Recreation
and Places of Interest
The rugged mountains
with their swift-flowing streams,
the numerous large lakes and reservoirs,
and the historic sites of Native American
and pioneer days attract many visitors
to Oklahoma. The most popular recreation
areas in the state are the lakes and
streams. The generally mild climate
makes fishing a year-round sport on
Oklahoma’s lakes, which are
well-stocked with bass, trout, and
catfish.
Tourism has become
an important economic activity in
Oklahoma. Since the 1950s, many parks
have been developed in the areas around
Oklahoma’s lakes and reservoirs.
The parks have been supplied with
luxury hotels, lodges, and camping
and recreational facilities. Sporting
events, including rodeos and horse
shows, draw people from within and
outside the state.
State
Parks
Oklahoma has 52 state
parks and recreation areas. Lake Murray,
Quartz Mountain, and Lake Wister state
parks in the south and Sequoyah State
Park at Fort Gibson Reservoir are
the better-known parks in the state.
These parks provide outstanding facilities
for fishing and water sports, as do
the state parks on the shores of lakes
Eufaula, Texoma, Greenleaf, and Tenkiller.
In the northwest
corner of the state, Black Mesa State
Park has Native American pictographs,
a pit where dinosaur bones have been
found, and colorful rock formations.
Other natural features in the northwest
are springs that bubble up through
the sand at Boiling Springs State
Park; one of the largest known gypsum
caves at Alabaster Cavern State Park;
and the salt lake in the Great Salt
Plains State Park. Roman Nose and
Red Rock Canyon state parks are located
in scenic canyon valleys in western
Oklahoma. Robbers Cave State Park
in the San Bois Mountains of eastern
Oklahoma is said to have been a hideout
for deserters from both the Union
and Confederate armies during the
Civil War (1861-1865). Other state
parks in eastern Oklahoma are Osage
Hills and Beavers Bend.
Museums
A number of museums
are found in Oklahoma. The largest
and best known of these are the Oklahoma
Historical Society Museum, Oklahoma
City Art Museum, National Cowboy Hall
of Fame and Western Heritage Center,
and the Kirkpatrick Science and Air
Space Museum at Omniplex, all in Oklahoma
City; the Philbrook Museum of Art,
which has a noted collection of Native
American art and crafts, and the Gilcrease
Museum, both in Tulsa; and the Sam
Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History
at the University of Oklahoma.
Other Places
to Visit
Chickasaw National
Recreation Area, in the Arbuckle Mountains
near Sulphur, was originally established
in 1902 as Sulphur Springs Reservation
and then redesignated as Platt National
Park in 1906. In 1976 it was merged
with the Arbuckle National Recreation
Area. The area is famed for the mineral
water that comes from its many springs
and for Lake of the Arbuckles. Wilderness
areas and botanical preserves are
found in the Winding Stair Mountain
National Recreation Area, located
in the Ouachita National Forest near
Talihina in the southeast. Oklahoma
also contains seven national wildlife
refuges, with herds of buffalo and
deer and prairie dog colonies. Private
groups are also active. For example,
the Natural Conservancy in the late
1990s operated 16 preserves in Oklahoma,
including the Tallgrass Prairie Preserve
near Bartlesville and the Black Mesa
Preserve in the panhandle of the state.
Many sites of historic
interest are visited by tourists each
year. These include old frontier outposts
such as Fort Reno and Fort Supply
in the northwest and the reconstructed
stockade at Fort Gibson, one of the
old frontier posts near Muskogee.
Indian City U.S.A., near Anadarko,
contains reproductions of seven Native
American villages. Visitors to Oklahoma
can sample the state’s history
at the Woolaroc Museum near Bartlesville,
created from the estate of one of
the cofounders of Phillips Petroleum;
No Man’s Land Historical Museum
in Goodwell; and the Black Kettle
Museum in Cheyenne, which contains
details of an attack by General George
Armstrong Custer on a Native American
village. The site of the old Cherokee
national capital is Tahlequah, while
those of the Chickasaw, Creek, and
Choctaw tribes are at Tishomingo,
Okmulgee, and Tuskahoma. The cabin
of Sequoyah, the inventor of the Cherokee
alphabet, is a state memorial, as
is the Murrell Home, a beautiful old
mansion which is nearly all that remains
of a pre-Civil War Cherokee community.
The Will Rogers Memorial at Claremore
and the Pioneer Woman Statue and Museum
at Ponca City are in northern Oklahoma.
Among the more unusual attractions
in Oklahoma City is the working oil
well on the grounds of the State Capitol.
Recently visitors have been attracted
to the state while exploring the remnants
of Route 66, one of the first national
highways linking East and West and
immortalized in American literature
and music.
Source: MSN
Encarta: Online Encyclopedia