Enid, OK RoadyGoat
The wheat fields surrounding Enid ripple in the wind, a visual testament to the area's enduring agricultural heritage. Established amidst the Land Run of 1893, the town's very origins are rooted in ambition and opportunity.
Everything Hennessey is known for
Songs written about the waterways and highways that run near Hennessey.
The wheat fields surrounding Enid ripple in the wind, a visual testament to the area's enduring agricultural heritage. Established amidst the Land Run of 1893, the town's very origins are rooted in ambition and opportunity.
Enid, Oklahoma, rose from the prairie in the Land Run of 1893, a moment that forever changed the landscape of what would become Oklahoma. Settlers, eager for a piece of the open land, raced to claim their stake. The town’s name, borrowed from Tennyson’s Arthurian tales, belied the rough-and-tumble reality of those early days. Life centered around the promise of the land and the hard work required to cultivate it. From its elevated position of nearly 1,300 feet, the town looked out over seemingly endless fields of wheat, a crop that quickly became the lifeblood of the community. That wheat, and the agriculture it represented, remains a defining characteristic of Enid even now. The Great Depression brought immense hardship, testing the resilience of the farmers who had built their lives here. The town also holds secrets, whispers of underground tunnels from the Prohibition era, hinting at a hidden side beneath the calm surface. Generations have grown up here, their lives intertwined with the rhythms of the land. And the Friday night lights shine bright on the Enid High School Plainsmen as they battle their rivals, the Ponca City Wildcats, in a football tradition that binds the community together.
100000 settlers raced for 6 million acres on Sept 16 1893 -- the largest land run in history.
Named for Lt. Col. Leon Vance Jr. who earned the Medal of Honor the day before D-Day then vanished over the Atlantic at 27.
Christmas Day 1916 oil strike turned a banker into a tycoon. Largest private integrated oil company in America.
Rock Island refused to stop trains in Enid. Settlers blockaded the tracks until Grover Cleveland intervened.
Enid-born astronaut spent 60 days on Skylab and made the first ham radio call from orbit.
15-story Art Deco tower built 1931. The developer went bankrupt by 1932.
Built on the Chisholm Trail with original 1890s buildings in Humphrey Heritage Village.
80 million bushels at peak capacity. Third-largest grain storage in the world.
40 stories, landmarks & places within ~20 miles — the same local lore RoadyGoat plays as you drive through.
You're driving through Hennessey, a town named for a man who died right here on the frontier. Pat Hennessey was a freighter, killed back in 1874, likely in a fight with Cheyenne warriors or maybe white horse thieves.…
Right here, near Hennessey, Oklahoma, a young man named John C. Karcher was raised. He'd go on to independently invent a device that would revolutionize the oil industry: the seismograph! While originally used in World…
You're driving through western Oklahoma, and right here is a place where a unique group of settlers put down roots: the Mennonites. Arriving in 1880, they were part of a long history of seeking new frontiers,…
You're driving through Oklahoma, and you might not even realize it, but you're surrounded by art! From bronze pioneers to abstract steel, Oklahoma boasts hundreds of outdoor sculptures. The oldest? It might be the…
You're driving through Garfield County, and right here, the town of Bison bears the name of a creature that once defined the American prairie. Imagine tens of millions of these massive beasts, American bison, thundering…
Right here, near Dover, Oklahoma, you're driving past the site of one of the nation's worst train wrecks. On September 18, 1906, the Cimarron River bridge collapsed right under Rock Island Passenger Train Number 12. The…
You're driving through Kingfisher County, near present-day Dover. Right here, back in 1872, stood the Red Fork Ranch. It wasn't just a place to rest; it was a vital trading post and cattle hub right on the Chisholm…
You're driving through Kingfisher County, and right here is where the Waightman Gang hit their first train robbery in Oklahoma Territory, near Dover, back in 1895. George Waightman, a burly outlaw with auburn hair, had…
You're driving through Kingfisher County, not far from Dover, and right here is where Lincoln City once stood. It was one of three all-Black towns founded after the 1889 Oklahoma Land Run, a beacon of hope for African…
Right here in Waukomis, Oklahoma, you're passing through the hometown of a man nicknamed 'Happy' – and he legally changed his name to match! John Newbold Camp, born in Enid in 1908, earned the nickname from his father…
You're driving past Waukomis, a town born in the rush of the Cherokee Outlet opening. Imagine this: it's September 1893. Farmers are staking their claims, and right here, Charles Moore opens a store. By November, Frank…
You're driving through Garfield County, just southwest of Enid, and you're passing through Drummond. This town owes its existence to a railroad company. The Frisco Town Company platted Drummond in 1901, the same year…
You're driving through Kingfisher County, and right here is the town of Loyal. It wasn't always called Loyal, though. From its founding around 1894, it was known as Kiel. But with anti-German sentiment rising during…
You're driving through Oklahoma, and right here is a place that was home to Angie Debo, a historian who dared to tell the truth about American Indian history. Born in Kansas in 1890, she came to Oklahoma as a…
You're driving through Logan County, and right here is Marshall. This town owes its existence to Sylvan T. Rice, a homesteader who opened a store in July 1894. He named it for his hometown in Iowa, Marshalltown. The…
You're driving through Marshall, Oklahoma, where Lola Clark Pearson made her home for over thirty years. Born in Iowa, she moved here in 1905 and immediately organized the Marshall Woman's Club. Pearson was a powerhouse…
Named for Lt. Col. Leon Vance Jr. who earned the Medal of Honor the day before D-Day then vanished over the Atlantic at 27.
