Love to see people document these little towns, they were the Wild West once Sorry to see people have to leave their home places for financial reasons these last 30 yrs and glad people in other parts of the country can see them because you explored them
Chris, The building in Alva was a flour mill. Also the grain elevators you showed are still in operation. One of them used to be owned by my grandfather.
My grandparents lived in Gate Oklahoma. Seeing it featured on your video brought back many wonderful memories. I remember going to Avery's and Curtis' grocery stores with my Grandma when I was a little girl...
I'm old enough to remember when these little towns were bustling with life. I even remember the trains with the wooden cars, the transition to steel cars was just beginning.
it s incredible the enormous amount of abandoned towns in Usa. I enjoy so much see the users who are dedicated to documenting him. Greetings from Bs As , Arg .-
I grew up 7 miles east of Putnam, Oklahoma on the family farm. I attended the Putnam Schools from 1st through 4th grade. I still have the family farms and travel out there and through Putnam almost daily. The first building you showed was the lumber yard and general store.
I know Kenton, OK pretty well. My great grandfather, John Duncan, used to run the Kenton Mercantile. He passed away in the late '70's at the age of 103,. I also had a couple of my mother's aunts and uncles, that lived at each end of town.
My husband and I took a trip to Oklahoma in September to see Fort Sill in Lawton, where he was stationed when he was in the Army. Seeing this video made me want to take a side trip to Gate and he agreed. It took us 5 hours to drive up there from Lawton and we arrived around noon. Yes, luckily for us Laurie's Cafe was open for business, so we were able to get some lunch there. Several people stopped to get some take-out while we were there. Afterwards we checked out all the wonderful murals. I wish we could have found out who painted them and when they were painted. It was very hot that day and it was a long drive but well worth it. Thanks for the upload!
Gage, with over 400 people, I would not consider a ghost town, though a lot of downtown does seem abandoned. A couple of interesting things about Gage >>> First, the National Weather Service still maintains a weather station here, which has been keeping area weather data for over one hundred years. Second, Gage has an Artesian Park, consisting of a spring-fed, artesian lake the size of five football fields. The Park, located just east of town, functions as a large outdoor swimming pool, with a water depth that ranges from 3 feet to 14 feet. At one time, the park was so popular that is supported a motel nearby. Nice video. There are several additional ghost towns, or ghost towns-in-the making, in western Oklahoma, that I am aware of.
Don't know how I missed this video when it came out. Many familiar places. Very well done. I'm sure you know, but rural towns lived by the railroads and schools. When trucking killed the minor rail lines and consolidation killed the local schools,.....
@@attrell Apparently the farm trade was not enough to keep them going. Of course, many unused rails were pulled during WW II for their steel to support the war effort. After the war, many of the elevators consolidated but were finally abandoned. There is a rail bed you can still follow on google starting a mile south of Keyes going east to Hooker.
Love your video!! I grew up in western Oklahoma! I had to chuckle a little when you said town of Gotebo! I think you're the first person to say it correctly. Great job on the video❣
I really enjoyed your video. I was born in Snyder, OK it's just a few miles from Cooperton, OK and Gotebo, OK. My family moved from Snyder in 1955, when we moved I was only 5 years old, we moved to Jones, OK. I remember when we would go visit family members we drove through both Cooperton and Gotebo. It's sad to see what the town's look like today. Thank you for sharing.
My favorite channel. Organized, no rambling, informative and fascinating. Sometimes the distant past makes me ponder that life is just a short journey.
My father was born in avard went to school in Alva and graduated from nwosu in Alva. Two of my sisters and myself were born in Alva hospital which is now a museum. All three of my sisters graduated from nwosu. Our parents and one set of grandparents are buried in Alva.
I recommend trying the Mexican restaurant in Cherokee or "Ingersol" BBQ (on the Hwy from Cherokee and Alva) or if you're in Alva, Taco Village is a long time multi generational local eatery! And a Family Favorite for my wife and her mother!
