Home |   About OHS |  Historical Marker Program

Historical Marker Program

Search Results

Your search returned 256 results.


101 Ranch

Noble County
Location: on OK-156, north of Marland
Coordinates: 36.567150, -97.149150
Material: Aluminum
Sponsor(s): OHS/ODOT
Topics: Agriculture; American Indians; Arts; Industry/Business; Petroleum; Ranching; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

Believed to have derived its name from the 101,894 acres of the Ponca Reservation, this huge ranch was founded by George W. Miller and his sons in the early 1880s on land he leased, eventually purchased, or otherwise acquired from the Ponca Indians. The ranch became world-famous for its Wild West show, oil wells, livestock, and farm products.

There is a duplicate marker located approximately three miles north of this marker’s location at the 101 Ranch site in Kay County.

Alexander Posey

McIntosh County
Location: off OK 9 in Posey Park, in Eufaula
Coordinates: 35.288483, -95.585067
Material: Aluminum
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society and the Oklahoma Department of Transportation
Topics: American Indians; Arts; Government; Mass Communication; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

This famous Creek poet and journalist's life prematurely ended when he drowned in the North Canadian River near Eufaula on May 27, 1908. Alexander Posey was the editor of newspapers, a member of the Dawes Commission, and widely known for his poems such as "Ode to Sequoyah."

Note: This marker was originally located in Vivian (8 miles west of Eufaula) and moved to its present location at an unknown date. The marker text indicating the location of Posey’s birthplace in relation to the marker is now incorrect.

Alikchi Court Ground

McCurtain County
Location: on OK-3, 1/2 mile east of Ringold
Topics: American Indians; Folklife; Government; Social/Cultural; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

The last execution under Choctaw law was carried out here in 1899. According to Choctaw custom, a prisoner sentenced to death was allowed freedom to set family affairs in order from the time of sentencing until he returned to face the firing squad.


Alikchi Springs

McCurtain County
Topics: American Indians; Law and Order

Alikchi was established in about 1834 as “Court Town“ or the District Capital of the Oklahoma Falaya (later Apukshunnubbee) District of the Choctaw Nation. On July 13, 1899, Alikchi Court grounds were the scene of the last official execution under Choctaw tribal law. With the Curtis Act of 1906, the court was closed.


Amos Chapman

Dewey County
Location: in Brumfield section of Seiling Cemetery
Coordinates: 36.160600, -98.938700
Material: Aluminum
Sponsor(s): Seiling Chamber of Commerce
Topics: American Indians; Government; Military; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Transportation; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Amos Chapman was a famous civilian American Indian scout employed by the US Army. He was one of only five survivors of the Buffalo Wallow Fight in 1874, an action that earned him the Congressional Medal of Honor. Chapman later married Mary Longneck, the daughter of a Cheyenne chief.

Ardmore

Carter County
Location: on US Highway 77, north of Ardmore, Carter County
Topics: American Indians; Education; Government; Religion/Philosophy; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

The Ardmore post office was named for Ardmore, Pennsylvania, and established on October 27, 1887, on the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railroad, built north from Texas. Ardmore was the home of Lee Cruce, second governor of Oklahoma from 1911–1915. Hargrove College was opened by the Methodist Church in 1895 and became Carter Seminary in 1917 for Chickasaw girls. It was named for Charles D. Carter, M.C.

Asbury Manual Labor School

McIntosh County
Location: on BUS-69 in Greenwood Cemetery north of Eufaula
Coordinates: 35.293967, -95.582650
Material: Stone with bronze plaque
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Methodist Historical Society
Topics: American Indians; Education; Religion/Philosophy

Stones that make up the monument are from the original buildings of Asbury Manual Labor School (est. 1847). The original site of the school lies under Lake Eufaula. Monument dedicated to Methodist missionaries who established the school for Native children and youth.


Atoka

Atoka County
Location: on grounds of Atoka Museum and Civil War Cemetery, Atoka
Coordinates: 34.399863, -96.117413
Material: Aluminum
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society and the Oklahoma Department of Transportation
Topics: American Indians; Government; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Named for Captain Atoka, Choctaw leader and signer of Treaty of Dancing Rabbit (1830). Atoka County was organized in the Choctaw Nation in 1854. The Atoka Agreement, which provided for allotment of lands in the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations, was signed in this city in 1897.

Bacone College

Muskogee County
Location: at front entrance of Bacone College in Muskogee (DAR)
Sponsor(s): Daughters of the American Revolution
Topics: American Indians; Education; Religion/Philosophy; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

Almon C. Bacone founded Bacone College for American Indians in Tahlequah, Cherokee Nation, in 1880. The school was moved to Muskogee in the Creek Nation in 1885. It is affiliated with the American Baptist Church and is the oldest college continually in operation in Oklahoma.


Baptist Mission

Adair County
Location: 3 miles north of junction of US 62 and US 59 at Old Baptist Mission Church, Westville vicinity
Coordinates: 36.035258, -94.583987
Material: Aluminum
Topics: American Indians; Education; Religion/Philosophy; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

The present-day white frame building contains some of the original timbers of the log church built in 1839. Reverend James Bushyhead, the first supreme court judge of the Cherokee Nation, established the mission which the Cherokees called Bread Town. The Cherokee Messenger, a religious publication, was printed at the mission beginning in 1844. Bacone College at Muskogee is an outgrowth of the school begun at Baptist Mission.

Battle of Backbone Mountain

Le Flore County
Location: on OK-112, one mile north of OK-120
Topics: American Indians; Military; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

Union forces, led by Major General James G. Blunt, and Confederate troops, commanded by Brigadier General William L. Cabell, skirmished here in September of 1863. On July 27, 1864, a Choctaw battalion under the command of Captain Jackson McCurtain defeated federal troops nearby.


Battle of Cabin Creek

Mayes County
Location: on US-69, one mile south of Craig-Mayes County line
Topics: American Indians; Government; Military; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Transportation

The first Battle of Cabin Creek was fought July 1 and 2, 1863, where Cabin Creek crossed the old Fort Gibson Military Road. The second battle occurred September 18, 1864, when 2,000 Confederate troops under Brigadier General Stand Watie captured a 130-wagon federal supply train carrying $1.5 million in goods. This was the last major Civil War engagement in Indian Territory.


Battle of Chustenahlah

Osage County
Location: One half mile west of N 52nd W Avenue on OK-20, Skiatook vicinity.
Coordinates: 36.368646, -96.059451
Material: Granite
Topics: American Indians; Government; Military; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

This site, 3.5 miles NW, is where Colonel James McIntosh, 2nd Arkansas Mounted Rifles, routed loyal Union Indian forces December 26, 1861. The battle opened with fire from the Indian line of Patriot's Hill, 2 miles southwest. The loyal Union Indians finally fled to Kansas.

Battle of Chusto-Talasah

Tulsa County
Location: on OK-11 at 86th Street North in Tulsa
Topics: American Indians; Government; Military; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

This battle was the second in a series of three engagements between pro-Northern Indians led by Opothleyahola and a combined white and Indian Confederate force on December 9, 1861, on Bird Creek.

Battle of Locust Grove

Mayes County
Location: on OK-33 on east side of Locust Grove in parkway at "Pipe Spring," SH 33
Material: Aluminum
Topics: American Indians; Government; Military; Social/Cultural; Transportation

On July 2, 1862, federal troops under Colonel William Weer surprised a Confederate encampment here. The Southerners led by Colonel J. J. Clarkson surrendered, but heavy fighting continued throughout the day in nearby woods between Union troops and Confederate soldiers who escaped the raid.


Battle of Round Mountain

Payne County
Location: one mile north and 1/4 mile west of intersection of OK-18 and OK-51, four miles west of Yale
Material: Granite
Topics: American Indians; Government; Military; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Between the landmark known as Round Mountain (Twin Mounds) to the south and a camp on Salt Creek two miles northwest, the first battle of the Civil War in Oklahoma was fought between a group of loyal Creeks under Opothleyahola and Confederate forces led by Colonel Douglas H. Cooper. Some scholars believe this engagement took place in Tulsa County.


Battle of the Washita

Roger Mills County
Location: in downtown Cheyenne one block south of US-283 and OK-47 intersection
Material: Granite
Topics: American Indians; Military; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

On November 27, 1868, Colonel George Armstrong Custer led the 7th Cavalry in an attack on Chief Black Kettle's camp on the Washita River. The surprise, early-morning attack decimated the Cheyenne camp and no doubt was the seed for Custer's later meeting with American Indians at the Battle of Little Big Horn.

Battle of the Wichita Village

Grady County
Location: on US-81 on north edge of Rush Springs
Material: Aluminum
Topics: American Indians; Land Openings; Military; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Four companies of the 2nd Cavalry, under the command of Major Earl Van Dorn, attacked a Comanche band near a Wichita village here on October 1, 1858, even though the Indians were on their way from a friendly council at Fort Arbuckle. Seventy Indians were killed, all because of poor communication. Pikey's Crossing was also an entry site for the Land Run of April 22, 1889.


Battle of Turkey Springs

Woods County
Location: on US-64, two miles east of Camp Houston
Coordinates: 36.81235, -99.07458
Material: Aluminum
Sponsor(s): Cherokee Strip Volunteer League and the Oklahoma Historical Society
Topics: American Indians; Government; Military; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

The last known encounter between American Indians and the federal government in Oklahoma occurred in this area on September 13–14, 1878. Units of the 4th Cavalry battled with Northern Cheyennes led by Dull Knife and Little Wolf as they fled Indian Territory to return to the north. An Arapaho scout and three soldiers were killed.


Bernard de La Harpe 1719

Latimer County
Location: on US-270, five miles east of Hartshorne
Material: Aluminum
Topics: American Indians; Empire Period, 1541–1803

The French explorer Bernard de La Harpe came north from Louisiana seeking trade with the Wichita Indians. He camped three miles east of Hartshorne on August 25, 1719, on his way north to the Canadian River and Wichita villages.


Big Pasture

Tillman County
Location: on OK-70 in Grandfield
Material: Granite
Topics: American Indians; Land Openings; Natural Resources; Settlement Patterns; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

A half-million acres were reserved for grazing lands when the Kiowa-Comanche-Apache lands were opened to public settlement in 1901. Because of the rich soil, pressure was brought on the federal government to open the Big Pasture to settlement. The land was sold by sealed bids beginning in December 1906. It was the last big land opening in Oklahoma.

Birthplace of Jim Thorpe

Lincoln County
Location: at 1008 North Broadway, in front of the Prague Historical Museum on SH-99-US-377 just north of the US-62 Junction in Prague
Material: Granite
Topics: American Indians; Early Statehood, 1907–1941; Industrial Period, 1892–1941; Recreational/Service; Social/Cultural

James Francis Thorpe, a Sac and Fox, was born as Wa-tho-huck or "Bright Path." He dominated the 1912 Olympics, winning both the decathlon and pentathlon events. He played Major League Baseball and professional football. He was the first president of the National Football League and is a member of Professional Football Hall of Fame. The Associated Press voted him the world's greatest male athlete of the first half of the twentieth century.

Birthplace of Will Rogers

Rogers County
Coordinates: 36.437944, -95.687250
Material: Granite
Topics: American Indians

November 4, 1879–August 15, 1935. Will Rogers, world-renowned writer, humorist, and actor, was born on a ranch east of Oologah in Cooweescoowee, Indian Territory. He and Wiley Post died in an airplane crash at Point Barrow, Alaska. His birthplace was moved out of the path of Oologah Lake to 2 miles north of here and is open to the public.

Black Beaver

Caddo County
Location: on US-62 in National Hall of Fame for Famous American Indians in Anadarko
Topics: American Indians; Military; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Black Beaver, Delaware Indian frontier scout, served as the interpreter for the US Dragoon Expedition to the Plains Indians in 1834. He was awarded the rank of captain and helped guide expeditions to the Far West, including Captain Randolph Marcy's trip to the goldfields in California in 1849. Black Beaver was buried near his home northwest of Anadarko. In 1975 the Delaware tribe reinterred his body on the Fort Sill Military Reservation.

