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单词 oklahoma
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Oklahoma


O·kla·ho·ma

O0052900 (ō′klə-hō′mə) Abbr. OK or Okla. A state of the south-central United States. It was admitted as the 46th state in 1907. The western part was organized in 1890 as the Oklahoma Territory, which was merged with the adjoining Indian Territory to form the present state boundaries. The Dust Bowl of the 1930s forced many farmers to move west as migrant laborers. Oklahoma City is the capital and the largest city.
O′kla·ho′man adj. & n.

Oklahoma

(ˌəʊkləˈhəʊmə) n (Placename) a state in the S central US: consists of plains in the west, rising to mountains in the southwest and east; important for oil. Capital: Oklahoma City. Pop: 3 511 532 (2003 est). Area: 181 185 sq km (69 956 sq miles). Abbreviation: Okla. or OK (with zip code)

O•kla•ho•ma

(ˌoʊ kləˈhoʊ mə)

n. a state in the S central United States. 3,450,654; 69,919 sq. mi. (181,090 sq. km). Cap.: Oklahoma City. Abbr.: OK, Okla. O`kla•ho′man, adj., n.
Thesaurus
Noun1.Oklahoma - a state in south central United StatesOklahoma - a state in south central United StatesOK, Sooner StatePlatt National Park - a national park in Oklahoma having mineral springsU.S.A., United States, United States of America, US, USA, America, the States, U.S. - North American republic containing 50 states - 48 conterminous states in North America plus Alaska in northwest North America and the Hawaiian Islands in the Pacific Ocean; achieved independence in 1776Bartlesville - a town in northeastern OklahomaEnid - a town in north central OklahomaLawton - a town in southwest OklahomaMcAlester - a town in southeastern OklahomaMuskogee - a town in eastern Oklahoma on the Arkansas Rivercapital of Oklahoma, Oklahoma City - capital and largest city of Oklahoma; the economy is based on oil and livestockTulsa - a major city of northeastern Oklahoma on the Arkansas river; once known as the oil capital of the world and still heavily involved in the oil and gas industriesArkansas River, Arkansas - a river that rises in the Rocky Mountains in Colorado and flows southeast through Kansas and Oklahoma and through Arkansas to become a tributary of the Mississippi RiverCanadian River, Canadian - a river rising in northeastern New Mexico and flowing eastward across the Texas panhandle to become a tributary of the Arkansas River in OklahomaCimarron, Cimarron River - a river that rises in northeastern New Mexico and flows eastward into Oklahoma where it becomes a tributary of the Arkansas RiverLlano Estacado - a large semiarid plateau forming the southern part of the Great PlainsNeosho, Neosho River - a river that rises in eastern Kansas and flows eastward into Oklahoma to become a tributary of the Arkansas RiverRed River, Red - a tributary of the Mississippi River that flows eastward from Texas along the southern boundary of Oklahoma and through Louisiana
Translations
Оклахома

Oklahoma


Oklahoma

(ōkləhō`mə), state in SW United States. It is bordered by Missouri and Arkansas (E); Texas, partially across the Red River (S, W); New Mexico, across the narrow edge of the Oklahoma Panhandle (W); and Colorado and Kansas (N).

Facts and Figures

Area, 69,919 sq mi (181,090 sq km). Pop. (2010) 3,751,351, an 8.7% increase since the 2000 census. Capital and largest city, Oklahoma City. Statehood, Nov. 16, 1907 (46th state). Highest pt., Black Mesa, 4,973 ft (1,517 m); lowest pt., Little River, 287 ft (88 m). Nickname, Sooner State. Motto, Labor Omnia Vincit [Labor Conquers All Things]. State bird, scissor-tailed flycatcher. State flower, mistletoe. State tree, redbud. Abbr., Okla.; OK

Geography

The high, short-grass plains of W Oklahoma are part of the Great PlainsGreat Plains,
extensive grassland region on the continental slope of central North America. They extend from the Canadian provinces of Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba south through W central United States into W Texas.
..... Click the link for more information.
, which are chilled by north winds in the winter and baked by intense heat in the summer. There are extensive grazing lands and wheat fields. The plains are broken here and there, notably by Black Mesa in the Panhandle and by the Wichita Mts. in the southwest, but the general slope is downward to the east, and central and E Oklahoma is mostly prairie, rising in the northeast to the Ozark Mts. and in the southeast to the Ouachita Mts.