Really cool video. My grandmother grew up in a dugout on the side of a cliff in rural western Oklahoma in the 1920's. I understand it was somewhere West of Watonga. I have been all through the West there. She ended up in Geary, Oklahoma and even seeing houses there collapsed and boarded up only to realize people still were living in them. It was like going to a different world since I am from Canada.
Addington looks like Shattuck, back in the Gage area of the video because of the windmill museum 😊 thanks for your content! Arnett, Oklahoma here… (the armpit of Oklahoma 😂)
I was in that town in 2013 when I was chasing a potential tornado. Had to turn around when I got to Canadian because the storm was moving too fast. I may have even took some photos in Arnett.
Spent time in Lawton and Altus as a kid - that was 45 years ago. Oklahoma then had the nicest people I've ever met. Hurts my eyes to see those towns falling apart.
Great video. 😊😊Its always good to see other ghost towns history that can be related to Saskatchewan in some ways. 😊😊Thanks for sharing these moments Chris.👏👏
Hello and I agree! I wish I had 2-3 more days on that trip. Will go back next year. I added Depew to my Route 66 abandoned video I uploaded today. I enjoyed that town.
If you haven't already. Be sure to make your way to Roosevelt, OK and Gotebo. The only thing keeping Roosevelt from dying is Parts World the junk yard. The only thing keeping Gotebo going is the grain elevator. You can find Cooperton between Mt View, Roosevelt and Gotebo. Good luck and safe travels. Oh, Dill City and Lone Wolf oklahoma are Ghosttowns as well.
I hope you go to the other end of Oklahoma when I was a youngster back in 1995 I was young man and we built the movie twister and a lot of the towns. I think it was Enid Oklahoma was one of the places we built I remember going in the back vacant town and putting fake store, friends and building fake homes over the pre-existing homes. The town was 95% deserted. It was right next to Kansas and I believe the story goes that a twister scared everybody out of town. I would love to get back there and see what the town looks like now.
I live about 45 minutes west of Tulsa, so pretty much the northeast of the state. There is a town in south-west creek county, called Depew, and most of the businesses are gone. But some person, group, organization idk, came and painted the windows of the abandoned buildings downtown, so it looks like there still open.
Thank you for showing Addington Oklahoma I've driven by The cow Creek company for the last 18 years but can't remember what highway it's on I think it's highway 281?
Avard, Okla. two railroads, former Frisco/BN& Former Santa Fe, now both belong to the BNSF, the Frisco ends there, but heads back East through Hopeton, Dacoma,Carmen, McWillie,Helena,Goltry,Carrier & then Enid, continuing on to Tulsa, Springfield,Mo. former Santa Fe runs East West, it's called the Transcon, LA to Chicago.
What’s amazing to me is the number of unbroken windows in these places. Shows there is still some respect, thank goodness...Research the history, the collapse of the homeowner farms began under the Regan Administration when the corporate owned farm was said to be much more efficient, Regan applauded this.
Rumor has it the old high school gym/roller skating rink in Avard, Oklahoma is haunted!! There is supposedly a portal to the other side!! Vina Rae’s grill and graze restaurant was there!! Lots of paranormal activity went on there!!
Glad you put this om I can see what I can no longer travel to. From a small town and I know all to well how so many places get Abaddon, glad I could se, sad that they have lost their [people. If I had the money and the health I would try to bring life back to one of tham
What you called the professional building in Aline was actually the International Order of Odd Fellows building. It has since been demolished to make room for an infrastructure project. Current population is 202.
I would suspect that the abandoned large building next to the railroad tracks in Alva would have been a flour mill as it is connected to the grain elevators.
