Moore, Oklahoma

Everything Moore is known for

7 songs mention this city 2 artists from here

Music in Moore

Songs About Moore

Jireh (feat. Chandler Moore & Naomi Raine)
Elevation Worship & Maverick City Music
80%
"Song about Moore"
A Little Less Talk and a Lot More Action
toby keith
45%
American Soldier
toby keith
45%
Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue (The Angry American)
toby keith
45%
I Love This Bar
toby keith
45%
Who’s Your Daddy?
toby keith
45%
the interstate 35 waltz
garret t. capps & justin boyd
10%

Rivers & Roads in Song near Moore

Songs written about the waterways and highways that run near Moore.

History of Moore

Norman, OK RoadyGoat

Norman, Oklahoma, a city carved from the plains in the Land Run of 1889, sits at just over a thousand feet above sea level. The rolling landscape is a reminder of the wide-open spaces that drew settlers here. It's a place where the energy of youth mixes with the weight of history. While the city is named for surveyor Abner Norman, its modern identity is deeply intertwined with the University of Oklahoma. The OU Sooners, with their seven national championships, are a point of immense local pride. Beyond the stadium, the university is a major economic engine and a cultural hub. Some even whisper of a network of tunnels beneath the campus, relics of a bygone era, now mostly sealed off. This youthful vibrancy nurtured talents that reached far beyond Oklahoma's borders.

8.5 mi away

Cattlemen's Steakhouse RoadyGoat

Cattlemen's Steakhouse has been the anchor of Oklahoma City's Stockyards since 1910. Legend has it the original owner won the building in a dice game. Presidents, ranchers, and oil barons have all eaten the same hand-cut steaks at the same counter. The lamb fries (look it up) are a Stockyards tradition. It's the real Oklahoma — no pretense, just beef.

9.0 mi away

Oklahoma City, OK RoadyGoat

Oklahoma City rose from the red earth almost overnight. Picture it: the Land Run, 1889, a chaotic surge of humanity staking claims on land that had been designated unassigned. From that frenzy, a city was named, quickly incorporated, and began to take shape on the plains. Its elevation, over a thousand feet, meant drier air rolling in, and the scissor-tailed flycatchers, the state bird, became a common sight against the vast Oklahoma sky. Route 66, the Mother Road, wound its way through, bringing travelers and commerce, and in 1953, Sonic Drive-In, with its carhop service, was founded, offering a distinctly American experience. Even beneath the surface, a hidden history took root, an elaborate network of tunnels used for bootlegging during drier times. The city grew, fueled by government, energy, and aviation, industries that continue to shape its economy. But the city’s story is also etched with tragedy. April 19, 1995. The Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building. An act of terror that claimed 168 lives, leaving an indelible mark on the city’s collective memory. Oklahoma City rebuilt, and continues to evolve, a testament to resilience rising from red soil.

9.0 mi away

Oklahoma City National Memorial

1995

Memorial to the 168 people killed in the April 19, 1995 bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building, the deadliest act of domestic terrorism in U.S. history.

9.4 mi away

1889 Land Run Starting Point

1889

On April 22, 1889, an estimated 50,000 settlers lined up to claim two million acres of unassigned land in one of the most chaotic events in American frontier history.

6.1 mi away

National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum

1955

Founded in 1955, this Oklahoma City museum houses one of the finest collections of Western art and artifacts in the world.

13.5 mi away

Things to Do in Moore

Everything Near Moore

321 stories, landmarks & places within ~20 miles — the same local lore RoadyGoat plays as you drive through.

Explore Moore on the Map