The rivers that flow from west to east across the state—the Arkansas and its tributaries, the Cimarron, and the Canadian (with the North Canadian) in the north, the Red River with the Washita and other tributaries in the south—are much more prominent in the east. Chickasaw National Recreation Area is in S Oklahoma. Oklahoma CityOklahoma City
(1990 pop. 444,719), state capital, and seat of Oklahoma co., central Okla., on the North Canadian River; inc. 1890. The state's largest city, it is an important livestock market, a wholesale, distribution, industrial, and financial center, and a farm trade and
..... Click the link for more information.
 is the capital, and the other large city is TulsaTulsa
, city (1990 pop. 367,302), seat of Tulsa co., NE Okla., on the Arkansas River E of its junction with the Cimarron; inc. 1898. It became an inland port with the opening (1971) of the McClellan-Kerr Waterway, a 440-mi (708-km) system linking it with the Gulf of Mexico.
..... Click the link for more information.
.

Economy

Cotton, formerly the leading cash crop of Oklahoma, has been succeeded by wheat; income from livestock, however, exceeds that from crops. Many minerals are found in Oklahoma, including coal, but the one that gave the state its wealth is oil. After the first well was drilled in 1888, the petroleum industry grew enormously, until Oklahoma City and Tulsa were among the great natural gas and petroleum centers of the world. Oil and gas have declined somewhat in importance today. Many of Oklahoma's factories process local foods and minerals, but its chief manufactures include nonelectrical machinery and fabricated metal products. Military bases and other government facilities are also important.

Government and Higher Education

The original 1907 constitution is still in effect. Oklahoma has a legislature of 48 senators and 101 representatives. The governor is elected for a four-year term. The state elects two U.S. senators and five representatives and has seven electoral votes. In 1994, Republican Frank Keating won the governorship; he was reelected in 1998. Democrat Brad Henry narrowly won the office in the 2002 election and retained it in 2006. Mary Fallin, a Republican, was elected to the post in 2010 and 2014; she was the first woman to win the governorship. Republican Kevin Stitt was elected governor in 2018.

Among institutions of higher learning in the state are Oklahoma State Univ., at Stillwater; the Univ. of Oklahoma, at Norman and Oklahoma City; and the Univ. of Tulsa and Oral Roberts Univ., at Tulsa.

History

The Native American Heritage

Oklahoma's Native American population is the largest in the nation—252,420 at the 1990 census. Several indigenous cultures existed in the area before the first European visited in 1541. Francisco CoronadoCoronado, Francisco Vásquez de
, c.1510–1554, Spanish explorer. He went to Mexico with Viceroy Antonio de Mendoza and in 1538 was made governor of Nueva Galicia.
..... Click the link for more information.
 almost certainly crossed Oklahoma in that year, and Hernando De SotoDe Soto, Hernando
, c.1500–1542, Spanish explorer. After serving under Pedro Arias de Ávila in Central America and under Francisco Pizarro in Peru, the dashing young conquistador was made governor of Cuba by Emperor Charles V, with the right to conquer Florida
..... Click the link for more information.
 may have visited E Oklahoma. Later Juan de OñateOñate, Juan de
, fl. 1595–1614, Spanish explorer in the American Southwest, possibly b. New Spain. In 1598 he led an expedition north from New Spain, took possession of New Mexico for the Spanish king, and established a settlement at San Juan.
..... Click the link for more information.
 passed through W Oklahoma, and some other Spanish explorers and traders and French traders from Louisiana visited the region, but there was no development of the area.