For me it's so sad. Where are the Generation of these people who built all these things, towns and cities? Are they all dead or did they vanish? There should be a cause thanks for your updates
Thanks for escepting my comment. I feel sad because my late father had a farm planted with Rubber, Coffee and Coco ect. In LIBERIA, West Africa but the generation continue to keep it warm thanks again 👍💯🙏
Alin The building with ads on the outside I saw a Purina, sign. it was a feed store. Aver the hotel the building next to it was a diner, the Locker Building it was a Butcher Shop where : cattle / pigs/ chickens / and wildgame is processed / It is enunciated GO - TEA - BOH, they made a " stink " bait for Catfish. The Legion building was a WPA project. IN Alva the grain elevators, the building next to it was grain mill, making flour or cornmeal. It wasn't the Depression, it was the Oil Bust of the late 1980's / early 90's these towns are located in the Anadarko Basin. The railroad was set up by the Ringling Brothers as they had a town in Eastern Jefferson County, and they thought they could transport Cattle and oil with the Chicago Rock Island and Pacific Railroad. The reason for all the railroad tracks for oil terminals / cotton gins / and grain elevators. I hope this helps
My great grandma who is 94 or 95 was born and raised in Gate Oklahoma. She told me her dad owned a drug store as in the general store back then. And that it caught on fire. That’s all I remember. So interesting
I love all of your videos. Yet I have learned alot from your videos and others.One thing I do on my channel is Ghost towns, here in Ga. and SC. I believe that once the heart of a town,aka business district dies. The town is dead no matter what the cause of the town dying. It is people that make a town not just its business. Once unity is gone and the soul of the town is gone it is dead. Shalom my friend.
I live in this area. While the area and people are charming it does come with it's own challenges. Declining populations, increasing commutes for work, lack of employment opportunities, good luck finding groceries locally in many of these small towns. With the increasing encroachment of businesses like Dollar general and Walmart pricing out local business and then even those closing, goods and services are in short supply.
You know it is sad to see this, but in this day in age, could these little towns be revitalized in some way? People are moving out of the US BIG cities, new industries need areas to build, i know it would take a lot to do so but so many want to move out, to repurposing should be pushed into these little towns. I am not sure what that might or would be, but i think and would hope that something could be looked at doing so.
Even though I'm from Russia, I really like your videos. It's always sad to see abandoned places where people lived.
Hey there from America
Greetings from America. And yes, decay places can be both interesting & also bittersweet.
So am and do I
Since life usually has such a desire to exist in spite of the world being in our opposition, its off putting to see when things failed.
Love to see people document these little towns, they were the Wild West once
Sorry to see people have to leave their home places for financial reasons these last 30 yrs and glad people in other parts of the country can see them because you explored them
You did a nice job showing these dwindling little OK towns. I enjoy seeing them & what you're doing here.
Chris, The building in Alva was a flour mill. Also the grain elevators you showed are still in operation. One of them used to be owned by my grandfather.
Thank you!!
My grandparents lived in Gate Oklahoma. Seeing it featured on your video brought back many wonderful memories. I remember going to Avery's and Curtis' grocery stores with my Grandma when I was a little girl...
Glad you enjoyed it
Bro my great grandparents lived there too. That’s crazy. Now they’re in the panhandle of Oklahoma
I'm old enough to remember when these little towns were bustling with life.
I even remember the trains with the wooden cars, the transition to steel cars was just beginning.
Me too
I loved this tour - it was so fascinating!
Thank you!
it s incredible the enormous amount of abandoned towns in Usa. I enjoy so much see the users who are dedicated to documenting him. Greetings from Bs As , Arg .-
Thank you!
@@attrell what is the name of the mayor of the town Gotebo OK in the thumbnail with the Massey Ferguson tractor sitting abandoned on the street ?
I grew up 7 miles east of Putnam, Oklahoma on the family farm. I attended the Putnam Schools from 1st through 4th grade. I still have the family farms and travel out there and through Putnam almost daily. The first building you showed was the lumber yard and general store.
Thank you!
I know Kenton, OK pretty well. My great grandfather, John Duncan, used to run the Kenton Mercantile. He passed away in the late '70's at the age of 103,. I also had a couple of my mother's aunts and uncles, that lived at each end of town.