Bloomfield Academy

Bryan County
Location: on OK-78, one and a half miles south of Achille
Material: Granite
Topics: American Indians; Education; Government; Religion/Philosophy; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Bloomfield Academy, a seminary for Chickasaw girls, was established in 1853 by authority of the Methodist Missionary Board. The school was located on two different sites in Bryan County before it was moved to Ardmore in 1917. There it was renamed Carter Seminary in honor of Congressman Charles D. Carter.

Note: This marker was reported damaged.


Boggy Depot (Old Boggy Depot)

Atoka County
Location: on OK-7 approximately 5 miles east of Wapanucka
Coordinates: 34.367578, -96.327843
Material: Granite
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society and the Oklahoma Department of Transportation
Topics: American Indians; Government; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Transportation; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Site of town noted for distinguished citizens in state history. First house built in 1837 by Cyrus Harris, later governor of Chickasaw Nation. Later capital of Choctaw Nation and site of an Overland Mail Stage stand to San Francisco (1858–61). Home of Principal Chief Allen Wright, Choctaw, who named Oklahoma in 1866. Rev. Cyrus Kingsbury, noted missionary, is buried here.

Note: This marker replaced a previous aluminum marker titled “Old Boggy Depot.”

Boley

Okfuskee County
Location: in community of Boley
Coordinates: 35.493390, -96.484182
Material: Other (Interpretive panel)
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society
Topics: American Indians; Ethnic Diversity; Government; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Transportation; Urban Development

Boley is one of thirteen All-Black towns, out of more than fifty that once existed, remaining in Oklahoma. While Tullahassee is reportedly the oldest, most were established between 1889 and 1907 as African Americans sought security and control of their own destiny in a segregated world. Boley was established in 1903 on land owned by a Creek Freedwoman, Abigail Barnett. Boley was incorporated on May 11, 1905. By 1911 it boasted more than 4,000 citizens (25,000 in surrounding areas) and many businesses, including two banks and three cotton gins. The town hosts the oldest African American community-based rodeo every Memorial Day weekend.

Boley, Oklahoma

Okfuskee County
Location: on US-62 in Boley
Coordinates: 35.488219, -96.484095
Material: Aluminum
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society/Town of Boley
Topics: American Indians; Ethnic Diversity; Government; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Transportation; Urban Development

Boley, Creek Nation, Indian Territory, established as an all Black town on land of Creek Indian Freedwoman Abigail Barnett. Organized by T.M. Haynes first townsite manager. Established August 1903. Incorporated May 11, 1905. Declared National Historic Landmark May 15, 1975.

Buffalo Springs

Garfield County
Location: on US-81, 1 1/2 miles north of Bison
Coordinates: 36.2150336,-97.8872384
Material: Aluminum
Topics: American Indians; Indian and Frontier Trade; Land Openings; Ranching; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Transportation

The springs were a favorite rest stop on the Chisholm Trail on long cattle drives from Texas to Kansas. A pioneer merchant, trader, and explorer, Jesse Chisholm, a Cherokee, established the trail through western Indian Territory before the Civil War. Texas cattlemen used the trail until the late 1880s to move millions of cattle to northern markets. The trail ran from Montague County, Texas, to Abilene, Kansas. Buffalo Springs was an important gathering place for settlers making the land run on April 22, 1889.

Burney Institute

Marshall County
Location: on OK-32, 1 1/2 miles east of Lebanon
Material: Aluminum
Topics: American Indians; Education; Recreational/Service; Social/Cultural; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

The school was opened as a learning center for Chickasaw girls in 1859 under the supervision of the Cumberland Presbyterian Board. In 1887, the name was changed to Chickasaw Orphan Home and Manual Labor School. The first post office, called Burney Academy, opened on July 3, 1860.

Caddo Springs

Caddo County
Location: along highway in front of Concho Indian School, Concho
Topics: American Indians; Education; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Transportation

Noted for the purity of its waters which come from adjacent sand dune areas, Caddo Springs, sometimes called Concho Springs, was a favored spot on the Chisholm Trail. Cheyenne and Arapaho people alike shared the springs as did the Arapahoe School, later named Concho Indian School, built in 1870. The springs were named for the earliest known Oklahoma inhabitants, the Caddo Indians.


Camp Arbuckle

McClain County
Location: on SH 59, one mile west of Byars
Topics: American Indians; Military; Settlement Patterns; Transportation; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Camp Arbuckle was established in May 1850 by Captain R. B. Marcy and Company D, 5th Infantry, the site was visited in 1849 by Marcy while escorting gold seekers to California. The post was moved in 1851 to a permanent site in Garvin County. Buildings then were occupied by Delawares under Black Beaver, famous chief and guide. An Indian town, known as Beaversville, existed there until Civil War days.

Camp Comanche

Caddo County
Location: on US Highway 62, near boundary line of Caddo and Comanche Counties
Topics: American Indians; Government; Military

Camp Comanche was set up near a large Comanche village by the First Dragoons under Colonel Henry Dodge on July 16, 1834, while en route from Fort Gibson to Plains tribes. Seventy-five Dragoons and noted artist George Catlin were too ill to travel farther with the expedition. The camp was evacuated July 28, upon Dodge's return from peace councils with the Plains Indians.

Camp Comanche

Comanche County
Location: in Fort Sill Museum in Lawton
Topics: American Indians; Arts; Government; Military; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Colonel Henry Dodge set up camp near a large Comanche village in this area in July 1834, hoping to hold talks with Comanche chiefs. Accompanying the US Dragoons Expedition was artist George Catlin, who probably made some of his most famous sketches of buffaloes and Comanches during the twelve days he spent at the camp. The exact location of the camp is unknown.


Camp Leavenworth

Marshall County
Location: on US-70 at west side of Kingston
Material: Aluminum
Topics: American Indians; Military; Social/Cultural; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

This frontier post was named for Brigadier General Henry Leavenworth, commander of the Dragoon Expedition through Oklahoma in 1834. Leavenworth died nearby after being injured in a buffalo hunt. Some historians call the 1834 expedition the greatest expeditionary force in the annals of the US Army.

Camp Radziminski

Kiowa County
Location: on US-183, two miles north of Mountain Park
Coordinates: 34.724926, -98.949244
Material: Aluminum
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society and the Oklahoma Department of Transportation
Topics: American Indians; Government; Military; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Established in September 1858 by four troops of the 2nd US Cavalry under Major Earl Van Dorn. The camp was named for Lieutenant Charles Radziminski, a former member of the 2nd Cavalry. E. Kirby Smith, Cornelius Van Camp, Fitzhugh Lee, and W. B. Royall served here. No permanent buildings were erected and the post was abandoned in December 1859.

Camp Supply

Woodward County
Location: on US-183, one mile east of Fort Supply
Topics: American Indians; Government; Military; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

The site was used as a supply camp for Colonel George Armstrong Custer's 7th Cavalry in 1868. General Philip Sheridan received Custer here when he returned from the Battle of the Washita in December of 1868. The name was changed to Fort Supply in 1878 and abandoned in 1894. The State of Oklahoma later used the buildings for a hospital.

Cantonment

Blaine County
Location: on OK-51, 1/2 mile west of Canton
Topics: American Indians; Military; Religion/Philosophy; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

Colonel Richard Dodge established this post in March of 1879 as part of the US Army's attempt to intercept hostile American Indians raiding into Kansas and Nebraska. Major General Philip H. Sheridan directed the construction of the post on the Cheyenne-Arapaho Reservation. Three years later, the stone buildings were abandoned and were eventually used as a Mennonite mission, a federal Indian school, and Indian agency.

Captain Atoka

Atoka County
Location: on grounds of Atoka County Courthouse in Atoka
Coordinates: 34.385550, -96.126833
Material: Granite
Sponsor(s): Atoka Historical Society
Topics: American Indians; Government; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

In memory of Captain Atoka. Born about 1792. Died during Civil War. Signed the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek in 1830. Led band of Choctaws to this area, settling near Crystal in 1834. Captain Atoka was a noted athlete, Choctaw subchief and respected leader. Atoka County and the City of Atoka were named in his honor.

CCC-Roman Nose State Park

Blaine County
Location: on OK-A8 off OK-51 in Roman Nose State Park north of Watonga
Topics: American Indians; Early Statehood, 1907–1941; Government; Recreational/Service; Social/Cultural

Men of the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) built roads and buildings in the state park during the Great Depression. Opened in 1937, the park is located on land that Cheyenne Chief Henry Roman Nose used as a campground. Chief Roman Nose was a veteran of Plains Indian warfare. He was imprisoned at Fort Marion, Florida, then attended school at Hampton Institute in Virginia and Carlisle Indian School in Pennsylvania.


Chahte Tamaha

Bryan County
Location: on US-70 at the eastern city limits of Bokchito
Material: Aluminum
Topics: American Indians; Education; Government; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

This settlement was also called Choctaw City and was the site of Armstrong Academy, established by the Choctaw Nation in 1845. The Choctaw National Council met in the main hall of the academy for twenty years. Chahte Tamaha served as the Confederate capital during the Civil War. Delegates to a meeting of the United Nations of Indian Territory met here at the beginning of the Civil War to ally with the Confederacy. Armstrong Academy continued as a Choctaw boys school until a fire destroyed the building in 1919.

Cherokee National Cemetery

Muskogee County
Location: on East Poplar Street in Fort Gibson
Material: Aluminum
Topics: American Indians; Government; Social/Cultural; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Before the Civil War, the Cherokees designated the cemetery as a national cemetery. The Cherokee Nation maintained the cemetery until 1906 when it was transferred to the town of Fort Gibson. Cherokee Principal Chief William P. Ross and other tribal leaders are buried here.


Cherokee-Seneca Boundary

Delaware County
Location: on US-59 at Buffalo Creek
Material: Aluminum
Topics: American Indians; Government; Settlement Patterns

In 1831, more than 400 members of the Seneca Tribe in Ohio gave up their reservation land in exchange for a tract of land in the northeastern part of the Cherokee Nation. This was the boundary between the Cherokee land and the Seneca territory that comprised an area of 67,000 acres, seven miles by fifteen miles.


Cheyenne-Arapaho Cattle Ranch (Hodge Site)

Custer County
Location: on OK-33, three miles east of Hammon
Coordinates: 35.638807, -99.321835
Material: Aluminum
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society and Custer County Historical Society
Topics: American Indians; Ranching; Territorial, 1861–1907

The main headquarters for this million-acre ranch was on the Washita River at the mouth of Quartermaster Creek. The ranch, established in 1882, was also known as the Apple Ranch. Part of the ranch is listed in the National Register of Historic Places as the Hodge Archaeological Site.

Note: This marker is damaged.

Chickasaw Council House

Johnston County
Location: in Chickasaw Museum, 200 North Fisher, Tishomingo
Topics: American Indians; Government; Social/Cultural; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

A log cabin, now restored to near original condition, served as the official meeting place of Chickasaw leaders from 1856 until 1858 when a new brick building was constructed. Fire destroyed that building in 1890, and the final Chickasaw capitol, now the Johnston County Courthouse, was built in 1897.


Chickasaw Trail of Tears

McCurtain County
Location: on US Hwy 70 between Broken Bow and Arkansas state line
Topics: American Indians; Government; Settlement Patterns; Transportation; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

During the late 1830s and early 1840s, Chickasaws removed by the United States government from Mississippi and Alabama passed near here on their way to a new homeland in present-day south-central Oklahoma. In 1937 an estimated 6,000 Chickasaws traveled by various routes to lands purchased from the Choctaws. This journey became known as the Chickasaw Trail of Tears.

