89 stories, landmarks & places within ~20 miles — the same local lore RoadyGoat plays as you drive through.
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Foucart Building
· Things to Do
A Belgian architect who built castles for kings became Oklahoma Territory premier architect.
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Guthrie Land Run Site
· 0.1 mi · Things to Do
Zero to 10000 people in one afternoon -- April 22 1889. The biggest land rush in history.
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Logan County Courthouse (Capitol Theft)
· 0.1 mi · Things to Do
On June 12 1910 the governor sent an agent at 1 AM to steal the state seal and move the capital to OKC.
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Guthrie Historic District (Guthrie, Oklahoma)
· 0.1 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Hold on tight, because you're about to drive through a perfectly preserved slice of Oklahoma's wild early days. This is the Guthrie Historic District, once the capital of Oklahoma Territory. Guthrie exploded onto the…
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Guthrie Historic District
· 0.1 mi · Things to Do
2000+ Victorian buildings survived because the town was too broke to demolish them.
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State Capital Publishing Museum
· 0.1 mi · Things to Do
First daily newspaper in OK printed on Land Run day. Received statehood teletype in 1907.
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Tom Mix Heritage
· 0.1 mi · Things to Do
Bartender to $17000/week Hollywood star. Made 160+ cowboy films after leaving Guthrie.
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Guthrie station
· 0.3 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Imagine a time when this wasn't just a restaurant, but a gateway to Oklahoma! This is Guthrie Station, built in 1903. Guthrie was booming, and this station became a crucial hub for passengers arriving and departing. It…
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Scottish Rite Masonic Temple
· 0.4 mi · Things to Do
One of the largest Masonic temples in the world: 260x470 feet with 16 limestone columns.
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Carnegie Library and Territorial Museum
· 0.4 mi · Things to Do
Oldest surviving Carnegie library in OK. Site of last territorial and first state inaugurations.
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Scottish Rite Temple (Guthrie, Oklahoma)
· 0.7 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Prepare to be amazed by the sheer scale and detail of the Scottish Rite Temple in Guthrie! It's a testament to the enduring influence of Freemasonry in Oklahoma. The Scottish Rite Temple is actually a complex of two…
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Eighty-niner Day Celebration
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Guthrie right now, the heart of Oklahoma's frontier history! This city hosts the biggest 89er Day Celebration in the state, an annual April party that goes all the way back to the very first land…
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Guthrie
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
You're driving past Guthrie, a town that literally exploded into existence! On April 22, 1889, thousands raced across the prairie in the Land Run of 1889, and right here, Guthrie was staked out and founded. It quickly…
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Nation, Carry Moore
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Oklahoma, and right here, you're passing through territory once terrorized by Carry Nation! Born in Kentucky, she found her national fame in Kansas, smashing saloons with a hatchet in the early…
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Organic Act (1890)
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
You're driving through the heart of Oklahoma, and right here, in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1890</say-as>, Congress passed the Organic Act. This wasn't just some dusty bill; it was the blueprint for the…
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Camp Guthrie
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Guthrie, and right here, you're passing the site of Camp Guthrie. This was the military's command center before and during the famous Land Run of 1889. While civilian marshals struggled to keep…
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Cannon, Rufus
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Oklahoma, and right here, you're passing through territory once patrolled by Rufus Cannon, one of the most feared African American lawmen of Oklahoma Territory. Born with Cherokee ancestry, Cannon…
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Colleges and Universities, Normal
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
Right here in Guthrie, Oklahoma's first territorial legislature met back in 1890 and decided where to put the state's very first higher education institutions. After some serious city competition, they chose Norman for…