I enjoyed my visit to Kenton
My husband and I took a trip to Oklahoma in September to see Fort Sill in Lawton, where he was stationed when he was in the Army. Seeing this video made me want to take a side trip to Gate and he agreed. It took us 5 hours to drive up there from Lawton and we arrived around noon. Yes, luckily for us Laurie's Cafe was open for business, so we were able to get some lunch there. Several people stopped to get some take-out while we were there. Afterwards we checked out all the wonderful murals. I wish we could have found out who painted them and when they were painted. It was very hot that day and it was a long drive but well worth it. Thanks for the upload!
Thanks for watching!
I live in Lawton, just south of Ft. Sill! 😊 Need to take a walk to a couple of these! 😮
Gage, with over 400 people, I would not consider a ghost town, though a lot of downtown does seem abandoned. A couple of interesting things about Gage >>> First, the National Weather Service still maintains a weather station here, which has been keeping area weather data for over one hundred years. Second, Gage has an Artesian Park, consisting of a spring-fed, artesian lake the size of five football fields. The Park, located just east of town, functions as a large outdoor swimming pool, with a water depth that ranges from 3 feet to 14 feet. At one time, the park was so popular that is supported a motel nearby. Nice video. There are several additional ghost towns, or ghost towns-in-the making, in western Oklahoma, that I am aware of.
Thanks for sharing! I am eager to visit again, I really enjoyed the area. I'll check out that park next visit.
Do you know any Clark's there?
I remember growing up in Tulsa the local TV station would always list the temperature for Gage.
Fund comptrollers, need their ear to the ground and maybe they can come up with necessary people/ funding / labor to get things done. Hope
Thanks for taking the time to make these videos. It is very interesting.
Thank you!
I live in Lawton so, I am going to have to take a walk to a few of these! 😅 Thank you for sharing your exploration!
THanks for watching!
Picher, Oklahoma is a ghost town as well. Both of my parents were born and raised there, and I spent some of my childhood there.
I drove thru that town, so sad. Out of respect for the residents who remain, I didn't include that. I feel just awful what happened.
Don't know how I missed this video when it came out. Many familiar places. Very well done. I'm sure you know, but rural towns lived by the railroads and schools. When trucking killed the minor rail lines and consolidation killed the local schools,.....
Thanks for sharing that, I was surprised that rail at Keyes doesn't operate anymore.
@@attrell Apparently the farm trade was not enough to keep them going. Of course, many unused rails were pulled during WW II for their steel to support the war effort. After the war, many of the elevators consolidated but were finally abandoned. There is a rail bed you can still follow on google starting a mile south of Keyes going east to Hooker.
Chris, beautiful decay, good stuff man, yet, sad!
Thanks!
Love your video!! I grew up in western Oklahoma! I had to chuckle a little when you said town of Gotebo! I think you're the first person to say it correctly. Great job on the video❣
Oh good! I am thrilled you like the video! Thanks!
Our Family Farm still exists outside of Gotebo
I really enjoyed your video. I was born in Snyder, OK it's just a few miles from Cooperton, OK and Gotebo, OK. My family moved from Snyder in 1955, when we moved
I was only 5 years old, we moved to Jones, OK. I remember when we would go visit family members we drove through both Cooperton and Gotebo. It's sad to see what the town's look like today. Thank you for sharing.
Thanks for sharing!
Used to drive through Snyder on my way to Mangum where my ex was from. Very ghost like towns down there. Sayre is another one...
Nice video. I like to see the differences between abandoned places in the US and over here in germany.
Must be amazing stuff over there!
Love these old buildings from the past wish they could be restored some good memories of people who once were there
The memories made in all of these towns and buildings is something we think about as we travel. So much life was lived before everyone left.
Hahaha, that same cat in Kenton is in my most recent video. She gave me a tour!
Too funny!!
As a native Oklahoman, it’s really really cool seeing this. I hope I can find the time to visit these amazing places
Thanks for watching!