Tribes of the Plains cultures—Osage, Kiowa, Comanche, and Apache—dominated the west; the Wichita and other relatively sedentary tribes lived farther east. It is asserted that the first European trading post was established at Salina by the Chouteau family of St. Louis before the territory was transferred to the United States by the Louisiana PurchaseLouisiana Purchase,
1803, American acquisition from France of the formerly Spanish region of Louisiana. Reasons for the Purchase

The revelation in 1801 of the secret agreement of 1800, whereby Spain retroceded Louisiana to France, aroused uneasiness in the United
..... Click the link for more information.
 in 1803, but the land remained in control of the sparse and nomadic native population. For the most part only traders, official explorers (notably Stephen H. Long), and scientific and curious travelers (among them Washington Irving and George Catlin) came into the present-day state.

Indian Territory

In 1819 the Adams-Onís Treaty with Spain defined Oklahoma as the southwestern boundary of the United States. After the War of 1812 the U.S. government invited the Cherokee of Georgia and Tennessee to move into the area, and a few had come to settle. Soon intense white pressure for their lands, with the approval of President Andrew Jackson, forced the Cherokee and the others of the Five Civilized Tribes (the Choctaw, the Chickasaw, the Creek, and the Seminole) to abandon their old homes east of the Mississippi and to take up residence in what was to become the Indian TerritoryIndian Territory,
in U.S. history, name applied to the country set aside for Native Americans by the Indian Intercourse Act (1834). In the 1820s, the federal government began moving the Five Civilized Tribes (Cherokee, Creek, Seminole, Choctaw, and Chickasaw) of the Southeast to
..... Click the link for more information.
. Their tragic removal is known as the Trail of Tears. They settled on the hills and little prairies of the eastern section and built separate organized states and communities.

The Cherokee particularly had a highly Europeanized culture, with a written language, invented by their great leader Sequoyah, and highly developed institutions. Some of the Cherokee were slaveholders and ran their agricultural properties in the traditional Southern plantation pattern; others were small farmers. The Five Civilized Tribes clashed briefly with the Plains Indians, particularly the Osage, but they were for a time free from white interference, and they were able to establish a civilization that strongly affected the whole history of the region.

The troubles of the whites did not, however, long escape them, and the Civil War was a major disaster. Although no major battle of the war was fought in present-day Oklahoma, there were numerous skirmishes. Most Native Americans allied themselves with the Confederacy, but Unionist disaffection was widespread, and individual violence was so prevalent that many fled, leaving their farms to desolation.

As a punishment for taking the Confederate side the Five Civilized Tribes lost the western part of the Indian Territory, and the federal government began assigning lands there to such landless eastern tribes as the Delaware and the Shawnee, as well as to nomadic Plains tribes, who put up strong resistance before they were subdued and settled on reservations. The territory was plagued by lawlessness and served as a hideout for white outlaws. After the establishment of a federal court at Fort Smith, Isaac Parker became famous as the "hanging judge."

Cattle, Railroads, and Boomers

Immediately after the Civil War the long drives of cattle from Texas to the Kansas railroad head began to cross Oklahoma, traveling over the cattle trails that became part of Western folklore. The best known was the Chisholm TrailChisholm Trail,
route over which vast herds of cattle were driven from Texas to the railheads in Kansas after the Civil War. Its name is generally believed to come from Jesse Chisholm, a part-Cherokee trader who, in the spring of 1866, drove his wagon, heavily loaded with
..... Click the link for more information.
. The cattle were fattened on the virgin ranges of Oklahoma, and cattlemen began to look on the grasslands with speculative and covetous eyes.

The first railroad to cross Oklahoma was built between 1870 and 1872, and thereafter it was not possible to keep white settlers out. They came despite proscriptive laws and treaties with the Native Americans, and by the 1880s there was a strong admixture of whites. In addition, ranches were developed that were nominally owned by Native Americans, but actually controlled by white cattlemen and their cowboys. The region quickly took on a tinge of the Old West of the cattle frontier, a tinge that it has never wholly lost.