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Constitutional Convention
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
Right here in Guthrie, Oklahoma's future was being hammered out in 1906. You're driving past the birthplace of the Oklahoma Constitution! Imagine, 112 delegates – mostly farmers, lawyers, and laborers – gathered to…
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Golf
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
Right here in Oklahoma, we've got some serious golf history! Back in May of 1900, the game was first played in territorial Oklahoma at the Guthrie Country Club. That same year, another course popped up in Oklahoma City.…
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Horton, Judith Ann Carter
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Guthrie, and right here, Judith Ann Carter Horton was a force for education and equality. Born into poverty, she worked her way through Oberlin College and came to Oklahoma in 1892. In 1906, she…
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Logan County
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Logan County, and right here is Guthrie, a town that was once the capital of Oklahoma Territory AND the state capital! It all started with the Land Run of 1889. The Kansas Southern Railway laid…
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Mix, Thomas Edwin
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
You're driving past Guthrie, Oklahoma, and right here is where a legend of the silver screen got his start. Before he was Tom Mix, the most popular movie cowboy in the world, he was just Tom, a young man who'd left the…
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Rough Riders
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
Right here, you're driving through a piece of Oklahoma history that went all the way to Cuba! These are the Rough Riders, the First U.S. Volunteer Cavalry, and three of their twelve companies were recruited right here…
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Architecture
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Guthrie right now, and you're looking at a town that sprang up overnight! On April 22, 1889, there were only four buildings here. By nightfall, thousands of people had arrived in a chaotic land…
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Asians
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Guthrie, Oklahoma, and right here is where the first Asian Oklahomans put down roots. Chinese men arrived as early as 1889, working on the railroads or as cooks and laundrymen. You can see…
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Asp, Henry E.
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Guthrie, Oklahoma, the first territorial capital. Right here, in the late 1800s, Henry E. Asp, a lawyer for the Santa Fe Railway, was shaping the future of Oklahoma. He wasn't just any lawyer; Asp…
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Berline, Byron
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Guthrie, Oklahoma, home of a legendary fiddler: Byron Berline. Born in Kansas in 1944, Berline's family had land in both states, but called Grant County home. He learned fiddle from his dad,…
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Candee, Helen Churchill Hungerford
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Guthrie, a town that once served as a refuge for women seeking a fresh start. In 1895, author Helen Candee, escaping a troubled marriage, came here to Oklahoma Territory. Why Guthrie? Because it…
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Enabling Act, 1906
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Oklahoma, and right here is where a big decision was made that shaped the state you're in. Back in 1906, Congress was wrestling with how to admit Oklahoma to the Union. Should it be one state, or…
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Flynn, Dennis Thomas
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
You're driving through what used to be Oklahoma Territory, and right here, you're passing through the stomping grounds of Dennis Thomas Flynn. For eight years, Flynn served as Oklahoma's delegate to the U.S. Congress,…
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Foucart, Joseph Pierre
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Guthrie, and right here, the visual character of this historic downtown was shaped by Joseph Foucart. He was the first professional architect in Oklahoma Territory, arriving just months after the…
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Greer, Frank Hilton
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Guthrie, and right here is where Frank Greer made his mark as a 'Sooner.' He snuck into the Unassigned Lands before the official land opening on April 22, 1889, hiding in a freight car. Just…
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Hoffman, Roy V.