My favorite channel. Organized, no rambling, informative and fascinating. Sometimes the distant past makes me ponder that life is just a short journey.
Wow, thank you!
I live in Alva Oklahoma and that abandoned brick building you came across on was a grain elevator
Oh thank you!
Seeing old towns like this is why I take my road trips...Great job!
Thank yhou!
My father was born in avard went to school in Alva and graduated from nwosu in Alva. Two of my sisters and myself were born in Alva hospital which is now a museum. All three of my sisters graduated from nwosu. Our parents and one set of grandparents are buried in Alva.
My grandparents grew up in that area, I never got to meet them really so it was great to see where they grew up before coming to Australia
Been thru some of these towns in my previous job.
I love seeing places like this. Hope one day i can travel to so many of them. Just imagine the old life they had in them
Have to love the humour in the antique shop sign.
Yeah I liked that one too.
I recommend trying the Mexican restaurant in Cherokee or "Ingersol" BBQ (on the Hwy from Cherokee and Alva) or if you're in Alva, Taco Village is a long time multi generational local eatery! And a Family Favorite for my wife and her mother!
Thanks for the tips! Next time I a there I will!
Great HD and camera work. The colors really stand out.
Thank you!
Great video/material/history.....Enjoyed; THANK U.....
Thank you too!
Little mayor looks great 😊
I think so too!
Really cool video. My grandmother grew up in a dugout on the side of a cliff in rural western Oklahoma in the 1920's. I understand it was somewhere West of Watonga. I have been all through the West there. She ended up in Geary, Oklahoma and even seeing houses there collapsed and boarded up only to realize people still were living in them. It was like going to a different world since I am from Canada.
Addington looks like Shattuck, back in the Gage area of the video because of the windmill museum 😊 thanks for your content! Arnett, Oklahoma here… (the armpit of Oklahoma 😂)
I was in that town in 2013 when I was chasing a potential tornado. Had to turn around when I got to Canadian because the storm was moving too fast. I may have even took some photos in Arnett.
Could you please show the firehouses in the old towns you showcase?
Good idea, I will do that!
I'll never get there, so thank you for the tour, it is captivating!!
Thanks enjoy this
Thank you!
This is my first time watching your videos. I really enjoyed it. I love looking at abandoned buildings and older things. Please post more videos.🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
Thank you I will!
Really good with locations! I look forward to watching your other videos!
Thank you!
My Dad is from Gotebo... enjoyed the video...look forward to more 😊
Awesome! Thank you!
@@attrell
Pronounced
Go tee bow.
Spent time in Lawton and Altus as a kid - that was 45 years ago. Oklahoma then had the nicest people I've ever met. Hurts my eyes to see those towns falling apart.
Your NEW SUSCRIBER love a Lot This place , This vídeo 😊🙌 Huge Hug from Ensenada bajá MÉXICO 🇲🇽
When I lived in S California we used to go to Rosarita Beach and Ensenada
Thank you!
Great video. 😊😊Its always good to see other ghost towns history that can be related to Saskatchewan in some ways. 😊😊Thanks for sharing these moments Chris.👏👏
Glad you enjoyed it!
Thanks Chris for your work. W. Ok is a very interesting vibe. GAGE was really interesting.
Thank you!!
You could get many more ghost towns in Okla. Ive been to many. We are moving to the town of Depew soon. Pop. 400.
Hello and I agree! I wish I had 2-3 more days on that trip. Will go back next year. I added Depew to my Route 66 abandoned video I uploaded today. I enjoyed that town.
I grew up in Aline the garage was my uncles it served as a garage for the town
Thanks for all that info! Great town, I am glad I checked it out. ALmost missed it because it was so foggy I missed the turn off from the highway.
Nice job Chris.
Thanks!
As a resident of one of the featured towns, we love it like this.