Chief Joseph of the Nez Perce

Kay County
Location: on US 60 approximately 2 miles east of Tonkawa
Coordinates: 36.688083, -97.267000
Material: Granite
Sponsor(s): Tonkawa Historical Society and Oklahoma Historical Society
Topics: American Indians; Settlement Patterns; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

After surrendering to the US military in 1877, the Nez Perce under Chief Joseph were relocated to Indian Territory as prisoners of war. At Oakland Agency (near present-day Tonkawa), the Nez Perce made a substantial effort to become economically self-sufficient by arranging leasing agreements with local ranchers. They also established a day school. The Nez Perce left Indian Territory in 1885. Over 100 Nez Perce children died during their time in Indian Territory, including Chief Joseph’s daughter.

Chief Left Hand

Blaine County
Location: at Jessie Chisholm's gravesite near Left Hand Springs northeast of Geary
Topics: American Indians; Religion/Philosophy; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Chief Left Hand was born in the 1840s near Fort Supply. This noted warrior and survivor of the Sand Creek Massacre attended the Medicine Lodge conference in 1867, which resulted in the removal of his people to Indian Territory. He became principal chief of the Southern Arapaho in 1889 and encouraged his tribe to accept the white man's ways. However, he believed the Ghost Dance movement promised a return to the old ways. His allotment included this site, then known as Raven Springs, now Left Hand Springs. In the early 1900s, blindness forced Chief Left Hand to relinquish his position as chief.


Chief Mosholatubbee

Le Flore County
Location: in Hall Cemetery south of Cameron on Raymond Adams Road
Material: Granite
Topics: American Indians; GP; Settlement Patterns; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Chief Mosholatubbee was one of three Choctaw chiefs who signed early treaties with the United States, including the 1830 Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek, which provided for the removal of the Choctaws to Indian Territory. He moved with his people to a new home off the Fort Towson Road, north of Sugar Loaf Mountain, and died August 3, 1838. In his honor, the Choctaw Nation region from the Arkansas River to the Winding Stair Mountains was called Mosholatubbee District.


Chief Pushmataha

Wagoner County
Location: on US-69, 1/4 mile north of Arkansas River bridge
Material: Granite
Topics: American Indians; Recreational/Service; Social/Cultural; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Chief Pushmataha led a Mississippi Choctaw hunting expedition to the area in January of 1807 and attacked armed men under the leadership of French trader Joseph Bogy. Pushmataha County, in southeastern Oklahoma, is named for this great Choctaw leader.

Chief Sapulpa Cemetery

Creek County
Location: on East Taft Avenue near South Division Street in Sapulpa (DAR)
Sponsor(s): Daughters of the American Revolution
Topics: American Indians; Indian and Frontier Trade; Social/Cultural; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

Chief Sapulpa Cemetery, one block south of the marker, is named for a full-blood Creek Indian named "Chief" Sapulpa, although he was not a chief. He owned an early trading post and was a Confederate officer in the Civil War. His real name was Sepulcher, but over time the name became corrupted to Sapulpa. The local DAR chapter purchased the burial ground in 1923.


Chief Stumbling Bear Pass

Comanche County
Location: on OK-58 north of Fort Sill Military Reservation
Coordinates: 34.807365, -98.524543
Material: Aluminum
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society and the Oklahoma Department of Transportation
Topics: American Indians; Government; Settlement Patterns; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

Stumbling Bear, a Kiowa, was the last signer of the Medicine Lodge Treaty in 1867. Stumbling Bear founded the first permanent settlement of Plains Indians in the area. In 1877 the federal government built houses for the Indians on Canyon Creek, north of the Wichita Mountains.

Chief’s Old House

Choctaw County
Location: on county road, two miles northeast of Swink
Material: Granite
Sponsor(s): Swink Historical Preservation Association
Topics: American Indians; Family/Household; Settlement Patterns; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

According to some this is the oldest house still standing in Oklahoma, having been built in 1832 by the federal government for Choctaw District Chief Thomas LeFlore under its treaty obligations with the Choctaw Nation. Recent scholarship indicates that the home built for LeFlore stood west of Wheelock Mission in McCurtain County. However, this old house is representative of a typical Choctaw planter's home in the mid-nineteenth century.

Note: Unable to locate marker.


Chilocco Indian School

Kay County
Location: on US-77, three miles south of the Kansas border
Material: Granite
Topics: American Indians; Education; Empire Period, 1541–1803; Ethnic Diversity; Industrial Period, 1841–1892; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

Congress authorized this school for Indian children in 1882. Before its closing in the 1970s, Chilocco was one of the largest Indian schools in the United States. On part of the original 9,000 acres set aside for the school, a major archaeological find proved the existence of Ferdinandina, a French trading post established around 1746 and considered to be the first white settlement in what would become Oklahoma.

Chisholm Trail

Canadian County
Location: Marker was relocated to the Mollie Spencer Farm in Yukon in 2019; originally on US-81, three miles north of El Reno
Coordinates: 35.495504, -97.759363
Material: Granite
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society
Topics: American Indians; Indian and Frontier Trade; Ranching; Transportation

A pioneer merchant, trader, and explorer, Jesse Chisholm, a Cherokee, established a trail through western Indian Territory before the Civil War. Texas cattlemen used the trail until the late 1880s to move millions of cattle to northern markets. The trail ran from Montague County, Texas, to Abilene, Kansas.

Chisholm Trail

Garfield County
Location: North of Enid on Highway 81 on the east side of the road just north of the Highway 45 intersection
Coordinates: 36.4641915,-97.8731928
Material: Granite
Sponsor(s): Jesse Chisholm Trail and Memorial Association
Topics: American Indian and Frontier Trade; American Indians; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Transportation; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Here passed the old cattle trail, blazed by Jesse Chisolm, which finally stretched for eight hundred miles, from San Antonio, Texas, to Abilene, Kansas, over which cowboys from the pasturelands of the great southwest drove the herds to the railroads. Many tales of the adventure will perhaps remain untold with the passing of those who traveled the trail. To them, this memorial is dedicated, in the year 1945.

Chisholm Trail

Grant County
Location: One mile north of Pond Creek on Highway 81, on the west side of the road (DAR)
Coordinates: 36.6807398,-97.804301
Material: Stone with bronze plaque
Sponsor(s): Daughters of the American Revolution
Topics: American Indian and Frontier Trade; American Indians; Ranching; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Transportation; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

A pioneer merchant, trader, and explorer, Jesse Chisholm, a Cherokee, established the trail through western Indian Territory before the Civil War. Texas cattlemen used the trail until the late 1880s to move millions of cattle to northern markets. The trail ran from Montague County, Texas, to Abilene, Kansas.

Chisholm Trail

Grant County
Location: Approximately 400 feet west of Eighth Street in Pond Creek on Highway 81, on the north side of the road (DAR)
Coordinates: 36.666028, -97.812611
Material: Stone with bronze plaque
Sponsor(s): Daughters of the American Revolution
Topics: American Indians; Indian and Frontier Trade; Ranching; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Transportation; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

A pioneer merchant, trader, and explorer, Jesse Chisholm, a Cherokee, established the trail through western Indian Territory before the Civil War. Texas cattlemen used the trail until the late 1880s to move millions of cattle to northern markets. The trail ran from Montague County, Texas, to Abilene, Kansas.

Chisholm Trail

Kingfisher County
Location: on US-81 at north edge of Dover
Material: Granite
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society and the Oklahoma Department of Transportation
Topics: American Indians; Indian and Frontier Trade; Ranching; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Transportation; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

A pioneer merchant, trader, and explorer, Jesse Chisholm, a mixed-blood Cherokee, established a trail through western Indian Territory before the Civil War. Texas cattlemen used the trail until the late 1880s to move millions of cattle to northern markets. The trail ran from Montague County, Texas, to Abilene, Kansas.

Note: This marker may be missing.

Chisholm Trail

Stephens County
Location: on OK-7, two miles east of Duncan
Topics: American Indians; Indian and Frontier Trade; Ranching; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Transportation

A pioneer merchant, trader, and explorer, Jesse Chisholm, a Cherokee, established a trail through western Indian Territory before the Civil War. Texas cattlemen used the trail until the late 1880s to move millions of cattle to northern markets. The trail ran from Montague County, Texas, to Abilene, Kansas.


Chitto Harjo, Creek Patriot

McCurtain County
Location: in front yard of home approximately five miles south of Smithville (SW 4 NE 4 SW 4 of S 3, T 2S, R25 E)
Material: Concrete with bronze plaque
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society
Topics: American Indians; Folklife; Government; Social/Cultural; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

This Muscogee (Creek) leader opposed the allotment of tribal lands through various means, including lobbying federal officials, refusing to file for an allotment, and directly resisting government agents and the Creek National Council. This marker commemorates Harjo’s gravesite. He died here circa 1911 in the home of Choctaw citizen Daniel Bobb after a shootout at his home near Henryetta in 1909.

Choctaw Agency

Le Flore County
Location: on US-271 east of Spiro
Topics: American Indians; Government; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

The first building to house Choctaw Indian agents at this location was completed in 1832. The village later was known as Skullyville where a new Choctaw constitution was adopted at a convention in 1857.

Choctaw Capitol

Pushmataha County
Location: on US-271, 1 1/2 miles west of Tuskahoma
Material: Aluminum
Topics: American Indians; Government; Settlement Patterns; Social/Cultural; Transportation; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

The first Choctaw capitol, Nanih Waiya, was completed in 1838. The first Choctaw constitution was written here in 1834. At Nanih Waiya are buried the bones of the Choctaws who died en route to Indian Territory from their ancestral homeland in Mississippi in the 1830s.

Choctaw Chief Isaac Garvin

McCurtain County
Location: in Waterhole Cemetery three miles south of Garvin
Topics: American Indians; Family/Household; Government; Social/Cultural; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Garvin served as principal chief of the Choctaws from 1879 to his death in 1880.


Choctaw Chief Thomas LeFlore

McCurtain County
Location: one mile west of Wheelock Mission on private land
Topics: American Indians

Leflore, chief of the Apuckshunnubbe District of the Choctaw Nation, 1834–1838 and 1842–1850, lived in a home built here under the 1830 Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek. He died in 1859 and was buried in a family cemetery nearby.


Choctaw Chief’s House

Choctaw County
Location: on grounds of house, two miles northeast of Swink
Coordinates: 34.023164, -95.181443
Material: Concrete with bronze plaque
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society and the Daughters of the American Revoluntion
Topics: American Indians; Family/Household; Settlement Patterns; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Three concrete markers commemorate what was once known as Choctaw Chief’s House. This house was originally believed to have been constructed for Choctaw District Chief Thomas LeFlore in 1832 per terms of the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek (1830). Subsequent research uncovered that Chief LeFlore’s House likely stood west of Wheelock Mission in McCurtain County. See “Chief’s Old House.” Also see Louis Coleman, “The Choctaw Chief’s House: Oral Tradition and Historical Inaccuracies,” The Chronicles of Oklahoma 81, No. 4 (Winter 2003–04): 492–501. Markers’ sponsors include the Oklahoma Historical Society and Daughters of the American Revolution.

Choctaw Nation Capitol Building

Pushmataha County
Location: on OK-2, one mile north of US-271 junction
Topics: American Indians; Government; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

The last Choctaw capitol was erected here in 1884. The tribal government was housed in the building until statehood. The Choctaw Nation's headquarters are now located in Durant.


Choctaw Trail of Tears

McCurtain County
Location: at a point on US Hwy 70 near Broken Bow, Oklahoma
Topics: American Indians; Government; Settlement Patterns; Social/Cultural; Transportation; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

During the early 1830s, Choctaw Indians removed by the United States government from Mississippi passed near here on their way to new homes in present-day Oklahoma. An estimated 15,000 Choctaws traveled by steamboat, wagon, and on foot to Oklahoma. Approximately one-quarter of the tribe perished from cold, disease, and starvation during the removal journey. This journey became known as the "Choctaw Trails of Tears.