In the 1880s land-hungry frontier farmers, the boomers, agitated to obtain the "unassigned" lands in the western section—the lands not given to any Native American tribe. The agitation succeeded, and a large strip was opened for settlement in 1889. Prospective settlers lined up on the territorial border, and at high noon they were allowed to cross on a "run" to compete in finding and claiming the best lands. Those who illegally entered ahead of the set time were the nicknamed the "sooners." Later other strips of territory were opened, and settlers poured in from the Midwest and the South.

Oklahoma Territory and Statehood

The western section of what is now the state of Oklahoma became the Oklahoma Territory in 1890; it included the Panhandle, the narrow strip of territory that, taken from Texas by the Compromise of 1850, had become a no-man's-land where settlers came in undisturbed. In 1893 the Dawes CommissionDawes Commission,
commission to the Five Civilized Tribes, created by the U.S. Congress in 1893 under the Dawes Act with H. L. Dawes as chairman. Its aim was the reorganization of the Indian Territory by securing the assent of the chiefs to the extinguishing of tribal land
..... Click the link for more information.
 was appointed to implement a policy of dividing the tribal lands into individual holdings; the Native Americans resisted, but the policy was finally enforced in 1906. The wide lands of the Indian Territory were thus made available to whites.

The Civilized Tribes made the best of a poor bargain, and the Indian Territory and Oklahoma Territory were united in 1907 to form the state of Oklahoma, with a constitution that included provision for initiative and referendum. Already the oil boom had reached major proportions, and the young state was on the verge of great economic development. At the same time, cotton, wheat, and corn were major money crops, and cattleland holdings, although shrinking, were still enormous.

The Dust Bowl

In World War I the great demand for farm products brought an agricultural boom to the state, but in the 1920s the state fell upon hard times. Recurrent drought burned the wheat in the fields, and overplanting, overgrazing, and unscientific cropping aided the weather in making Oklahoma part of the Dust BowlDust Bowl,
the name given to areas of the U.S. prairie states that suffered ecological devastation in the 1930s and then to a lesser extent in the mid-1950s. The problem began during World War I, when the high price of wheat and the needs of Allied troops encouraged farmers to
..... Click the link for more information.
 of the 1930s. Farm tenancy increased in the 1920s, and in both the east and west the farms tended more and more to be held by large interests and to be consolidated in large blocks.

A great number of tenant farmers were compelled to leave their dust-stricken farms and went west as migrant laborers; the tragic plight of these "Okies" is the theme of John Steinbeck's novel The Grapes of Wrath. With the return of rains, however, and with increasing care in selecting crops and in conserving and utilizing water and soil resources, much of the Dust Bowl again became productive farm land. The demand for food in World War II and federal price supports for agricultural products after the war further aided farm prosperity.

Irrigation and an Oil Boom

Large state and federal programs for conserving river water and, at the same time, meeting irrigation needs have resulted in such constructions as the reservoir impounded by the Kerr Dam on the Arkansas River. For the most part, these programs resulted in improved agricultural conditions and created new recreation areas. In 1971 the opening of the Oklahoma portion of the Arkansas River Navigation System gave the cities of Muskogee and Tulsa (at its port Catoosa) direct access to the sea.

Oklahoma experienced another boom during the 1970s when oil prices rose dramatically. In the mid-1980s, however, Oklahoma's economy was hurt (as it had been in the 1930s) by dependence on a single industry, as oil prices fell rapidly. In the eary 21st cent., earthquakes in N and cental Oklahoma, due to the effects of injecting drilling wastewater deep underground, have become common and on occasion damaging.

Bibliography

See V. E. Harlow, Oklahoma History (5th ed. 1967); E. C. McReynolds, Oklahoma: A History of the Sooner State (rev. ed. 1971); A. Marriott and C. K. Rachlin, Oklahoma (1973); A. H. Morgan and H. W. Morgan, Oklahoma (1982); A. M. Gibson, Oklahoma: A History of Five Centuries (1984); J. S. Morris et al., Historical Atlas of Oklahoma (3d ed. 1986).

