This is a list of current and former state parks in Oklahoma.
class=notpageimage| Oklahoma State Parks (Hover mouse over pog to popup clickable link)Current parks
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. | ||
Beaver Dunes Park | Beaver | 520 | Owned by City of Beaver. | ||
Boggy Depot Park | Atoka | 630 | Owned and managed by the Chickasaw Nation since 2011. | ||
Brushy Lake Park | 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 | 1,075 | 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. | |
Hochatown State Park | McCurtain | 1,713 | 1966 | Broken Bow Lake | Combined into Beavers Bend, no longer a separate park |
Hugo Lake State Park | Choctaw | 289 | 1974 | Hugo Lake | Originally built in 1974 as Kiamichi Park, renamed Hugo Lake State Park in 2002. |
Lake Eucha Park | Delaware | 55 | 1967 | Lake Eucha | The former Lake Eucha State Park; owned and managed by the city of Tulsa since 2011; 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. 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. |
Walnut Creek State Park | Osage | 1,429 | 1966 | Keystone Lake | Park was permanently closed October 1, 2014 |
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; subleased since 2015 to the non-profit Hulah Lake Osage Association which maintains the park through volunteer efforts and campground fees. |
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.
- ^ Wertz, Joe. "Why It’s Hard to Privatize and Move State Parks." September 2, 2011. Retrieved April 8, 2013.
- "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