Choctaw-Chickasaw Woman’s Missionary Union

Pittsburg County
Location: at the intersection of Monroe Street and Strong Boulevard in McAlester (OBHC)
Topics: American Indians; Religion/Philosophy; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

Baptist women's work in Oklahoma began in 1876 with the organization of the Choctaw-Chickasaw Woman's Missionary Union.


Chouteau’s Post

Mayes County
Location: on public school grounds in Salina
Topics: American Indians; Indian and Frontier Trade; Military; Settlement Patterns; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Auguste Chouteau and his brother, Pierre, traded with the Arkansas band of Osage in the Three Forks area where the Arkansas, Verdigris, and Grand Rivers merge. Colonel A. P. Chouteau—Pierre's son and the fourteenth man to graduate from the US Military Academy at West Point— built a trading post on the Grand River in 1817, recognized as the oldest permanent American settlement in what became Oklahoma. He built a home near the trading post on the eastern bank of the Grand River.

Claremore Mound

Rogers County
Location: less than one-quarter mile north of E 440 Road on OK-88 and approximately five miles north of Claremore on OK-88
Coordinates: 36.382000, -95.632833
Material: Granite
Topics: American Indians; Natural Resources; Petroleum; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Named for the great Osage chief, Clermont, the area was the site of an Osage village destroyed by the Cherokees in 1817. Oil was discovered a century later on the Osage Reservation nearby.

Cleveland-Pioneer Oil City

Pawnee County
Location: on US-64 and OK-99 in Cleveland
Topics: American Indians; Natural Resources; Petroleum; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Urban Development

Cleveland, established in 1894, was named for President Grover Cleveland. It became an early boomtown after oil was discovered in the immediate vicinity and in nearby Osage County in the early twentieth century.


Colbert Family

Bryan County
Location: on OK-199, thirteen miles east of Madill in Fort Washita Cemetery
Material: Granite
Topics: American Indians; Government

For 200 years, some of the most famous tribal leaders of the Chickasaw Nation came from this family. Their leadership abilities were well-known and utilized during negotiations with the federal government. The marker is a tribute to Charley Colbert, auditor of the Chickasaw Nation.

Colbert’s Ferry

Bryan County
Location: on US-69 in Colbert
Topics: American Indians; Government; Social/Cultural; Transportation; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Colbert's Ferry was located on the Red River about three-fourths of a mile from the home of Benjamin F. Colbert. Colbert owned the ferry that provided travelers with a safe journey across the river. Colbert's home served as a stop on the Butterfield Mail Route from 1858 to the early days of the Civil War. The Colbert post office was established here on November 17, 1853.

The Cooper Site

Woodward County
Location: Fort Supply
Sponsor(s): Leland Bement
Topics: American Indians; Environmental/Cultural; Pre-European Contact, before 1541 AD; Recreational/Service; Social/Cultural

Two miles northeast of here is the Cooper Paleo-Indian bison kill site. The site was the scene of three of the largest Folsom (ca. 10,500 years ago) bison kills known. Each event saw more than thirty bison herded into a dead-end gully. Hunters on the gully rim killed the animals with spears tipped with finely crafted Folsom points. A bison skull beneath the second kill was painted with red zigzag lines to ensure a successful hunt. The mineral pigment was red hematite. This is the oldest painted skull in North America and is the earliest evidence of hunting ritual for the Plains region.


Council Grove

Oklahoma County
Location: near Northwest Tenth Street and the North Canadian River in Bethany (DAR)
Coordinates: 35.479047, -97.663289
Sponsor(s): Daughters of the American Revolution
Topics: American Indians; Indian and Frontier Trade; Military; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Jesse Chisholm opened a trading post here in 1858. In 1865, Comanche and Kiowa met nearby with Confederate leaders. Barracks were constructed on the site to house soldiers to clear timber for the construction of Fort Reno.

Creek Capitol

Okmulgee County
Location: on city square in Okmulgee
Topics: American Indians; Government; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

This former capitol of the Creek Nation was constructed in 1878. Indian Territory tribal delegates met on this site in 1870 to draft the Okmulgee Constitution. Though never adopted or approved, the document called for the organization of Indian Territory under one government.

Creek Capitol

Okmulgee County
Location: inside north door of Creek Capitol (DAR)
Material: Aluminum
Sponsor(s): Daughters of the American Revolution
Topics: American Indians; Government; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

The Creek Council House, now a museum, occupies an entire city block in downtown Okmulgee. An original building was erected in 1868 but was razed for construction of the present structure in 1878. See Creek Capitol.


Creek Council Ground

McIntosh County
Location: at Eufaula Indian community at Seventh and Forest in Eufaula
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society
Topics: American Indians; Government; Military; Recreational/Service; Social/Cultural

Confederate Commissioner Albert Pike met with Creek leaders at North Fork Town, now covered by the waters of Lake Eufaula, on July 10, 1861, to sign a treaty in which the Creeks pledged their support to the South in the Civil War.


Creek Council Oak

Tulsa County
Location: southwest corner of West 15th Street and South Cheyenne Avenue in Tulsa
Coordinates: 36.140502, -95.989655
Material: Aluminum
Sponsor(s): Tulsa County Historical Society
Topics: American Indians; Government; Social/Cultural; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

4 blocks south on the north side of 18th St. stands a great oak, focal point of the old Creek Ceremonial Grounds. Here, overlooking the Arkansas, in 1828, the Indians deposited ashes from their Alabama ancestral home, kindled a fire to begin anew in the west, thus founding present-day Tulsa.

Note: This marker is no longer extant.


Cromwell

Seminole County
Material: Granite
Sponsor(s): Student Council and Patrons of Paden, 1987-1988
Topics: American Indians; Education; Ethnic Diversity; Folklife; Government; Industry/Business; Natural Resources; Petroleum; Social/Cultural; UB

The Cromwell oil field and town were named for Joe I. Cromwell of Muskogee, Oklahoma. A gas well, the #1 Jim Willis in the SE/4 SE/4NW/4 of Section 15-10N-8E, was completed at a depth of 3,466 feet by the Cosden Oil Co. on November 11, 1922. However, it was not until the discovery of oil by the Cromwell Oil & Gas Company at the #1 Bruner in the NW/4 NE/4 SW/4 of Section 15-10N-8E on October 2, 1923, that the drilling boom started. This well was completed to a depth of 3,475 feet. A total of 393 wells produced oil in the field with the largest oil well producing 5,600 barrels per day, and the largest gas well producing 125,000,000 M.C.F. The town of Cromwell and the surrounding oil field had a peak population of 10,000 during 1923 and 1924. Lawlessness became rampant and caused the town to be named "Cromwell the Wicked". In September 1924, prisoners from Cromwell were handcuffed to a log cabin and marched 14 miles to the county jail in Wewoka. To help curb the lawlessness in the town, William (Bill) Tilghman, a pioneer law officer and one of the famous "Three Guardsmen" of Oklahoma was named Chief of Police in September 1924. On November 1, 1924, at the age of seventy, Tilghman was slain at the entrance of Murphy's dance hall located where this marker stands.


Crossing of Fort Supply to Fort Reno Road

Woodward County
Location: on OK-34 at Ninth Street and Jefferson in Woodward
Topics: American Indians; Indian and Frontier Trade; Military; Settlement Patterns; Transportation

Originally a trail from Camp Supply to Darlington in the Cheyenne/Arapaho lands beginning in 1869, the road eventually became the main route of travel and supply between the two western forts.


Custer’s Rendezvous

Kiowa County
Location: in Quartz Mountain State Park
Material: Granite
Topics: American Indians; Government; Military; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Transportation

On March 5, 1869, General George Armstrong Custer and two cavalry regiments met a large supply train dispatched from Camp Supply by General Philip H. Sheridan. Three days earlier, Custer and his troops had departed Medicine Creek Camp, later Fort Sill, on an expedition against Plains Indians.


Cutthroat Gap Massacre

Kiowa County
Location: on OK-54, two miles south of Cooperton
Coordinates: 34.828696, -98.861303
Material: Granite
Sponsor(s): Kiowa Historical Society and Oklahoma Historical Society
Topics: American Indians; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

In the early summer of 1833, an Osage war party attacked an undefended Kiowa camp nearby, killing many elderly men, women, and children. Most of the warriors had left the camp days earlier to hunt bison. It has been estimated that 150 Kiowas were killed. The Osage took two children captive and stole many horses. Little Bear recorded the massacre on his calendar as the “Summer That They Cut Off Their Heads,” acknowledging Osage raiders who put the heads of their victims in camp cooking pots. The site of the massacre later became known as Cutthroat Gap.

Cutthroat Gap Massacre

Pittsburg County
Topics: American Indians; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

The Cutthroat Gap Massacre site is approximately 2.5 miles east of this marker. In the early summer of 1833, the summer before "The Stars Fell", an Osage war party attacked an undefended Kiowa camp. The camp of Islandman A'D'Ate, Principal Chief of the Kiowa, consisted of women, children, the elderly, and a few warriors. Most of the warriors were on a raid against the Utes while others were hunting buffalo. The Osage tracked Islandman's band from Saddle Mountain through the mountains to the camp site.


Dalton Cave

Creek County
Location: on corner of Coonrod Drive and SH-51, Mannford
Sponsor(s): Keystone Crossroads Historical Society
Topics: American Indians; Environmental/Cultural Ecology; Folklife; Government

Located approximately 3.3 miles west is a cave where, according to the 1930s WPA Guide to Oklahoma, Creek Indian Tom Bartee sheltered and fed the Daltons when they were pursued by deputy US marshals.


Darlington

Canadian County
Location: on US-81, three miles north of El Reno
Coordinates: 35.586301, -97.958908
Material: Granite
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society
Topics: American Indians; Government; Mass Communication; Religion/Philosophy; Retail; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Transportation

An important stop on the Chisholm Trail, the Cheyenne-Arapaho Agency was established at Darlington in 1870. The settlement is named for Brinton Darlington, a Quaker who was appointed Indian agent by President U. S. Grant. A post office opened in Darlington in 1873 and the first newspaper published in western Indian Territory, the Cheyenne Transporter, was printed in the community in 1879.

Dave Blue Trading Post

Cleveland County
Location: at intersection of 48th Avenue Southeast and East Imhoff Road (OK-9) in Norman
Coordinates: 35.189750, -97.370517
Material: Aluminum
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society
Topics: American Indians; Indian and Frontier Trade

Dave Blue was a trader in the 1870s who hired Cherokee and Creeks to kill wild buffalo. Blue shipped the hides to Atoka for transportation to market in the eastern United States. Blue's trading post was built along the Arbuckle Cattle Trail.

Deputy U.S. Marshal James Nakedhead

McIntosh County
Location: on OK-150 in Lake Eufaula State Park
Coordinates: 35.419127, -95.628342
Material: Granite
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society
Topics: American Indians; Government; Recreational/Service; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

James Nakedhead was a deputy US marshal killed in the line of duty in Indian Territory on February 27, 1895. A Cherokee policeman, he was the first town marshal of Tahlequah in 1890. He was a Cherokee policeman and the first town marshal in Tahlequah in 1890.


Doaksville

Choctaw County
Location: one mile north of Fort Towson on Red Road and east of Fort Towson Cemetery
Coordinates: 34.034867, -95.269867
Material: Concrete with bronze plaque
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society
Topics: American Indians; Indian and Frontier Trade; Settlement Patterns; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

This town was the commercial center of the region shortly after it was established by Josiah Doak in 1824. At one time it was the capital of the Choctaw Nation. The name of the post office at nearby Fort Towson was changed to Doaksville on November 11, 1847.

Drummond Home

Osage County
Location: at the Fred and Addie Drummond Home, 305 North Price in Hominy
Topics: American Indians; Ethnic Diversity; Family/Household; Natural Resources; Petroleum; Ranching; Retail

Frederick Drummond immigrated to the United States from Scotland in the 1880s. After moving to the Osage Reservation, he established the Hominy Trading Company in 1904 and expanded his operations into the cattle business and buying and leasing Indian lands, eventually building one of the state's largest ranches. Drummond and his wife, Addie, constructed this substantial Victorian home in 1905. Most of the original fine furnishings, as well as personal family records, photographs, and other items, are still in the house.