Oklahoma State Information

Phone: (405) 521-2011
www.ok.gov


Area (sq mi):: 69898.19 (land 68667.06; water 1231.13) Population per square mile: 51.70
Population 2005: 3,547,884 State rank: 0 Population change: 2000-20005 2.80%; 1990-2000 9.70% Population 2000: 3,450,654 (White 74.10%; Black or African American 7.60%; Hispanic or Latino 5.20%; Asian 1.40%; Other 14.90%). Foreign born: 3.80%. Median age: 35.50
Income 2000: per capita $17,646; median household $33,400; Population below poverty level: 14.70% Personal per capita income (2000-2003): $24,407-$26,719
Unemployment (2004): 4.90% Unemployment change (from 2000): 1.80% Median travel time to work: 21.70 minutes Working outside county of residence: 23.80%

List of Oklahoma counties:

  • Adair County
  • Alfalfa County
  • Atoka County
  • Beaver County
  • Beckham County
  • Blaine County
  • Bryan County
  • Caddo County
  • Canadian County
  • Carter County
  • Cherokee County
  • Choctaw County
  • Cimarron County
  • Cleveland County
  • Coal County
  • Comanche County
  • Cotton County
  • Craig County
  • Creek County
  • Custer County
  • Delaware County
  • Dewey County
  • Ellis County
  • Garfield County
  • Garvin County
  • Grady County
  • Grant County
  • Greer County
  • Harmon County
  • Harper County
  • Haskell County
  • Hughes County
  • Jackson County
  • Jefferson County
  • Johnston County
  • Kay County
  • Kingfisher County
  • Kiowa County
  • Latimer County
  • LeFlore County
  • Lincoln County
  • Logan County
  • Love County
  • Major County
  • Marshall County
  • Mayes County
  • McClain County
  • McCurtain County
  • McIntosh County
  • Murray County
  • Muskogee County
  • Noble County
  • Nowata County
  • Okfuskee County
  • Oklahoma County
  • Okmulgee County
  • Osage County
  • Ottawa County
  • Pawnee County
  • Payne County
  • Pittsburg County
  • Pontotoc County
  • Pottawatomie County
  • Pushmataha County
  • Roger Mills County
  • Rogers County
  • Seminole County
  • Sequoyah County
  • Stephens County
  • Texas County
  • Tillman County
  • Tulsa County
  • Wagoner County
  • Washington County
  • Washita County
  • Woods County
  • Woodward County
  • Oklahoma Parks

    • US National Parks
      Chickasaw National Recreation Area
      Oklahoma City National Memorial
      Washita Battlefield National Historic Site
    • Urban Parks
      Earlywine Park
      Lake Hefner Park
      Lake Overholser
      Mohawk Park
      River Parks
      Trosper Park
    • State Parks
      Adair State Park
      Alabaster Caverns State Park
      Arrowhead State Park
      Beaver Dunes State Park
      Beavers Bend Resort Park
      Bernice State Park
      Black Mesa State Park & Nature Preserve
      Boggy Depot State Park
      Boiling Springs State Park
      Brushy Lake State Park
      Cherokee Landing State Park
      Cherokee State Park
      Clayton Lake State Park
      Crowder Lake University Park
      Disney/Little Blue State Park
      Dripping Springs State Park
      Fort Cobb Lake State Park
      Foss State Park
      Gloss Mountain State Park
      Great Plains State Park
      Great Salt Plains State Park
      Greenleaf State Park
      Heavener Runestone State Park
      Hochatown State Park
      Honey Creek State Park
      Hugo Lake State Park
      Keystone State Park
      Lake Eucha State Park
      Lake Eufaula State Park
      Lake Murray State Park
      Lake Texoma State Park
      Lake Thunderbird State Park
      Lake Wister State Park
      Little Sahara State Park
      McGee Creek State Park
      Natural Falls State Park
      Okmulgee State Park
      Osage Hills State Park
      Quartz Mountain Resort
      Raymond Gary State Park
      Red Rock Canyon State Park
      Robbers Cave State Park
      Roman Nose Resort Park
      Sequoyah Bay State Park
      Sequoyah State Park & Western Hills Guest Ranch
      Snowdale State Park
      Spavinaw State Park
      Talimena State Park
      Tenkiller State Park
      Twin Bridges State Park
      Wah-Sha-She State Park
      Walnut Creek State Park
    • Parks and Conservation-Related Organizations - US
      Ground Water Protection Council (GWPC)
    • National Wildlife Refuges
      Deep Fork National Wildlife Refuge
      Little River National Wildlife Refuge
      Optima National Wildlife Refuge
      Ozark Plateau National Wildlife Refuge
      Salt Plains National Wildlife Refuge
      Sequoyah National Wildlife Refuge
      Tishomingo National Wildlife Refuge
      Washita National Wildlife Refuge
      Wichita Mountains Wildlife Refuge
    • National Scenic Byways
      Talimena Scenic Drive - Oklahoma
    • National Grasslands
      Black Kettle & McClellan Creek National Grasslands