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Oklahoma, and right here, you're passing through the story of Major General Roy V. Hoffman, a true father of the Oklahoma National Guard. He wasn't just a soldier; he was a leader who commanded…
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International Bluegrass Festival
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
Right here in Guthrie, you're driving past the home of the Oklahoma International Bluegrass Festival! It all kicked off in 1997, thanks to three-time national fiddle champ Byron Berline. He brought bands from all over…
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Madsen, Chris
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Oklahoma, and right here, you might be passing near the final resting place of Chris Madsen, a man who built a career on a carefully crafted legend. Born in Denmark in 1851, Madsen arrived in the…
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Nix, Evett Dumas
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Guthrie, Oklahoma's first territorial capital. Back in the 1890s, this was the headquarters for U.S. Marshal Evett Dumas Nix. At just thirty-two, he was the youngest marshal ever appointed in the…
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Oklahoma Constitution
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
Right here in Guthrie, in 1906, delegates gathered to write Oklahoma's constitution. They were aiming for the best ever written, even getting advice from William Jennings Bryan. He told them to borrow from other states'…
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Oklahoma Education Association
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Guthrie, a town born from the Land Run of 1889. Just six months later, in October of that same year, eleven teachers gathered right here. They didn't know it, but they were founding an…
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Oklahoma Woman's Suffrage Association
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
Right here, in what was then Oklahoma Territory, women fought for the right to vote. It started back in 1890, with women wanting the vote to support temperance. By 1893, they could only vote in school elections. But…
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Vestal, Stanley
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Oklahoma, and right here, in the history of this state, you've got a fascinating figure: Stanley Vestal. Born Walter Campbell, he grew up in Guthrie and Weatherford, and later became a professor…
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Barde, Frederick Samuel
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
Right here in Guthrie, you're driving past the stomping grounds of Frederick S. Barde, a journalist and naturalist who became known as the dean of Oklahoma journalism in the early 1900s. Inspired by Henry David Thoreau,…
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Barnes, Cassius McDonald
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Guthrie, the historic capital of Oklahoma Territory. Right here, Cassius McDonald Barnes served as governor from 1897 to 1901. His tenure was a political whirlwind, marked by fierce debates over…
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St. Joseph Monastery
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Oklahoma, and right here, in Guthrie, you're passing by the birthplace of a major Catholic community in the state. Back on September 26, 1889, just five months after the historic Land Run, three…
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Vincent, Leopold
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
Right here in Guthrie, you're driving through a place that was once the heart of a political earthquake in Oklahoma Territory! In 1894, Leo Vincent arrived, a fiery editor and the chairman of the Populist Party. He took…
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Jenkins, William Miller
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
Right here, in Oklahoma, you're driving past a place connected to William M. Jenkins, who served as territorial governor for a brief but eventful period in 1901. He was appointed governor by President McKinley, stepping…
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Martin, Robert
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
Right here in Guthrie, you're driving past the final resting place of Robert Martin, a man who went from a Civil War officer to a territorial governor. After serving in the Union Army, Martin came to Oklahoma in 1889,…
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Oklahoma Department of Libraries
· 0.9 mi · Eohc
Right here, in Guthrie, Oklahoma's story as a state begins with its library. Back in 1890, before statehood, the first legislative assembly created a territorial library to serve lawmakers and the public. Governor…
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Joe Liggins Birthplace
· 1.1 mi · Things to Do
The Honeydripper spent 18 weeks at #1 R&B -- a precursor to rock and roll born in Guthrie.
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Diehl, Cora Victoria
· 2.8 mi · Eohc
Right here in Logan County, you're driving past a piece of Oklahoma history! Back in 1891, long before women could even vote nationwide, a 21-year-old named Cora Victoria Diehl became the first woman elected to public…
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Hamlin, Albert Comstock
· 2.8 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Logan County, Oklahoma, and right here, you're passing through history! This is the area where A. C. Hamlin made his mark. In 1908, Hamlin became the first African American elected to the state…
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Good Roads Association
· 2.8 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Oklahoma, and maybe you've noticed how smooth the roads are. But it wasn't always this way. Back in the early 1900s, Oklahoma's roads were often a muddy mess, making it tough to get goods to…
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Horsethief Canyon
· 2.8 mi · Eohc
You're driving past Horsethief Canyon in Logan County, a place steeped in outlaw lore, though maybe not for the reasons you'd think. Legend says desperadoes like the Dalton and Doolin gangs hid out here in the 1890s.…
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Cedar Valley
· 4.2 mi · Eohc
You're driving past Cedar Valley, Oklahoma, a community that sprang up around a golf course. Back in 1973, developer Duffy Martin decided to build the Cedar Valley Golf Club. The course opened in 1974, and soon after, a…
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Blue Belle Saloon
· 4.6 mi · Things to Do
Opened on Land Run day 1889. Tom Mix bartended here. Oklahoma oldest saloon.