Durant

Bryan County
Location: on US-69 on north side of Durant
Topics: American Indians; Early Statehood, 1907–1941; Government; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

The town of Durant was named for Dixon Durant, member of a prominent Choctaw-French family in the Choctaw Nation. The first Durant post office was established on February 20, 1879. Durant was home to one of the state's greatest leaders, Robert Lee Williams, a member of the constitutional convention, chief justice of the Oklahoma Supreme Court, governor of Oklahoma, a federal district judge, and judge of the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals.

Dwight Mission

Sequoyah County
Location: on US-64 east of Vian at junction with road to Marble City
Material: Granite
Topics: American Indians; Education; Religion/Philosophy; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

The American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions purchased and used the site as a base for missionary work. Reverend Cephas Washburn built a school for the Cherokees here in 1828, a successor to a school he founded in Arkansas. For four decades, Washburn provided educational leadership among the Cherokees.

Eagletown

McCurtain County
Location: on US-70 west of Mountain Fork River at Eagletown
Material: Granite
Topics: American Indians; Early Statehood;, 1907–1941; Education; Ethnic Diversity; Government; Religion/Philosophy; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

The first permanent settlement among Western Choctaws was west of Mountain Fork River, but the present town was platted east of the river in 1821. Oklahoma's first post office was established here on July 1, 1834.

Edmund Pickens

Love County
Location: on OK-32 at Ennville
Material: Aluminum
Topics: American Indians; Government; Settlement Patterns; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Born in Mississippi, Pickens came west with the Chickasaws in 1837 and was their first elected chief after the nation removed to Indian Territory. Pickens County in the Chickasaw Nation was named for him.


Elias Boudinot

Cherokee County
Location: at Worcester Cemetery at Park Hill
Material: Granite
Topics: American Indians; Government; Mass Communication; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Kulakenna "Buck" Watie, brother of Stand Watie, took the name of his benefactor, Elias Boudinot of New Jersey. After completing his education, Boudinot signed the Treaty of New Echota (Georgia) in 1835 that provided for the removal of the Cherokees to Indian Territory. He was clerk of the Cherokee National Council and editor of the Cherokee Phoenix before removal. After he came west, Boudinot was assassinated on June 22, 1839, near the Park Hill Mission Press where he was assisting the famous missionary Reverend Samuel Worcester.


Emahaka Mission

Seminole County
Location: in Seminole county, five miles south of Wewoka at intersection of US-270 and State-56
Topics: American Indians; Education

A school for Seminole Indian girls was established in 1894 operated by the Seminole Nation. Reverend W.P. Blake was the first superintendent. Mrs. Alice Brown Davis, who later became first female chief of the Seminole, was the superintendent in 1908 at Emahaka Mission. The school was abandoned in 1914, in a closing of Seminole government properties.

Enon Baptist Association

Love County
Location: at Leon Baptist Church in Leon (OBHC)
Topics: American Indians; Religion/Philosophy; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

In August 1885, the Enon Baptist Association was founded at Wilson Creek Church in the Chickasaw Nation.


Entering Indian Territory

Ottawa County
Location: on US-69 Alternate just south of Kansas-Oklahoma border
Topics: American Indians; Settlement Patterns; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

This area was granted to the Quapaw tribe in 1833. Nearby, members of twenty other tribes received lands from the federal government.


Fairfield Mission

Adair County
Location: at junction of OK-100 and US-59 on south edge of Stilwell
Topics: American Indians; Education; Religion/Philosophy; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

The mission building, completed in 1829 by Dr. Marcus Palmer, a missionary to the Cherokees, stood in a grove of large trees a few hundred feet east of the cemetery now known as McLemore Cemetery. Noted missionaries and teachers at the mission included Elizur Butler, Charles C. Torrey, Clarissa Palmer, Lucy Butler, and Esther Smith. A circulation library, possibly the state's first, was established at the mission in 1832.

Note: This marker is missing.

First Oil Well, Tulsa County

Tulsa County
Location: on 66 at the north side of Red Fork
Topics: American Indians; Industrial Period, 1841–1892; Natural Resources; Petroleum; Settlement Patterns

This well about a half-mile west of the marker was on the Creek allotment of Dr. Bland's wife and was in production with oil royalties, paying the Bland heirs until the well was closed down around 1952.

Fort Arbuckle

Tulsa County
Location: in Brush Creek Park near Sand Springs
Sponsor(s): Tulsa County Historical Society
Topics: American Indians; Military; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

The site of Fort Arbuckle is less than one mile north. One of the two US military posts on the western frontier of the Creek Nation, this “first” Fort Arbuckle in Indian Territory was built in 1834 by troops of the 7th Infantry with Major George Birch in command. The stockade buildings were garrisoned only a few months.

Fort Cobb

Caddo County
Location: on OK-9 in Fort Cobb
Material: Aluminum
Topics: American Indians; Military; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Western Expansion, 1803–1861

Established October 1, 1859, Fort Cobb was manned by Federal troops to allay fears of raids by Plains Indians on Choctaws, Chickasaws, and white settlers moving West. Four companies of infantry were garrisoned at the fort until it was evacuated in May of 1861. During the Civil War, the fort was occupied by Confederate soldiers. After the Battle of the Washita (1868), Fort Cobb was headquarters of General W. B. Hazen, special Indian agent, General Philip H. Sheridan, and Colonel George Armstrong Custer. The US Army abandoned the post in March of 1869.

Fort Coffee

Le Flore County
Location: on US-271 east of Spiro
Material: Aluminum
Topics: American Indians; Education; Military; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Named in honor of General John Coffee of Tennessee, Fort Coffee was established by the 7th Infantry on June 16, 1834, on the southern bank of the Arkansas River. Because of relative peace in the area, the fort was abandoned four years later. In 1842, the Choctaw Council established the Fort Coffee Academy for boys. Confederate forces used the barracks during the Civil War. However, Federal troops overran the post in October of 1863 and burned the main buildings.

Fort Gibson

Muskogee County
Location: on BUS-62 in front of Town Hall in Fort Gibson
Coordinates: 35.797141, -95.251534
Material: Aluminum
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society and the Oklahoma Department of Transportation
Topics: American Indians; Government; Military; Settlement Patterns; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

Founded on April 21, 1824, by Col. Matthew Arbuckle. In the twenty-six years before the Civil War, more than one hundred West Point graduates served at Fort Gibson. In 1841, the post was headquarters of Brigadier General (later President) Zachary Taylor. The post was abandoned in 1890.

Fort Holmes

Hughes County
Location: on OK-48 west of Kenefic
Topics: American Indians; Military; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

This frontier fort was established by Lieutenant Theophilus Holmes who later rose to the rank of lieutenant general in the Confederate Army. Holmes built temporary barracks for troops in 1834 to serve as an advance base for troops stationed at Fort Towson. General Henry Leavenworth visited here on his 1834 expedition to the Plains Tribes.

Note: This marker was reported missing.

Fort Reno

Canadian County
Location: on OK-66 at entrance to Fort Reno
Material: Aluminum
Topics: American Indians; Early Statehood, 1907–1941; Government; Military; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

Named for General Jesse L. Reno, who died in action in the Battle of Antietam in 1862, Fort Reno was a prominent outpost among the Cheyenne. US troops camped in the area during an Indian uprising in 1874, and a permanent site for the post was chosen the following year. The post was abandoned as an active military installation in February 1908, but it served as an army remount station until 1949. Many of the original structures still stand.

Fort Sill Indian School

Comanche County
Location: on I-44 between Fort Sill and Lawton
Material: Aluminum
Topics: American Indians; Education; Religion/Philosophy; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

Quaker teacher Reverend Josiah Butler opened the school for Kiowa, Apache, and Comanche children in February of 1871.


Fort Towson

Choctaw County
Location: on US-70 at east edge of Fort Towson
Coordinates: 34.017681, -95.253985
Material: Granite
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society
Topics: American Indians; Government; Military; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Colonel Matthew Arbuckle ordered the construction of the fort in May 1824 to guard the US boundary with Mexico. After Indian removals to the area in the 1830s, the fort served as a permanent army post until 1854. During the Civil War, the fort was occupied by Confederate forces. Brigadier General Stand Watie surrendered his Confederate troops here in June 1865, the last Confederate general to lay down his arms. Fort Towson was abandoned after the Civil War.

Fort Towson Landing

Choctaw County
Location: on US-70 at east edge of Fort Towson
Coordinates: 34.017682, -95.254016
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society and the Oklahoma Department of Transportation
Topics: American Indians; Indian and Frontier Trade; Industry/Business; Retail; Transportation

The Fort Towson Landing was south of here on the banks of the Red River. Also known as the Public Landing, it served as a receiving point for soldiers and supplies delivered by keelboats and steamboats from 1824 to 1854. Traders at the Choctaw settlement of Doaksville and local planters received goods and transported cotton to New Orleans. The cotton went to textile mills in Great Britain and the eastern United States helping to fuel the Industrial Revolution. Commercial navigation on the Upper Red River continued until the early 1900s when railroads surpassed it an as economical mode of transportation.

Fort Wayne

Adair County
Location: on US-59 on south edge of Watts
Coordinates: 36.105500, -94.574600
Material: Granite
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society
Topics: American Indians; Military; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Established in 1838 by Lt. Col. R. B. Mason, 1st Dragoons, US Army, at request of Arkansas citizens fearing Cherokees who were being removed from southeastern US. Named in honor of Gen. “Mad” Anthony Wayne, the fort was originally located in NE corner of present-day Watts on a hill, overlooking Illinois River. Considered poor location because many soldiers died there including Capt. John Stuart, 7th infantry. In 1839, fort was abandoned and moved to Beatie's Prairie west of Maysville, Arkansas. That site abandoned in 1842 and troops moved north to establish Fort Scott, Kansas.


Fort Wayne

Delaware County
Location: on SH20, about one mile west of Arkansas line
Material: Aluminum
Topics: American Indians; Military; Settlement Patterns; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Fort Wayne was originally intended as a link in the great line of forts extending north and south to afford protection on the frontier of the unknown West. It was soon realized that such extensive precautions were not necessary, and the locations were abandoned. One building had been completed, with four more under construction. These improvements were given to the Cherokee Nation and were in use until after the War Between the States. The exact site is known, but the buildings no longer exist and today nothing remains to mark the location of this frontier army post.


Gardner Mansion

McCurtain County
Location: on US-70 west of Mountain Fork River
Material: Aluminum
Topics: American Indians; Family/Household; Government; Religion/Philosophy; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

Now privately owned, this two-story home belonged to Jefferson Gardner, principal chief of the Choctaws from 1894 to 1896. Well-known Choctaw minister and builder James Dyer constructed the house in 1884 near the site of old Eagletown.


Garland Cemetery

McCurtain County
Location: on OK-3, three miles west of the Oklahoma-Arkansas border
Topics: Agriculture; American Indians; Social/Cultural

This cemetery was the family burying ground for prominent Choctaws. Chief Samuel Garland, 1864–1866, established a plantation here after arrival over the Trail of Tears in the 1830s. Buried here are Chief Garland and his mother-in-law, Sophia Pitchlynn, the mother of Choctaw Chief Peter Pitchlynn.

General Douglas Hancock Cooper

Bryan County
Location: on OK-199, thirteen miles east of Madill in Fort Washita Cemetery
Material: Granite
Topics: American Indians; Government; Military; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

General Cooper was appointed as the US Indian agent to the Choctaws in 1853 and to the Chickasaws in 1856. He consolidated the two agencies and moved them to Fort Washita. When the Civil War began, Cooper's friend, Confederate President Jefferson Davis, appointed him Choctaw-Chickasaw agent for the Confederacy. As commander of the Choctaw-Chickasaw Confederate mounted riflemen, he saw much action. He later was promoted to commander of the Indian Territory Military District, C.S.A., and was named Superintendent of Indian Affairs by President Davis. He died at Fort Washita in 1879 and is buried in an unmarked grave.

