Oklahoma

Explore Oklahoma
MainStreet Gallery and Gifts
MainStreet Gallery and Gifts is a unique shopping experience. We offer a variety of gift items and Coca Cola memorabilia. Upstairs we have our very unique and peaceful Thomas Kinkade Gallery featuring his artwork in a variety of price ranges. Please visit us soon!
Grove, OK GalleriesBeavers Bend Resort Lodge
40 rooms each with a million-dollar view, sits high above Broken Bow Lake
, OK ResortsTom Mix
Thomas Edward Mix was everything his surname suggest - a mix of myth and man, fantasy and reality. His own life rivaled his screen escapades, and he was enormously successful.
The Man
Dewey, OK Famous People
Fort Gibson Depot
The old depot is located across the street from the Fort Gibson stockade parking area and now offers gifts and information for visitors to the fort.
Fort Gibson, OK Railroad HistoryWestern History Collection
The University of Oklahoma's Western History Collections is one of the largest and most complete assemblages of materials on the American West. 65,000
Norman, OK MuseumsSequoyah Bay State Park Cabins
Sequoyah Bay Marina and cabins are the perfect place for weekend getaways or fishing trips. Sequoyah Bay'
, OK CabinsHistoric Churches
First Presbyterian Church - 1918 Oak and Creek Streets First Baptist Church South Elm and Creek Streets
Sallisaw, OK Historic ChurchesWestern Hills Guest Ranch
On a peninsula in the rolling foothills of Sequoyah State Park, this rustic Guest Ranch is a great western getaway. A flexible setting for families, reunions or conventioneers, visitors can count on finding all kinds of fun ? from fishing, golf and tennis to horseback riding and two-steppin'.
, OK ResortsHistoric Homes Tour
There are 38 recognized pre-statehood and early statehood era homes in Vinita. Self-guided walking tours and maps with narratives on the homes are available at the Eastern Trails Museum and the Vinita Chamber of Commerce. Listed below are a few examples.
223 S. Smith
Vinita, OK ToursBlacksmith House
Built in 1871, this 5 room house with native timbers and 18" thick sandstone walls was the first to be built in Pawhuska. When the Osage were moved from Kansas, Sid Delarue, a Swiss blacksmith, was promised the house if he would come to care for their horses. Listed on the
Pawhuska, OK Pioneer History