List of Oklahoma state parks
This is a list of current and former state parks in Oklahoma.
Current parks[]
Park Name | County or Counties | Area in acres | Area in ha | Year Established | Water Body(s) | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alabaster Caverns State Park | Woodward | 200 | 81 | 1956 | Largest public gypsum cave in the United States | |
Arrowhead State Park | Pittsburg | 2,200 | 890 | 1963 | Lake Eufaula | On a peninsula in Lake Eufaula. Lodge and cabins are closed. Now known as Arrowhead Area at Lake Eufaula State Park. |
Beavers Bend State Park | McCurtain | 3,482 | 1,409 | 1935 | Mountain Fork River, Broken Bow Lake | |
Bernice State Park | Delaware | 88 | 36 | 1970 | Grand Lake o' the Cherokees | Now known as the Bernice Area at Grand Lake State Park.[1] |
Black Mesa State Park | Cimarron | 349 | 141 | 1959 | Lake Carl Etling | Black Mesa Nature Preserve established in 1991 by the Oklahoma Nature Conservancies |
Boiling Springs State Park | Woodward | 820 | 330 | 1935 | ||
Cherokee Landing State Park | Cherokee | 146 | 59 | 1954 | Lake Tenkiller | |
Cherokee State Park | Mayes | 43 | 17 | 1954 | Grand Lake o' the Cherokees | |
Clayton Lake State Park | Pushmataha | 510 | 210 | 1947 | Clayton Lake | |
Disney/Little Blue State Park | Mayes | 32 | 13 | 1966 | Grand Lake | |
Fort Cobb State Park | Caddo | 1,872 | 758 | 1960 | ||
Foss State Park | Washita | 1,749 | 708 | 1961 | Foss Lake | |
Gloss Mountain State Park | Major | 640 | 260 | 1977 | ||
Great Plains State Park | Kiowa | 187 | 76 | 1977 | Tom Steed Lake | |
Great Salt Plains State Park | Alfalfa | 840 | 340 | 1952 | Great Salt Plains Reservoir | |
Greenleaf State Park | Muskogee | 565 | 229 | 1954 | Greenleaf Lake | |
Honey Creek State Park | Delaware | 30 | 12 | 1954 | Grand Lake | Now known as the Honey Creek Area at Grand Lake State Park.[2] |
Hugo Lake State Park | Choctaw | 289 | 117 | 1974 | Hugo Lake | Originally built in 1974 as Kiamichi Park, renamed Hugo Lake State Park in 2002. |
Keystone State Park | Tulsa | 714 | 289 | 1966 | Keystone Lake | |
Lake Eufaula State Park | McIntosh | 2,853 | 1,155 | 1963 | Lake Eufaula | |
Lake Murray State Park | Carter, Love | 12,496 | 5,057 | 1938 | Lake Murray | Added to National Register of Historic Places in 2001. |
Lake Texoma State Park | Marshall | 1,882 | 762 | 1951 | Lake Texoma | |
Lake Thunderbird State Park | Cleveland | 1,874 | 758 | 1965 | Lake Thunderbird | |
Lake Wister State Park | Le Flore | 3,428 | 1,387 | 1953 | Lake Wister | |
Little Sahara State Park | Woods | 1,600 | 650 | |||
McGee Creek State Park | Atoka | 2,600 | 1,100 | McGee Creek Reservoir | ||
Natural Falls State Park | Delaware | 120 | 49 | 1990 | ||
Osage Hills State Park | Osage | 1,100 | 450 | 1935 | ||
Quartz Mountain State Park | Greer | 4,284 | 1,734 | 1935 | Lake Altus | |
Raymond Gary State Park | Choctaw | 263 | 106 | 1955 | Raymond Gary Lake | |
Robbers Cave State Park | Latimer | 8,246 | 3,337 | 1935 | Fourche Maline Lake Carlton, Lake Wayne Wallace | |
Roman Nose State Park | Blaine | 1937 | Lake Watonga, Lake Boecher | |||
Sequoyah Bay State Park | Wagoner | 303 | 123 | 1954 | Fort Gibson Lake | |
Sequoyah/Western Hills State Park | Cherokee | 2,200 | 890 | 1953 | Fort Gibson Lake | |
Mayes | 35 | 14 | 1959 | Spavinaw Lake | Now known as the Spavinaw Area at Grand Lake State Park.[3] | |
Talimena State Park | Le Flore | 20 | 8.1 | 1970 | ||
Tenkiller State Park | Sequoyah | 1,190 | 480 | 1953 | Lake Tenkiller | |
Twin Bridges State Park | Ottawa | 63 | 25 | 1954 | Neosho River, Spring River | Now known as the Twin Bridges Area at Grand Lake State Park.[4] |