George C. Sibley Expedition

Alfalfa County
Location: 1/2 mile east of junction of OK-8 and OK-11, north of Cherokee
Coordinates: 36.805565, -98.245647
Material: Stone with bronze plaque
Topics: American Indians; Environmental/Cultural Ecology; Government; Settlement Patterns

Sibley, an Osage Indian agent, and two others were believed to be the first whites to view the Great Salt Plains on an expedition to the area in the summer of 1811. Sibley called the geological phenomenon "a perfect level plain covered in dry hot weather from two to six inches deep with a beautiful clean white salt.

Giants of the Great Plains

Greer County
Location: in Granite, Oklahoma only 38 minutes south of Elk City or 30 minutes north of Altus
Material: Granite
Topics: American Indians; Arts; Early Statehood, 1907–1941; Social/Cultural

Will Rogers (face, 30' wide and 28' tall) was dedicated November 10, 1979, in recognition of Rogers' 100th birthday anniversary. This giant mosaic is comprised of 195 two-foot-square granite panels.


Goodwater Choctaw Mission

Choctaw County
Location: on US-70, one mile west of Kiamichi River bridge
Material: Aluminum
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society and the Oklahoma Department of Transportation
Topics: American Indians; Education; Religion/Philosophy; Social/Cultural

In 1837, Reverend Ebenezer Hotchkins established the mission that became a Choctaw seminary for girls in 1842. The school closed at the beginning of the Civil War. Only the graves of the missionaries who served there mark the site.

Note: This marker is missing.

Government Springs

Garfield County
Location: at northwest corner of Government Springs Park in Enid (DAR)
Coordinates: 36.3924789,-97.8717339
Material: Granite
Sponsor(s): Enid Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution
Topics: American Indians; Ranching; Social/Cultural; Transportation

Government Springs was a camping place on the Chisholm Trail used originally by Indians and later by all travelers. See Buffalo Springs.

Governor Cyrus Harris

Murray County
Location: on US-177, eight miles south of Sulphur
Topics: American Indians; Government; Social/Cultural

After adoption of a new constitution in 1856, the Chickasaws elected Cyrus Harris as the first governor of the Chickasaw Nation, a position he held for twenty-two years. Speaking both Chickasaw and English fluently, Harris was an interpreter at several early Chickasaw removal councils and represented the tribe in Washington, DC, in the 1850s.

Note: This marker was reported missing.

Green Corn Dance

McIntosh County
Location: near S. 6th Street and Forest Avenue at Creek Nation Health Clinic in Eufaula
Coordinates: 35.282639, -95.591389
Material: Granite
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society
Topics: American Indians; Religion/Philosophy; Social/Culture

To the Creeks, the Green Corn dance was a major annual religious celebration of the harvest season. Around a central fire, men, women, and children dressed in colorful costumes, danced, chanted, and sang. After the rites, green corn was served.


Greenhill Cemetery

Muskogee County
Location: at intersection of York and North Streets in Musgokee
Topics: American Indians; Government; Social/Cultural; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

Greenhill Cemetery began in 1894 and moved to its present location in 1904 when town leaders contributed 250 acres to be used as the town's official burial site. The cemetery is the final resting place for Oklahoma's first governor, Charles Haskell; Oklahoma's first congresswoman, Alice Robertson; and Alexander Posey, newspaperman and poet laureate of the Creek Indians.


Hardy Creek

Pushmataha County
Location: Hwy-271, 7.6 miles south of Clayton, Oklahoma
Sponsor(s): Leona Mars, Granddaughter
Topics: American Indians; Indian and Frontier Trade; Transportation; Water; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Thomas Hardy, a Choctaw Indian from Nashoba, Oklahoma, camped at this creek bank before and after he went to Clayton, Oklahoma, to buy supplies. People started identifying this creek as Hardy Creek.


Harrah

Oklahoma County
Location: on East Main Street at Museum
Sponsor(s): Harrah Historical Society
Topics: Urban Development; American Indians; Settlement Patterns; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Transportation; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

The present site of Harrah was first settled in 1876 by French-Potawatomi Indian, Louis Navarre. In 1892, E. W. Sweeney built a bridge at a strategic ford across the North Canadian River, increasing the settlement's prospects. The railroad's arrival in 1896 assured success. Entrepreneur, Frank Harrah, purchased eighty acres from Navarre of which a portion was used for development. A forty-acre tract was surveyed, platted, and officially entered as the town of Harrah on February 18, 1899. This marker stands within the original tract in the heart of the town's early business district.


Harris House

McCurtain County
Location: on US-259, one mile south of Harris
Topics: Agriculture; American Indians; Family/Household; Government; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Transportation

Judge Henry C. Harris built the house in 1867. He served the Choctaw tribal government in several positions, including supreme judge of the Apukshunnubbe District. He founded Harris Ferry and operated a large plantation along the Red River.


Hillside Mission

Tulsa County
Location: on OK-11, four miles north of Skiatook
Material: Aluminum
Topics: American Indians; Environmental/Cultural Ecology; Industrial Period, 1941 to 1982; Religion/Philosophy; Social/Cultural; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

Reverend John Murdock established the Hillside Mission school in 1882 under the auspices of the Society of Friends. A nearby cemetery contains the grave of William C. Rogers, the last elected principal chief of the Cherokees prior to statehood.


Hochatown

McCurtain County
Location: on US-259 at Hochatown Union Church and Cemetery
Material: Granite
Topics: American Indians; Industrial Period, 1892–1941; Pre-European Contact, before 1541 AD; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Water; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Prehistoric hunters left spear points along the Mountain Fork River at Hochatown around 6,000 B.C. Caddo Indians occupied the area from 1,000–1791 A.C. The town was named for a Choctaw Indian, Hocha, who arrived on the Trail of Tears in 1833. White settlers moved into the area in 1900. The original town was inundated by waters from Broken Bow Lake in 1968.


Holmes Peak

Tulsa County
Location: on Keystone Expressway (US-64) at the intersection of 45th West Avenue in Tulsa
Topics: American Indians; Environmental/Cultural Ecology; Industrial Period, 1941 to 1982; Religion/Philosophy; Social/Cultural; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

Holmes Peak is the only geographical feature on Earth officially named by a government in honor of Sherlock Holmes. The US Board on Geographic Names approved the name on October 24, 1984. Another officially named geographic feature to honor Holmes is a crater on the Moon named by Astronaut Harrison Schmidt on the Apollo 17 Moon Landing.


Honey Springs Battlefield

McIntosh County
Location: on grounds of Honey Springs Battlefield Historic Site, Checotah vicinity
Coordinates: 35.530309, -95.486041
Material: Granite
Topics: American Indians; Ethnic Diversity; Government; Military; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

Five granite markers commemorate those who fought in the Civil War Battle of Honey Springs on July 17, 1863. Included are markers dedicated to Union soldiers, the Five Tribes, the First Regiment of Kansas Colored Volunteers, Confederate soldiers, and Texas Confederate soldiers. Marker sponsors include the Oklahoma Historical Society, the Intertribal Council of the Five Civilized Tribes, the Community Heritage Recognition Community, and Daughters of the Confederacy.


Hotel Wisnor/Carter-Booker Building

Carter County
Location: at 15 North Washington in Ardmore
Topics: American Indians; Industry/Business; Recreational/Service; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

Hotel Wisnor, a fifty-room, three-story hotel built in 1884, was named in honor of Benjamin Wisnor Carter, the prominent Chickasaw Indian for whom Carter County is named. In 1903, the Carter-Booker Building was constructed at this location, providing offices for the Cotton Exchange.


I-See-O

Comanche County
Location: on wall of Old Post Chapel at Fort Sill (DAR)
Sponsor(s): Daughters of the American Revolution
Topics: American Indians; Military

I-See-O was a famous Kiowa scout who attained the rank of sergeant in the US Army. Many consider him to be the last of the Indian scouts who faithfully served the army on the western frontier.


Indian Memorial

Tulsa County
Location: at entrance of Owen Park on West Edison Street in Tulsa (DAR)
Sponsor(s): Daughters of the American Revolution
Topics: American Indians; Government

This is the spot where the Creek, Cherokee, and Osage national boundaries joined.


Indian Spring

Lincoln County
Location: on Tenth Street in Chandler (DAR)
Sponsor(s): Daughters of the American Revolution
Topics: American Indians; Social/Cultural; Transportation; Water

The site of the first water supply for Chandler was used originally by Plains Indians as a water stop campground. A metal teepee covers the spring.


Initial Point/Indian Meridian

Murray County
Location: near OK-7 in the Arbuckle Mountains west of Davis
Topics: American Indians; Government; Settlement Patterns

Initial Point marks the exact location of the intersection of the north-south Indian Meridian and the east-west Base Line. Following the 1866 treaties with the Five Civilized Tribes, who agreed to the survey of their lands, the General Land Office in 1870 directed E. N. Darling to select the Indian Point (near Fort Arbuckle). The two lines he ran represent the basis of all future land descriptions in Oklahoma except the Panhandle. The rough stone pillar that marks Indian Point is on private land.


The Jacobson House

Cleveland County
Location: 609 Chautauqua, Norman
Material: Aluminum
Sponsor(s): The Jacobson Foundation
Topics: American Indians; Arts; Early Statehood, 1907–1941; Industrial Period, 1841–1892

The home of Swedish born artist Oscar B. Jacobson and Jeanne d'Ucel became a center for international celebrities, artists and writers from 1918–1966. Jacobson, director of the OU School of Art from 1915–1945, revolutionized art education in Oklahoma. He is also credited with nurturing the "renaissance" of American Indian painting on the Southern Plains in the 1920s.


James Bigheart

Osage County
Location: north side of SH11, 1/2 mile east of the Bird Creek Bridge east of Barnsdall
Material: Aluminum
Topics: American Indians; Indian and Frontier Trade; Natural Resources; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

After the Civil War, Bigheart became chief of the Osage. He operated a trading post at Big Heart, now Barnsdall, and led his people to retain all mineral rights to their lands which brought great wealth to the Osage people.


Jean Pierre Chouteau Bridge

Mayes County
Location: on US-69 at edge of Salina
Topics: American Indians; Indian and Frontier Trade

The Chouteau family had extensive holdings which included salt works and trading posts. Jean Pierre and his brother, Auguste, from a base in St. Louis, Missouri, traded with Osages in the area.


Jesse Chisholm

Blaine County
Location: on US-281, north of Geary
Material: Aluminum
Topics: American Indians; Indian and Frontier Trade; Ranching; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

A pioneer merchant, trader, and explorer, Jesse Chisholm established a trail through western Indian Territory before the Civil War. Texas cattlemen used the trail until the late 1880s to move millions of cattle to northern markets. Chisholm died and was buried near this site in March 1868.

Jesse Chisholm Grave

Blaine County
Location: at section 32, 15 north, 10 west
Material: Granite
Topics: American Indians; Indian and Frontier Trade; Ranching

Jesse Chisholm, for whom the Chisholm Trail was named, camped at Left Hand Spring in early March 1868. Becoming ill, probably from food poisoning, he died on March 4 and was buried on a nearby knoll.

Jesse Chisholm Trading Post and Spring

Pottawatomie County
Location: On OK-39, two miles east of Asher
Coordinates: 34.985850, -96.887380
Material: Stone
Sponsor(s): Carrie Boggs and Pottawatomie County Historical Society
Topics: American Indian and Frontier Trade; American Indians; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

This marker placed by the Pottawatomie County Historical Society October 1938 marks the near site of the Jesse Chisholm Trading Post and Spring of territorial fame.