If you haven't already. Be sure to make your way to Roosevelt, OK and Gotebo. The only thing keeping Roosevelt from dying is Parts World the junk yard. The only thing keeping Gotebo going is the grain elevator. You can find Cooperton between Mt View, Roosevelt and Gotebo. Good luck and safe travels. Oh, Dill City and Lone Wolf oklahoma are Ghosttowns as well.
Lol you made it to Go Tee Bo. 😂
Hey thanks! I will go check those out!
The "factory" in Alva was Roller Mills milling company. It was considered an architectural masterpiece when it was built.
It's an old flower mill. Critic mills used to have them. There's another bldg. ,same design in Beardstown il.
I hope you go to the other end of Oklahoma when I was a youngster back in 1995 I was young man and we built the movie twister and a lot of the towns. I think it was Enid Oklahoma was one of the places we built I remember going in the back vacant town and putting fake store, friends and building fake homes over the pre-existing homes. The town was 95% deserted. It was right next to Kansas and I believe the story goes that a twister scared everybody out of town. I would love to get back there and see what the town looks like now.
I am going in spring to the rest of Oklahoma!
I love your videos it's like a time travel. Thanks from Canada
Thanks for watching!
thanks for the video. Makes me want to go there.
Very good job!
Thank you!
Yes, it had a motel. It was only open on prom night though.
How about doing this same thing in north central Oklahoma? Around Medford, Wakita, Deer Creek, Lamint.
Yes! I am eager to go! Thanks.
Nice winter weather for the most part of the trip
Yes it was!
Great vid.
Thank you so much!
I live about 45 minutes west of Tulsa, so pretty much the northeast of the state. There is a town in south-west creek county, called Depew, and most of the businesses are gone. But some person, group, organization idk, came and painted the windows of the abandoned buildings downtown, so it looks like there still open.
I enjoyed my visit to Depew
Thank you for showing Addington Oklahoma I've driven by The cow Creek company for the last 18 years but can't remember what highway it's on I think it's highway 281?
I'm guessing the building in Alva was a flour mill, my grandpa grew up in Waynoka
Thank you!
@@attrell your welcome, enjoyed your work!
Much LOVE from Roumania
It looks pretty ok shape after such a long time. Ether weather is not that harsh or build quality is great. I guess the second most likely.
Avard, Okla. two railroads, former Frisco/BN& Former Santa Fe, now both belong to the BNSF, the Frisco ends there, but heads back East through Hopeton, Dacoma,Carmen, McWillie,Helena,Goltry,Carrier & then Enid, continuing on to Tulsa, Springfield,Mo. former Santa Fe runs East West, it's called the Transcon, LA to Chicago.
And the ioof building was on the end where we had Eastern
Should have checked out Freedom OK. 25 miles straight west of Alva.
I put it on my list for next trip, thank you!
My dad and his siblings are from Freedom..the French family..pug and Nellie are my grandparents.
What’s amazing to me is the number of unbroken windows in these places. Shows there is still some respect, thank goodness...Research the history, the collapse of the homeowner farms began under the Regan Administration when the corporate owned farm was said to be much more efficient, Regan applauded this.
That used to be goodno grocery store the section to the to the north used to be the post office until I moved across the street
I feel like I know your shadow, personally! lol
Very interesting and enjoyable walk thru old time OK. Thanks.
Thanks for watching!
Rumor has it the old high school gym/roller skating rink in Avard, Oklahoma is haunted!! There is supposedly a portal to the other side!! Vina Rae’s grill and graze restaurant was there!! Lots of paranormal activity went on there!!
I got to check that out!
Glad you put this om I can see what I can no longer travel to. From a small town and I know all to well how so many places get Abaddon, glad I could se, sad that they have lost their [people. If I had the money and the health I would try to bring life back to one of tham
Thanks for watching!
The dust bowel of the 1930's took a toll on that area. Most of the original inhabitants are still nearby ... at the cemetery.