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African Americans
· 8.9 mi · Eohc
Right here in Oklahoma, you're driving through a story of hope and resilience. Back in the late 1800s, after the Civil War, newly freed African Americans and Black settlers looked west for opportunity. Some dreamed of…
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Langston
· 8.9 mi · Eohc
You're driving past Langston, Oklahoma, a town with a unique beginning. Founded on April 22, 1890, Langston was one of the first all-Black towns established in Oklahoma Territory. E. P. McCabe, a prominent African…
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Langston University
· 8.9 mi · Eohc
Right here in Langston, you're driving past a testament to resilience and education: Langston University. Established in 1897 as the Colored Agricultural and Normal University, it was born from federal legislation in…
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McCabe, Edward P.
· 8.9 mi · Eohc
Right here in Oklahoma, you're driving past a place that was once the center of a huge dream for African Americans. E.P. McCabe, a charismatic land developer and politician, arrived in 1890, aiming to make Oklahoma a…
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Page, Inman Edward
· 8.9 mi · Eohc
Right here in Langston, you're driving past the site of a major educational battleground. Inman Page, the first president of the Colored Agricultural and Normal University – now Langston University – arrived in 1898. He…
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Tolson, Melvin Beaunorus
· 8.9 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Langston, Oklahoma, home to a remarkable poet, Melvin B. Tolson. He lived here longer than anywhere else, from 1947 until his death in 1966. Tolson taught English and drama at Langston University,…
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Wallace, David J.
· 8.9 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Logan County, heading towards Langston, the site of one of Oklahoma's historic all-Black towns. Right here, you're passing through the area where David J. Wallace, born into slavery in South…
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Cimarron City
· 10.0 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Logan County, and right here is Cimarron City. It's a community that wasn't even here until 1973. Developers J. L. Swaim and Don McLaughlin platted this one-thousand-acre town, with engineer Leon…
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Crescent
· 10.7 mi · Eohc
You're driving past Crescent, Oklahoma, and right here, in 1974, a Kerr-McGee plant just south of town became the center of a national controversy. Karen Silkwood, an employee critical of the company, died under unusual…
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Coyle
· 11.7 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Coyle, Oklahoma, a town that owes its existence to a railroad and a bit of entrepreneurial spirit. Back in 1899, the Eastern Oklahoma Railway was building a new line, and two agents, William H.…
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Edmond Post Office Massacre
· 14.2 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Edmond right now, and you might see the post office. But back on August 20th, 1986, it was the scene of a horrific tragedy. On that day, a disgruntled postal worker named Patrick Sherrill walked…
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Daisey, Nanitta R. H.
· 14.2 mi · Eohc
You're driving past Edmond, Oklahoma, and right here is where a legend made her dash for land! Meet Nanitta Daisey, better known as 'Kentucky Daisey.' She was a petite woman with a pistol, a reporter, and a whole lot of…
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Edmond
· 14.2 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Edmond, a city with a rich history starting with the railroad. But right here, in 1986, a tragedy struck the community. An Edmond postal employee entered the post office and shot and killed…
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Miller, Shannon Lee
· 14.2 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Edmond, Oklahoma, home of Olympic gymnastics legend Shannon Miller! Born in Missouri in 1977, Shannon moved here as a baby. Doctors discovered her legs were turning inward, and she had to wear…
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University of Central Oklahoma
· 14.2 mi · Eohc
Right here in Edmond, you're driving past the birthplace of higher education in Oklahoma. In 1891, the Territorial Normal School of Oklahoma opened its doors, making it the very first public institution of higher…
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Oklahoma Shakespeare in the Park
· 14.2 mi · Eohc
Right here in Oklahoma, you're driving past the birthplace of a unique cultural tradition: Oklahoma Shakespeare in the Park. Back in 1985, Jack and Kathryn O'Meara, inspired by a national trend, decided Oklahoma City…
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Smith v. Townsend (1893)
· 14.2 mi · Eohc
You're driving past Edmond, and right here, a legal battle unfolded over who got to claim this land! It all started with the 1889 Land Run. Alexander Smith, a railroad worker, was already living in a tent here before…
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West Edmond Field
· 14.2 mi · Eohc
You're driving past the area that was once Oklahoma's most important oil discovery of the 1940s: the West Edmond Field. It all started with Ace Gutowsky, a man who claimed to find oil using 'doodlebug' techniques, like…
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Cashion
· 15.0 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Cashion, Oklahoma, a town born from a land run and a dream of connecting farmers to markets. In 1900, two railroads, the Guthrie and Kingfisher Railway and the Guthrie and Western Railway, met…
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Edmond, OK
· 15.5 mi · Local history
Edmond, Oklahoma, began as a whistle stop. Literally. In 1887, a Santa Fe Railroad work crew laid tracks across the open prairie, and the spot known as Milepost 103 was designated a watering station. That was it. But…
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Pops 66 Soda Ranch
· 15.7 mi · Historical Marker
A modern Route 66 landmark in Arcadia featuring a 66-foot illuminated soda bottle and over 700 varieties of bottled soda.