Jim Thorpe

Payne County
Location: in Jim Thorpe Municipal Park in Yale
Topics: American Indians; Folklife; Social/Cultural; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

In 1912, Jim Thorpe won both the decathlon and pentathlon in the Olympics and was praised for his athletic prowess by the entire world. He played both professional baseball and football and is considered one of the greatest athletes of American sports history.


Jim Thorpe

Payne County
Location: at 706 East Boston in Yale
Material: Aluminum
Topics: American Indians; Folklife; Social/Cultural; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

This was the home of the Thorpe family beginning in 1917.


Jim Thorpe Birthplace No. 1

Lincoln County
Location: at 706 East Boston in Yale
Topics: American Indians; Early Statehood, 1907–1941; Industrial Period, 1892–1941; Recreational/Service; Social/Cultural

James Francis Thorpe, a Sac and Fox, was born as Wa-tho-huck or "bright path." He dominated the 1912 Olympics, winning both the decathlon and pentathlon events. He played Major League baseball and professional football. He was the first president of the National Football League and is a member of Professional Football Hall of Fame. The Associated Press voted him the world's greatest male athlete of the first half of the twentieth century.


Jim Thorpe Birthplace No. 2

Pottawatomie County
Location: approx. 6 miles southwest of Prague and approx. 5 miles south of US 62 on NS Rd 3510
Coordinates: 35.421941, -96.753523
Material: Granite
Sponsor(s): BancFirst of Prague and the Oklahoma Historical Society
Topics: American Indians; Early Statehood, 1907–1941; Recreational/Service; Social/Cultural

James Francis Thorpe, a Sac and Fox, was born as Wa-tho-huck or "bright path." He dominated the 1912 Olympics, winning both the decathlon and pentathlon events. He played major league baseball and professional football. He was the first president of the National Football League and is a member of Professional Football Hall of Fame. The Associated Press voted him the world's greatest male athlete of the first half of the twentieth century.

John Martin

Muskogee County
Location: at intersection of Elm and Jackson Streets in Fort Gibson
Topics: American Indians; Government

John Martin, a Cherokee Indian who was the first chief justice of the first supreme court established in the Cherokee Nation, is buried here.

Note: This marker was reported missing.


Julia Jackson Chapter United Daughters of the Confederacy

Bryan County
Location: near Douglas Cooper monument at Fort Washita
Material: Granite
Sponsor(s): Sponsored by the Julia Jackson Chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy
Topics: American Indians; Military; Social/Cultural; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

Sponsored by the Julia Jackson Chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy, the nearby granite marker honors Douglas Hancock Cooper, the first Confederate agent for the Choctaws and Chickasaws and later commander of the Choctaw-Chickasaw Mounted Rifles.


Keokuk Falls

Pottawatomie County
Location: on OK-99 north of North Canadian River
Topics: American Indians; Settlement Patterns; Social/Cultural; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Urban Development

After the land run into the Sac and Fox Reservation on September 22, 1891, the Keokuk Falls town site became an important settlement in Indian Territory. The boomtown boasted two distilleries and many saloons.

Note: This marker was reported missing.

Koweta Mission

Wagoner County
Location: on US-69, 1/4 mile north of Arkansas River bridge
Topics: American Indians; Settlement Patterns; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Reverend R. M. Loughridge founded this Creek Indian school in 1843 and named it for an ancient Creek town in Alabama.

La Harpe’s Council

Muskogee County
Location: on US-64 south of Haskell city limits
Material: Aluminum
Topics: American Indians; Empire Period, 1541–1803; Government

First peace council and alliance between a European government and Oklahoma Indian tribes occurred here in 1719 when French explorer Bernard de la Harpe explored the area.

Manard

Cherokee County
Location: on OK-82 south of Tahlequah, one mile east of the Cherokee-Muskogee County line
Coordinates: 35.799587, -95.104504
Material: Granite
Sponsor(s): Jennifer Sparks and the Oklahoma Historical Society
Topics: American Indians; Indian and Frontier Trade; Law and Order; Military; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

Named for early-day fur trader Pierre Manard, a member of the Chouteau family, the springs were identified as a Cherokee council ground prior to 1828. A trading post and agency were established in 1828 and 1837, respectively. Manard was the site of a Civil War skirmish on July 27, 1862, in which Federal troops and the Indian Home Guard routed Confederate forces. The Manard stage stop was the site of a hold up of the US Mail coach by the Cook gange on July 14, 1894, and the shooting of Joseph Glad by outlaw Jim French in late 1894. The Manard post office operated from 1883 to 1913. Manard School was established by 1863 and closed when consolidated with Fort Gibson schools in 1968.

March of the Dragoons

Cleveland County
Location: on US-77 in Noble just south of Maguire Road
Topics: American Indians; Military; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Captain Nathan Boone, son of pioneer legend Daniel Boone, led 100 men and officers on an expedition to gather information about the Plains Indians. The 1843 expedition camped near this site.


Massacre of Pat Hennessey

Kingfisher County
Location: on US-81 in Memorial Park in Hennessey
Coordinates: 36.111395, -97.899118
Material: Aluminum
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society and the Oklahoma Department of Transportation
Topics: American Indians; Indian and Frontier Trade; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Transportation

Freighter Pat Hennessey's charred body tied to his wagon wheel was found in a smoldering fire near 3 of his drivers, all killed on Jul 6, 1874, in last Indian wars when his train was on way along Chisholm Trail to Kiowa Agency. Grave is 2 blocks west.

Mekasukey Academy

Seminole County
Location: on OK-59 near junction with NS 3540 Rd, approx. four miles southwest of Seminole
Coordinates: 35.188407, -96.707079
Material: Aluminum
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society and the Oklahoma Department of Transportation
Topics: American Indians; Early Statehood, 1907–1941; Education

Opened in 1891, this school educated Seminole boys until it became coeducational in 1914. The name came from an ancient Seminole war town. The school closed in 1930 and the building later burned down.

Military Road

McCurtain County
Location: on US-70 at chamber of commerce office in Broken Bow
Topics: American Indians; Settlement Patterns; Transportation

Cut from Washington, Arkansas, to Fort Towson in 1831 for removal of Choctaws from Mississippi, the road became known as the "Trail of Tears" after thousands of suffering Indians used it to reach the new land. The road served as a major east-west artery for the Choctaw Nation until early 1900s. Important early settlement along the road were Harris Mill, Eagletown, Lukfata, Wheelock, and Clear Creek. Segments of the road are still visible.


Miller Court House

McCurtain County
Location: on US-259 near US-70 junction in Idabel
Topics: American Indians; Government; Mass Communication; Settlement Patterns; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

In 1821 this was the site of the first judicial proceedings in what would become Oklahoma. In 1824, a post office was established at an unknown site nearby as county seat of Miller County, Arkansas Territory. White settlers were forced out when the area was ceded to the Choctaws by treaty. The courthouse and post office burned in 1828.

Millie Durgan

Kiowa County
Location: at intersection of OK-9 and OK-115, one mile east of Mountain View
Topics: American Indians; Social/Cultural; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

Millie Durgan was 18 months old when she was captured by Kiowa Indians in the Elm Creek Raid in north Texas in 1864. The girl was adopted by the Kiowa tribe and later married a Kiowa.

Million Dollar Elm

Osage County
Location: on grounds of Osage Nation campus in Pawhuska
Coordinates: 36.666224, -96.340294
Material: Stone with bronze plaque
Sponsor(s): Harry G. Benson and Family
Topics: American Indians; Early Statehood, 1907–1941; Folklife; Natural Resources; Petroleum; Social/Cultural; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

The Osage Nation held the first public auction sale for oil leases on reservation tracts on November 11, 1912. Early sales were held under this elm tree. Bidders sat on bleachers around the tree and the auctioneer, Colonel E. Walters, ‘cried’ the sales. A total of sixteen 160-acre tracts leased for a bonus of over one million dollars. Thus this tree under which these high bids were made became known as the “Million Dollar Elm.”

Modoc Cemetery

Ottawa County
Location: 1/4 mile south of Hwy 10C in Ottawa
Topics: American Indians; Government; Settlement Patterns; Social/Cultural

All that remains of the original 4,000-acre Modoc Reservation is this 4 1/2 acre cemetery, the final resting place of Scarfaced Charley, Shacknasty Jim, James Long, Long George, and other leaders of California's Modoc War. Fought over 100 years ago in lava beds near Tulelake, California, this full-scale military campaign against "Captain Jack" and his band is famous in annals of Indian Wars. Today, the rolls of the vanishing Modoc contain only fifty-two descendants of those who peacefully exiled to the Quapaw Agency as prisoners-of-war in November 1873.


Montford Stokes

Muskogee County
Location: in Fort Gibson (DAR)
Sponsor(s): Daughters of the American Revolution
Topics: American Indians; Empire Period, 1541–1803; Government; Military; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

A former governor of North Carolina and an Indian agency, Montford Stokes died at Fort Gibson in 1842, the only Revolutionary War soldier buried in Oklahoma.


Monument Hill (Indian Trail Marker; Chief White Eagle Monument)

Noble County
Location: on OK-156, north of Marland
Coordinates: 36.569482, -97.144809
Material: Stone
Sponsor(s): 101 Ranch
Topics: Agriculture; American Indians; Early Statehood, 1907–1941; Ranching; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

Dedicated in 1927 and constructed by the 101 Ranch, this stone monument is dedicated to Ponca Chief White Eagle. Once the site of an ancient trail marker that served as one of several guideposts for various tribes traveling through the area during seasonal migration and hunting trips. The stone cairn is fourteen feet tall, five feet in diameter, and capped by a 200-pound concrete white eagle. A small cemetery is on site and includes the grave of Black cowboy Bill Pickett.

Moravian Mission Cemetery

Delaware County
Location: at New Springplace Mission near Oaks
Topics: American Indians; Religion/Philosophy; Social/Cultural; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Established as a Cherokee mission in 1842 by the Moravian Church, the institution was an outgrowth of a similar mission in Georgia, which was begun in 1802. Closed during the Civil War, the mission reopened afterward and continued to operate until 1902, when it was transferred to the Danish Lutheran Church. Only the walled spring and the gravestones of the cemetery, where many of the early missionaries were buried, remain.


Mountain Station

Latimer County
Location: about thirteen miles southwest of Wilburton, Latimer County, at top of Blue Mountain on the county road, west side from gate to Mountain Station Cemetery
Topics: American Indians; Government; Mass Communication; Transportation; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Old Ft. Smith-Boggy Depot Road. A stage stand for changing horses and a toll road over this mountain pass were established here in 1866 under Choctaw law. This road was the Butterfield Overland Mail route in 1858–61.


Muriel H. Wright

Atoka County
Location: on grounds of Boggy Depot Cemetery in Boggy Depot Park
Coordinates: 34.322390, -96.312879
Material: Granite
Sponsor(s): Descendants of Allen Wright and the Oklahoma Historical Society
Topics: American Indians; Early Statehood, 1907–1941; Education; Industrial Period, 1941–1982; Social/Culture

Muriel Hazel Wright was born in Lehigh, Choctaw Nation, in 1889. Her grandfather, Allen Wright, was Chief of the Choctaw Nation from 1866 to 1870. During her forty-seven years with the Oklahoma Historical Society she held many positions including editor of The Chronicles of Oklahoma from 1955 to 1973. Other works include Oklahoma: A History of the State and Its People, The Story Of Oklahoma, Our Oklahoma, A Guide to the Indian Tribes of Oklahoma, The Oklahoma History, and Civil War Sites in Oklahoma. Muriel’s honors and awards include Oklahoma Hall of Fame, Hall of Fame of Famous American Indians, Oklahoma Historical Society Historians Hall of Fame, The University of Oklahoma Distinguished Service Citation, and Honorary Doctorate from Oklahoma State University

Note: This marker is not associated with Muriel Wright’s gravesite, which is in Oklahoma City.