    Oklahoma

     

    a state in the South Central USA. Area, 181,100 sq km. Population, 2,559,000 (1970), of which 68 percent is urban. The state capital is Oklahoma City, and Tulsa is the leading economic center.

    Almost all of Oklahoma is a plain, with elevations of 200–500 m. The western part of the state is a plateau, with a maximum elevation of 1,516 m. The Ouachita Mountains, with elevations to 884 m, are located in the southeast. The climate is subtropical. Average January temperatures are 0°–6°C, and average July temperatures are 24°–27°C. Annual precipitation totals 450 mm in the west and 1,000 mm in the east. The main rivers are the Arkansas and the Red, tributaries of the Mississippi. Much of the land is cultivated; broad-leaved forests are still found in the mountains.

    In terms of output value, Oklahoma is the fourth largest mineral-producing state. The principal products are oil (30 million tons in 1970, fourth place in the USA), natural gas (43 billion cu m in 1969, third place in the USA), zinc, and coal. Manufacturing employed 135,000 people in 1970. Machine building and metalworking, including the manufacture of parts for aircraft and tractor trucks, are important. The state produces mining and construction equipment and metal structural members. It also has oil refining, production of chemicals, flour milling, and meat-packing. The electric power output was more than 20 billion kW-hr in 1969.

    Animal husbandry, especially meat production and dairying, is the leading branch of agriculture in terms of output value. With a 2,668,000-ton harvest in 1970, Oklahoma is a major US wheat producer. Large areas in the south are planted in cotton, and other crops include hay, peanuts, and grain sorghum.

    M. E. POLOVITSKAIA

    Oklahoma

    Forty-sixth state; admitted on November 16, 1907

    Since 1921, November 16 has been designated Oklahoma Statehood Day. It has also been Oklahoma State Flag Day since 1968. In 1957, in honor of the 50th anniversary of state­hood, the state legislature decreed the week of November 11­16 to be Oklahoma Week. In 1965, the lawmakers mandated public schools to conduct programs on the state’s history and achievements on November 16. Annual observance of Okla­homa Statehood Day began in 1921 under the sponsorship of the Oklahoma Heritage Association, which continues to hold a dinner at the state capital at which notable Oklahomans are inducted into the Oklahoma Hall of Fame. Oklahoma State­hood Day is also observed annually with a ceremony at the Washington Cathedral in the nation’s capital.