Former state parks[]
Park Name | County or Counties | Area in acres | Date founded |
Stream(s) and / or Lake(s) | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Adair Park (Stilwell, Oklahoma) | Adair | 25 | Small park within the city limits of Stilwell. Now owned by the City of Stilwell.[5] | ||
Beaver Dunes Park | Beaver | 520 | Owned by City of Beaver.[5] | ||
Boggy Depot Park | Atoka | 630 | Owned and managed by the Chickasaw Nation since 2011.[5] | ||
Brushy Lake Park (Sallisaw, Oklahoma) | Sequoyah | 90 | 1971 | Brushy Lake | Since 2011, owned and managed by the City of Sallisaw, Oklahoma |
Crowder Lake University Park | Washita | 22 | Crowder Lake | Owned and operated since 2003 by Southwestern Oklahoma State University. Lake surface is 158 acres. | |
Dripping Springs Park | Okmulgee | 1075 | Dripping Springs Lake | The former Dripping Springs State Park; operated by the City of Okmulgee since 2015. | |
Heavener Runestone Park | Le Flore | 50 | 1970 | Owned and managed by city of Heavener since 2011.[5] | |
Hochatown State Park | McCurtain | 1,713 | 1966 | Broken Bow Lake | Combined into Beaver's Bend, no longer a separate park |
Lake Eucha Park | Delaware | 55 | 1967 | Lake Eucha | The former Lake Eucha State Park; owned and managed by the city of Tulsa since 2011;[5] Park is not actually on Lake Eucha |
Okmulgee Park | Okmulgee | 1,075 | 1963 | Okmulgee Lake | The former Okmulgee State Park; owned and managed by the City of Okmulgee since 2015 |
Red Rock Canyon Park | Caddo | 310 | 1956 | Leased to the City of Hinton, Oklahoma in 2018. | |
Snowdale State Park | Mayes | 15 | 1959 | Lake Hudson (Oklahoma) | Snowdale became the Snowdale Area at Grand Lake State Park.[6][7] The Oklahoma Department of Tourism and Recreation chose not to renew its lease from the Grand River Dam Authority in 2019, shutting down the park.[8] |
Walnut Creek State Park | Osage | 1,429 | 1966 | Keystone Lake | Park was permanently closed October 1, 2014[9] |
Wah-Sha-She Park | Osage | 266 | 1973 | Lake Hulah | Formerly Wah-Sha-She State Park. Leased to the Osage Nation since 2011 by the US Corps of Engineers;[5] subleased since 2015 to the non-profit Hulah Lake Osage Association which maintains the park through volunteer efforts and campground fees.[10][11] |
References[]
- ^ "Bernice Area at Grand Lake State Park". TravelOK.com. Retrieved July 31, 2020.
- ^ "Honey Creek Area at Grand Lake State Park". TravelOK.com. Retrieved July 31, 2020.
- ^ "Spavinaw Area at Grand Lake State Park". TravelOK.com. Retrieved July 31, 2020.
- ^ "Twin Bridges Area at Grand Lake State Park". TravelOK.com. Retrieved July 31, 2020.
- ^ a b c d e f Wertz, Joe. "Why It’s Hard to Privatize and Move State Parks." September 2, 2011. Retrieved April 8, 2013.[1]
- ^ "Snowdale Area at Grand Lake State Park". State Park HQ. Retrieved August 5, 2020.
- ^ "Lake Hudson". TravelOK.com. Retrieved August 5, 2020.
- ^ "OPINION: The end for Snowdale State Park?". Senator Micheal Bergstrom, The Claremore Daily Progress, November 1, 2019. Retrieved August 5, 2020.
- ^ Logan, Layden, " Uncertainty Looms Over Walnut Creek’s Somber Final Weekend As A State Park." October 2, 2014. Accessed August 3, 2017.
- ^ "Nation Subleases Wah Sha She Park to volunteers, considers Walnut Creek". Shannon Shaw Duty, Osage News, February 26, 2015. Retrieved August 5, 2020.
- ^ "Hulah Lake Osage Association". Facebook. Retrieved August 5, 2020.
- State Parks on TravelOK.com Official Travel & Tourism website for the State of Oklahoma
Categories:
- State parks of Oklahoma
- Lists of state parks of the United States