New Springplace Cherokee Mission

Delaware County
Location: on OK-412A, three miles north of Oaks
Material: Aluminum
Topics: American Indians; Religion/Philosophy; Social/Cultural; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Established by the Moravian Church in 1842, the old mission was closed during the Civil War after missionary James Ward was ambushed and killed. Prominent Cherokee families such as Adair, Fields, Ridge, Vann, and Watie attended the mission.

Norge, Oklahoma

Grady County
Location: on Highway 92, Norge, where the 98th meridian intersects the highway
Topics: American Indians; Ethnic Diversity; Urban Development

Norge, formerly Allie, is located on the 98th meridian, separating the old Chickasaw Nation to the east and the Kiowa, Comanch,e and Apache Reserve to the west. The town received its name from a Norwegian settlement in the area. Situated on a high plain not far from the Keechi Hills, Norge is four miles southwest of Chickasha.


North Fork Town

McIntosh County
Location: at the intersection of Elm and Main Streets in Eufaula
Coordinates: 35.290390, -95.582318
Material: Aluminum
Sponsor(s): City of Eufaula and the Oklahoma Historical Society
Topics: American Indians; Military; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Important center of Texas Road in Creek Nation, from 1836. Post office established at Micco, 1853. Albert Pike secured treaties for Confederate States, signed here, 1861, by Choctaw, Chickasaw, and Creek Nations., Asbury School approved by Creek Council and supervised by Methodist Board established near here, 1848.

Note: This marker is missing.

Oil in the Osage Indian Nation and the “Million Dollar Elm”

Osage County
Location: on grounds of the Osage Nation Museum in Pawhuska
Coordinates: 36.667616, -96.339443
Material: Granite
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society and Oklahoma Petroleum Council
Topics: American Indians; Early Statehood, 1907–1941; Folklife; Industrial, 1941–1982; Natural Resources; Petroleum; Social/Cultural; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

Symbolic of the impact oil had on the people of the Osage Indian Nation is the so-called “Million Dollar Elm.” It was given this name because in its shade millions of dollars worth of Osage oil leases were auctioned. It was planted at this site sometime during the latter part of the 19th century as an ornament and for shade. The name was not given by tribal leaders but by reporters and magazine writers who were dramatizing the events when important heads and founders of the world's greatest oil companies came in person to bid. The auctioneer himself, the histrionic Colonel Walters, became famous because of his success in getting top bids. The drilling of the first well in the Osage Nation occurred in 1897. The first tract to bring one million dollars or more was acquired in March 1922. On March 29, 1924, Midland Oil Company bid almost two million dollars for a tract. By November 1969, Osage lands had produced one billion barrels of oil.

Oklahoma the Indian State

Kay County
Location: on US-77 just south of Kansas line, Kay County
Material: Aluminum
Topics: American Indians; Government; Land Openings; Settlement Patterns; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Land in this area was granted to Cherokee Indians by the US in 1828. It opened to white settlement in 1893. The Kaw Indian Tribal Reservation is located five miles east. There was located the land allotment of the Honorable Charles Curtis, Kaw Indian, Vice President of the United States, 1928–32.

Oklahoma’s First Commercial Oil Well

Washington County
Location: on the south bank of the Caney River in Johnstone Park, Bartlesville
Material: Aluminum
Topics: American Indians; Natural Resources; Petroleum; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

Nellie Johnstone No. 1, the first commercial oil well in Indian Territory, was completed on April 15, 1897, by the Cudahy Oil Company on the south bank of Caney River. The site is 3.1 milies northwest of this marker.


Oklahoma’s Pioneer Oil City

Cleveland County
Topics: American Indians; Land Openings; Petroleum; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

On July 2, 1904, the Lowery #1 came in just south of Cleveland, opening the Cleveland Sand and creating Oklahoma's first oil boom town. Here also was Jordan's Fort, built in 1886 by Colonel J. W. Jordan, Cherokee agent and deputy US marshal, to keep Boomers out of the Cherokee Outlet.


Old Spencer Academy

Choctaw County
Location: on grounds of old Spencer Academy, 8 miles north of Sawyer
Coordinates: 34.145919, -95.357897
Material: Granite
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society
Topics: American Indians; Arts; Education; Ethnic Diversity; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

Spencer Academy opened at this location in January 1844. This noted school for Choctaw boys, established by the Choctaw Council, was named for John C. Pencer, US Secretary of War. Subjects through high school were taught. The first graduates went to eastern colleges in 1848. Large buildings were erected in a quadrangle here including Jones Hall, Pitchlynn Hall, Armstrong Hall, a school building and dining hall, with houses for employees, storehouses and barns adjacent. It was here that the spirituals “Steal Away to Jesus,” “Roll, Jordon Roll,” and “Swing Low, Sweet Chariot” were composed. “Uncle” Wallis and “Aunt” Minerva Willis, spiritual composers, were enslaved in the Choctaw Nation and hired out by their owner to work for school superintendent Rev. Alexander Reid. Also see “Spencer Academy.”

Note: This marker incorrectly identifies Wallace and Minerva Willis as husband and wife when, in fact, they were father and daughter.

Old Stone Corral

Comanche County
Location: at the Fort Sill Museum (DAR)
Sponsor(s): Daughters of the American Revolution
Topics: American Indians; Ethnic Diversity; Military; Territorial Period, 1861–1907; Transportation

Known originally as the Quartermaster Corral, this structure, which replaced an earlier wooden corral, is located southeast of the original post quadrangle near Key Gate. The 10th Cavalry constructed the corral in 1870 to hold the horses, oxen, and mules used by the quartermaster for transport of men and supplies and for jobs such as road building. After 1875 the army used the corral for temporary incarceration of Plains Indians. In the 1880s, as boomers tried to enter and settle in the Indian Territory, the military rounded up and held the illegal settlers in the corral until the party was large enough to warrant military escort out of the area.


Original Townsite of Mannford

Creek County
Location: east site of SH-48, north the 48/51 junction at the turnoff into old Mannford Ramp Park
Topics: American Indians; Settlement Patterns; Transportation

The original townsite of Mannford began 1/4 mile east of the creek headrights of Tom and Hazel Mann. The town was named for Mann's Ford across the Cimarron River in 1895. G. M. Evans leased this ninety acres and surrounding land. The Arkansas Valley and Western Railway (AV&W RR/Frisco) came in 1902, and a post office was established on April 11, 1903. Hall C. Miller bought the ninety acres for the townsite on February 21, 1906. The townsite was relocated in 1962–63 due to the Keystone Dam.


Osage Agency

Osage County
Location: on Lynn Avenue one mile north of OK-11/US-60 in Pawhuska
Coordinates: 36.676217, -96.331700
Material: Aluminum
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society and the Oklahoma Department of Transportation
Topics: American Indians; Folklife; Government; Natural Resources; Petroleum; Social/Cultural; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

The Osage agency was established in 1872 to oversee the federal government's relationship with the Osage. Congress allowed the Osage to retain ownership of minerals in their reservation lands. When oil was discovered in the area, the allotted Osage became the richest Indian tribe in American history.

Note: This marker is missing.

Osage Chief Fred Lookout

Osage County
Location: east of Pawhuska on Lookout Mountain
Topics: American Indians; Government; Industrial Period, 1841–1892; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

Fred Lookout was the last hereditary chief of the Osage. After being educated in the East, he returned to the Osage Nation in 1884. He served as the leader of his people longer than anyone. He died in 1949 at the age of ninety-eight. His wife, Julia, was a descendant of Chief Pawhuska.


Osage Hills

Osage County
Location: on US-60 between Pawhuska and Bartlesville
Topics: American Indians; Environmental/Cultural Ecology; Natural Resources; Ranching

First settled by the Osage Indians in 1796, the area is now part of the Tallgrass Prairie Preserve, a protected remnant of the original North American prairie, a 500-mile wide stretch of land in the central part of the United States that extended from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico. The tallgrass prairie exists today only in those areas which are not tillable or have soils not conducive to farming. Rich grasses in the prairie have sustained cattle-grazing operations since the 1880s.


Osage Village

Pontotoc County
Location: on OK-1, 3 1/2 miles southwest of Allen
Topics: American Indians; Military; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

This early Osage encampment contained more than 300 inhabitants. Chief Black Dog, seven feet tall and blind in one eye, was the leader of the Osage who welcomed General Henry Leavenworth and his First Dragoons on a peace expedition to the area in 1834.

Note: This marker was reported damaged on 3/28/2023.

Otoe-Missouri Tribal Reservation

Noble County
Location: at Otoe-Missouria Complex off US-177
Coordinates: 36.491250, -97.074000
Material: Aluminum
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society
Topics: American Indians; Settlement Patterns; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

The Otoes were prairie-dwellers and Hunters. They migrated from the Lake Michigan area to Iowa then to Nebraska in 1700. The Missouria merged with the Otoe Tribe in 1798. Removal to Indian Territory (Oklahoma) began October 5 with arrival at the present site October 23, 1881 on 129,113 acres of land purchased and conveyed in trust by deed July, 1893 from the Cherokees.

Park Hill

Cherokee County
Location: 1/2 mile east of junction of US-62 and OK-82 on south edge of Tahlequah.
Topics: American Indians; Family/Household; Social/Cultural

Before the Civil War, Park Hill was the center of culture and learning in the Cherokee Nation. See Park Hill Press.


Park Hill Press

Cherokee County
Location: 1/2 mile east of junction of US-62 and OK-82 on south edge of Tahlequah.
Material: Aluminum
Topics: American Indians; Mass Communication; Religion/Philosophy

In 1837, Reverend Samuel Worcester moved his printing plant from Union Mission to Park Hill. Over the next quarter-century, more than 25 million pages were printed in English and American Indian languages.

Pawnee Agency

Pawnee County
Location: on US-64 west of Pawnee
Coordinates: 36.330469, -96.819987
Material: Granite
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society
Topics: American Indians; Government; Land Openings; Settlement Patterns; Territorial Period, 1861–1907

Established in 1874, the agency supervised the Pawnee who sold their lands in Nebraska and bought a reservation in present-day Pawnee County. The unallotted surplus lands of the Pawnee Reservation were opened to settlement in September 1893. Pawnee Agency was consolidated in 1928 to serve the Pawnee, Oto, Ponca, Tonkawa, and Kaw tribal nations.

Peace on the Plains

Greer County
Location: at junction of OK-44 and old US-283 near Quartz Mountain State Park
Coordinates: 34.856531, -99.330696
Material: Aluminum
Sponsor(s): Oklahoma Historical Society and the Oklahoma Department of Tourism
Topics: American Indians; Military; Westward Expansion, 1803–1861

A Wichita village approximately 5 miles southeast of this marker’s location was the scene of the first meeting between the federal government and Indian tribes of the western Great Plains in present-day Oklahoma on July 21, 1834. The US Dragoon regiment, under the command of Colonel Henry Dodge, camped one mile away from the village, which contained more than 200 grass lodges. Noted officers and civilians who accompanied the dragoons included Captains David Hunter and Nathan Boone, First Lieutenant Jefferson Davis, former North Carolina governor Montfort Stokes, and artist George Catlin.

Note: This marker has been reported for containing inaccurate language. Dragoons under the command of Colonel Dodge first encountered a Comanche village on July 14, 1834. Colonel Dodge was unable to arrange negotiations due to the Comanche chief being away, so the expedition moved westward and encountered a Wichita village on July 21. Formal negotiations between the US government and the Wichita commenced on July 22. Negotiations with the Kiowa and Comanche began the following day. Also see Camp Comanche (Caddo County).

(Page 1 of 2) Next Last

Marker Search







Browse by County




To find out more about the Oklahoma Historical Society Historical Marker Program or how to submit an application, please visit the Historical Marker Program page.

Marker Application Process

Missing or Damaged Markers
Please use our online form to report missing or damaged historical markers.

Report Missing or Damaged Markers



Contact Us

If you have questions, please contact:
Matthew Pearce
Oklahoma Historical Society
800 Nazih Zuhdi Drive
Oklahoma City, OK 73105
405-522-8659
matthew.pearce@history.ok.gov