    SEE ALSO OKLAHOMA DAY

    State capital: Oklahoma City Nickname: The Sooner State State motto: Labor omnia vincit (Latin “Labor conquers all

    things”) State animal: American buffalo (Bison bison) State amphibian: Bullfrog (Rana catesbeiana) State beverage: Milk State bird: Scissor-tailed flycatcher (Muscivora forficatus) State butterfly: Black swallowtail (Papilio polyxenes) State cartoon character: Gusty State children’s song: “Oklahoma, My Native Land” State colors: Green and white State country and western song: “Faded Love” State crystal: Hourglass Selenite Crystal State fish: White (sand) bass (Morone chrysops) State floral emblem: Mistletoe (Phoradendron serotinum) State flower: Oklahoma Rose; wildflower: Indian blanket

    (Gaillardia pulchella) State flying mammal: Mexican free-tailed bat State folk dance: Square dance State fossil: Saurophaganax Maximus State fruit: Strawberry State furbearer: Raccoon State game animal: White-tailed deer State game bird: Wild turkey State grass: Indiangrass (Sorghastrum nutans) State insect: Honeybee (Apis mellifera) State meal: Fried Okra, Squash, Cornbread, Barbeque Pork,

    Biscuits, Sausage & Gravy, Grits, Corn, Strawberries,

    Chicken Fried Steak, Black-eyed Peas, and Pecan Pie State monument: The Golden Driller State musical instrument: Fiddle State percussive musical instrument: Drum State poem: “Howdy Folks” State reptile: Collared lizard (mountain boomer, Crotaphy­

    tus collaris) State rock: Barite rose (rose rock or Cherokee rose) State soil: Port Silt Loam (Cumulic haplustolls) State song: “Oklahoma!” State theater: Lynn Riggs Players of Oklahoma, Inc. State tree: Redbud (Cercis canadensis) State vegetable: Watermelon (Citrullus lanatus) State waltz: “Oklahoma Wind”

    More about state symbols at:

    www.okhistory.org/kids/aboutok.html
    http://www.ok.gov/osfdocs/stinfo.html

    SOURCES:

    AmerBkDays-2000, p. 773 AnnivHol-2000, p. 192

    CONTACT:

    Oklahoma Heritage Association 201 NW 14th St Oklahoma City, 73103 888-501-2059 405-235-4458 www.oklahomaheritage.com/ oha@telepath.com

    STATE OFFICES:

    State web site: www.ok.gov

    Office of the Governor State Capitol Rm 212 Oklahoma City, OK 73105 405-521-2342 fax: 405-521-3353 www.governor.state.ok.us

    Secretary of State 2300 N Lincoln Blvd Rm 101 Oklahoma City, OK 73105 405-521-3912 fax: 405-521-3771 www.sos.state.ok.us

    Oklahoma Dept of Libraries 200 NE 18th St Oklahoma City, OK 73105 405-521-2502 fax: 405-525-7804 www.odl.state.ok.us

    Legal Holidays:

    Day after ThanksgivingNov 25, 2011; Nov 23, 2012; Nov 29, 2013; Nov 28, 2014; Nov 27, 2015; Nov 25, 2016; Nov 24, 2017; Nov 23, 2018; Nov 29, 2019; Nov 27, 2020; Nov 26, 2021; Nov 25, 2022; Nov 24, 2023

    Oklahoma

    a state in the S central US: consists of plains in the west, rising to mountains in the southwest and east; important for oil. Capital: Oklahoma City. Pop.: 3 511 532 (2003 est.). Area: 181 185 sq. km (69 956 sq. miles)
    AcronymsSeeOK

    Oklahoma


    Related to Oklahoma: Oklahoma City bombing, Oklahoma bombing
    • noun

    Synonyms for Oklahoma

    noun a state in south central United States

    Synonyms

    • OK
    • Sooner State

    Related Words

    • Platt National Park
    • U.S.A.
    • United States
    • United States of America
    • US
    • USA
    • America
    • the States
    • U.S.
    • Bartlesville
    • Enid
    • Lawton
    • McAlester
    • Muskogee
    • capital of Oklahoma
    • Oklahoma City
    • Tulsa
    • Arkansas River
    • Arkansas
    • Canadian River
    • Canadian
    • Cimarron
    • Cimarron River
    • Llano Estacado
    • Neosho
    • Neosho River
    • Red River
    • Red
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