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The area around Anadarko, located 55 mi/90 km southwest of Oklahoma City, was once a hunting ground for the Comanche, Kiowa and Wichita people. Today, the Apache, Caddo and Delaware are also represented in the area, making Anadarko a rich source of N...
Categories: Anadarko
Bartlesville, located 125 mi/200 km northeast of Oklahoma City, is the site of the first commercial oil well in Oklahoma, as well as the restored 26-room mansion of Frank Phillips, founder of Phillips Petroleum. Also in the town is Frank Lloyd Wright...
Categories: Bartlesville
Located 130 mi/210 km northeast of Oklahoma City and long known as a health spa because of the artesian mineral wells in the area, Claremore is also home to the J.M. Davis Arms and Historical Museum, one of the largest of its kind, with thousands of ...
Categories: Claremore
Categories: Enid
The first capital of the state, Guthrie sprouted in one day (22 April 1889) into a tent city of 15,000 residents during the land rush. Today this city 20 mi/32 km north of Oklahoma City has a 1,400-acre/570-hectare historic district that is said to b...
Categories: Guthrie
Oklahoma's fourth-largest city, 90 mi/145 km southwest of Oklahoma City, Lawton was the last Oklahoma town to blossom overnight (6 August 1901). Within months of its creation, the town had 85 saloons. Today, it's the home of the Museum of the Great P...
Categories: Lawton
Muskogee is known to most people as the place where folks don't smoke marijuana (and don't do a lot of other things, either), claims made in Merle Haggard's late-1960s hit "Okie from Muskogee." It's the home of the Five Civilized Tribes Museum, which...
Categories: Muskogee
This town is home to the University of Oklahoma. In 2005, the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art on the university campus opened a new wing that houses its impressive collection of French Impressionist paintings, American painting and sculpture (particular...
Categories: Norman
Oklahoma City lies in the Great Plains region with a large livestock market, and booming oil, natural gas, and petroleum industries. It's thriving nightlife has popular spots for dancing, drinks, and music. It's arts culture flourishes throug...
Categories: Oklahoma City
The capital of the Cherokee Nation, Tahlequah, Oklahoma, is the place to begin learning about the Cherokee people. You'll want to visit the Cherokee Heritage Center, a complex that contains the Cherokee National Museum, where multimedia exhibits are ...
Categories: Tahlequah
Categories: Temple
This attractive and prosperous city was the oil-producing capital of the nation until newer oil boomtowns, such as Houston and Dallas, took the wind out of its sails. Evidence of the city's onetime oil pre-eminence is an impressive collection of 1920...
Categories: Tulsa