Route 66 Museums
Myrtle has been greeting travelers on Route 66 since 1962. The 14-foot-tall kachina doll made of oil drums and scrap metal...
Oklahoma is ready to host your one-of-a-kind adventure. Expand your travel resume with this collection of articles, each created to provide inspiration and information to get you traveling.
Myrtle has been greeting travelers on Route 66 since 1962. The 14-foot-tall kachina doll made of oil drums and scrap metal...
Officially formed at statehood in 1907, Coal County was named for the coal mining industry that had supported the local...
Cotton County, named after the area’s largest crop, formed in 1912 and was the last county created in Oklahoma. Oil and gas p...
Located in southwestern Oklahoma, Greer County is named after former Texas Lieutenant Governor John A. Greer. From 1860 to...
Harmon County, located in southwestern Oklahoma, was named after Judson Harmon, a U.S. attorney general from Ohio. The...
Haskell County, located in east-central Oklahoma, was named after Charles N. Haskell, Oklahoma’s first governor. In 1831, t...
Named after President Thomas Jefferson and located in south-central Oklahoma, Jefferson County was formed in 1907. Early...
Jackson County, located in southwestern Oklahoma, was named after President Andrew Jackson and Confederate General...
Located in northeastern Oklahoma, Nowata County was named after a Delaware word meaning “friendly” or “welcome.” In 1889, the Kan...
Located in northeastern Oklahoma, Muskogee County was named for the Muscogee tribe. In the early 1700s, French explorers and...