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Arcadia
· 15.8 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Arcadia, a town born from the 1889 Land Run. Its name, inspired by a Greek paradise, reflected the hopes of early settlers drawn to the fertile land. Rail access in 1903 transformed it into a…
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Mixer, Orren Marion, Jr.
· 15.8 mi · Eohc
Right here near Arcadia, you're passing through the stomping grounds of Orren Mixer, one of Oklahoma's most celebrated Western artists. Born in Oklahoma City in 1920, Mixer found his passion painting livestock,…
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Arcadia Round Barn
· 16.0 mi · Things to Do
Only round barn on Route 66. Bent green oak. Saved by 80-year-old Luther Robison.
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Round Barn (Arcadia)
· 16.0 mi · Things to Do
A perfectly round barn from 1898 on Route 66. One of the most photographed barns in America.
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The Round Barn
· 16.1 mi · Historical Marker
Built in 1898, this unique round barn in Arcadia became one of the most iconic Route 66 landmarks in Oklahoma.
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Mulhall, Lucille
· 16.8 mi · Eohc
Right here in Oklahoma, you're driving past the legacy of Lucille Mulhall, the woman who made 'cowgirl' a household name! Born in 1885, she wasn't just *a* cowgirl; President Teddy Roosevelt himself called her the…
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Mulhall
· 16.8 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Mulhall, a town that faced a devastating tornado on May 3rd, 1999. This massive twister leveled eighty percent of the buildings, wiping out churches, schools, homes, and even the water tower and…
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POPS 66 and the Giant Soda Bottle
· 18.7 mi
At 660 W Highway 66 in Arcadia, on historic Route 66 northeast of Oklahoma City, a 66-foot soda bottle sculpture nicknamed 'Bubbles' stands beside a glass-and-steel soda ranch called POPS. Designed by Oklahoma City…
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Orlando
· 18.8 mi · Eohc
Right here in Orlando, Oklahoma, in 1902, a routine household chore turned deadly. A local housewife unknowingly purchased adulterated kerosene for her lamps. When she lit them, a fire erupted, tragically claiming her…
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Fallis
· 19.4 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Lincoln County, and right here is Fallis. It started as Mission, on the Iowa Reservation, but in 1894, it was renamed for its developer, Judge William H. Fallis. This place boomed as an…
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Lucas, Blanche Fallis
· 19.4 mi · Eohc
Right here, you're driving past the area that was once Fallis, Oklahoma, a town named for William Fallis. But his daughter, Blanche Fallis Lucas, is the real story here. You might know Oklahoma women got the right to…
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Oliver, Jennie Harris
· 19.4 mi · Eohc
You're driving through Lincoln County, not far from Fallis, and you're passing the former home of Jennie Harris Oliver, Oklahoma's third Poet Laureate. Though not born here, Oliver found inspiration in the Oklahoma…
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Luther
· 19.6 mi · Eohc
You're driving past Luther, Oklahoma, and right here, in this town, was once one of the premier high schools for African Americans in the entire United States. Booker T. Washington High School opened its doors in 1916.…