You're driving past Douglas, a town that owes its very name to a legislative act! Originally, the post office here was called Onyx, established back in 1894. When the Denver, Enid and Gulf Railroad surveyed a line…
You're driving through Kingfisher, a town born from the Oklahoma Land Run of 1889! Right here, settlers raced to stake their claims, but the rules said towns couldn't be too big. So, Kingfisher split into two rival…
You're driving through Kingfisher, Oklahoma, the birthplace of Sam Walton, the man who built a retail empire from the ground up. Born right here in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1918</say-as>, Walton's journey…
You're driving through Kingfisher, Oklahoma, and right here is where James Yancy Callahan made his mark. He was the *only* non-Republican to ever represent Oklahoma Territory as a delegate to Congress! Born in Missouri…
Right here in Kingfisher, you're passing through a place with a rich history tied to preserving Oklahoma's story. William Parker Campbell, a journalist by trade, moved here in 1892. The very next year, he had a…
Right here in Beckham County, you're driving past the land of Joseph Danne, an eccentric wheat breeder who changed farming on the southern plains. Born in Nebraska to German immigrants, Danne moved to Oklahoma Territory…
You're driving through Kingfisher, and right here is where William C. Grimes made his mark. He arrived for the Land Run of 1889, claimed land, and then dove headfirst into building this town. But his biggest impact? He…
You're driving through Kingfisher County, and right here, a local farming innovation changed the world. The town of Kingfisher itself has a few origin stories, maybe named for a rancher, maybe for a creek. But its real…
You're driving through Kingfisher, and right here is where a legal battle over the very definition of 'sooner' took place! Back before the 1889 Land Run, a military worker named John Wood was already in the Unassigned…
Right here in Kingfisher, you're driving past the birthplace of Oklahoma's memory keepers. It was 1893, and a group of newspaper editors, worried about losing their history, decided to create the Oklahoma Historical…
You're driving through Oklahoma Territory's history, and right here, you're passing through the legacy of Abraham Jefferson Seay. He wasn't just a governor; he was a showman! In 1892, Seay convinced the territorial…
You're driving through Kingfisher, Oklahoma, and right here, you're passing through the stomping grounds of Patrick Sarsfield Nagle, a political organizer who helped the Oklahoma Socialist Party reach its peak in the…
You're driving through Major County, and right here is the town of Ames. Originally part of the Cherokee Outlet, this area saw settlers rush in during the big land opening of 1893. The town itself got its name in 1902,…
Rock Island refused to stop trains in Enid. Settlers blockaded the tracks until Grover Cleveland intervened.
Christmas Day 1916 oil strike turned a banker into a tycoon. Largest private integrated oil company in America.
The wheat fields surrounding Enid ripple in the wind, a visual testament to the area's enduring agricultural heritage. Established amidst the Land Run of 1893, the town's very origins are rooted in ambition and…
15-story Art Deco tower built 1931. The developer went bankrupt by 1932.
Enid-born astronaut spent 60 days on Skylab and made the first ham radio call from orbit.
Founded 1932. Milburn Carey ran it for 46 years. Over 90 years continuous.
100000 settlers raced for 6 million acres on Sept 16 1893 -- the largest land run in history.
Built on the Chisholm Trail with original 1890s buildings in Humphrey Heritage Village.
1924 Santa Fe freight depot. Five rail lines once served Enid.
80 million bushels at peak capacity. Third-largest grain storage in the world.