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Further reading. External links. List of ghost towns in Oklahoma. Appearance. Autwine, in Kay County, Oklahoma. Picher, in Ottawa County, Oklahoma. This is an incomplete list of ghost towns in Oklahoma, United States of America, including abandoned sites.
70000532 [1] Added to NRHP. September 29, 1970. The Quanah Parker Star House, with stars painted on its roof, is located in the city of Cache, county of Comanche, in the U.S. state of Oklahoma. It was added in 1970 to the National Register of Historic Places listings in Comanche County, Oklahoma. [2]
Boley. 35°29′44″N 96°28′58″W / 35.495556°N 96.482778°W / 35.495556; -96.482778 (Boley Historic District) Okfuskee. All-black town founded in 1903, product of segregationist policies. 4. Boston Avenue Methodist Episcopal Church, South.
Ha Ha Tonka State Park is a public recreation area encompassing over 5,000 acres (2,000 ha) on the Niangua arm of the Lake of the Ozarks, about five miles south of Camdenton, Missouri, in the United States. The state park 's most notable feature is the ruins of Ha Ha Tonka, an early 20th-century stone mansion that was modeled after European ...
Ketch Ranch House or Ketch Ranch was private property located in the Wichita Mountains of Southwestern Oklahoma. [1] During the early 1920s, the forest reserve residence was established as a working ranch and vacation home for Ada May Ketch and Frank Levant Ketch who served as mayor of Ringling, Oklahoma .
40-58550 [3] GNIS feature ID. 1096611 [1] The mining waste was located very near neighborhoods in the town. South Treece Street, 2008. Picher is a ghost town and former city in Ottawa County, northeastern Oklahoma, United States. It was a major national center of lead and zinc mining for more than 100 years in the heart of the Tri-State Mining ...
Fort Washita is the former United States military post and National Historic Landmark located in Durant, Oklahoma on SH 199.Established in 1842 by General (later President) Zachary Taylor to protect citizens of the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations from the Plains Indians, it was later abandoned by Federal forces at the beginning of the American Civil War.
Greenwood, Tulsa. Greenwood is a historic freedom colony in Tulsa, Oklahoma. As one of the most prominent concentrations of African-American businesses in the United States during the early 20th century, it was popularly known as America's "Black Wall Street". It was burned to the ground in the Tulsa race massacre of 1921, in which a local ...