
A mile north of SH 53
at a point seven miles west of I-35, at a point 11 miles north of Ardmore. |
MORE INFORMATION
There
are over 50,000 ghost towns scattered across the For
more information on the ghost towns of E-mailers, PLEASE NOTE: Due
to the tremendous amount of viruses, worms and “spam,” out there, I no longer
open or respond to any e-mails with unsolicited attachments, OR messages on
the subject lines with “Hey”, “Hi”, “Need help”, “Help
Please”, “???”, or blank subject lines, etc. If you do send E-mail asking for
information, or sharing information, PLEASE
indicate the appropriate location AND
state name, or other topic on the “subject” line. Thank
you, and we'll see you out on the Ghost Town Trail! |
IMPORTANT NOTE These
listings and historical vignettes of ghost towns, near-ghost towns and other
historical sites in OKLAHOMA as shown above are for informational
purposes only, and should NOT
be construed to grant permission to trespass, metal detect, relic or treasure
hunt at any of the listed sites. If
the reader of this guide is a metal detector user and plans to use this guide
to locate sites for metal detecting or relic hunting, it is the READER'S responsibility to obtain written
permission from the legal property owners. Please be advised, that any state
or nationally owned sites will probably be off-limits to metal detector use.
Also be aware of any federal, state or local laws restricting the same. ALWAYS respect the rights of the
landowners. When you are exploring the ghost towns of |
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FIRST POSTED: January 2000
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