Love those old towns have you ever watched Joe n nics road trip
I think I saw a video from them about texas towns
I like the way he tells you the history what it was what it is n
Now housing prices and what it's like to live there
What you called the professional building in Aline was actually the International Order of Odd Fellows building. It has since been demolished to make room for an infrastructure project. Current population is 202.
I would suspect that the abandoned large building next to the railroad tracks in Alva would have been a flour mill as it is connected to the grain elevators.
Thank you!
For me it's so sad. Where are the Generation of these people who built all these things, towns and cities? Are they all dead or did they vanish? There should be a cause thanks for your updates
Thanks for escepting my comment.
I feel sad because my late father had a farm planted with Rubber, Coffee and Coco ect. In LIBERIA, West Africa but the generation continue to keep it warm thanks again 👍💯🙏
Corporate farms killed off the small farms, so the towns died.
Neoliberalism
When was this filmed? Really enjoyed it!
This month! Thank you!
Alin The building with ads on the outside I saw a Purina, sign. it was a feed store. Aver the hotel the building next to it was a diner, the Locker Building it was a Butcher Shop where : cattle / pigs/ chickens / and wildgame is processed / It is enunciated GO - TEA - BOH, they made a " stink " bait for Catfish. The Legion building was a WPA project. IN Alva the grain elevators, the building next to it was grain mill, making flour or cornmeal. It wasn't the Depression, it was the Oil Bust of the late 1980's / early 90's these towns are located in the Anadarko Basin. The railroad was set up by the Ringling Brothers as they had a town in Eastern Jefferson County, and they thought they could transport Cattle and oil with the Chicago Rock Island and Pacific Railroad. The reason for all the railroad tracks for oil terminals / cotton gins / and grain elevators. I hope this helps
Thanks for the info, that is great! And thanks for helping with how to pronounce the name!
Man merkt es regnet dort wenig dort ist alles noch so gut im Schuss
That building was a meat processing in locker plant for many the springers ran it fo ears
6:27 😊😊 it makes me I am watching lee van cleef movie
My great grandma who is 94 or 95 was born and raised in Gate Oklahoma. She told me her dad owned a drug store as in the general store back then. And that it caught on fire. That’s all I remember. So interesting
with that fog, putman ok looks like something out of a silent hill game
I love all of your videos. Yet I have learned alot from your videos and others.One thing I do on my channel is Ghost towns, here in Ga. and SC. I believe that once the heart of a town,aka business district dies. The town is dead no matter what the cause of the town dying. It is people that make a town not just its business. Once unity is gone and the soul of the town is gone it is dead. Shalom my friend.
Thanks for sharing!
There is a cemetery in Aline Oklahoma..has 1,090 graves.
That's a lot of graves!
Should do Hastings, OK , used to have college
THanks! I added to my list.
Hi oklahoma resident here
This is just north tulsa
You gotta go south of admiral to see the nice houses
I'll do that!
I live in this area. While the area and people are charming it does come with it's own challenges. Declining populations, increasing commutes for work, lack of employment opportunities, good luck finding groceries locally in many of these small towns. With the increasing encroachment of businesses like Dollar general and Walmart pricing out local business and then even those closing, goods and services are in short supply.
I'm from Cyril, Oklahoma.. We have around 2,000 Residents.. Great video man, where are you from?
My mom was born Gotebo, OK.
Anyone else notice the “Beware of dog” sign in the window where he saw the Mayor (the cat) in May Oklahoma? 😂
:)
I went to Oklahoma when I was 17.
If I was ultra wealthy (and maybe had several lifetimes) I'd consider moving to one of these places and just revitalize it like crazy.
That would be fun to do!
You know it is sad to see this, but in this day in age, could these little towns be revitalized in some way? People are moving out of the US BIG cities, new industries need areas to build, i know it would take a lot to do so but so many want to move out, to repurposing should be pushed into these little towns. I am not sure what that might or would be, but i think and would hope that something could be looked at doing so.
OMG!!! Crying room? They need to bring that back. Also, make them for planes too! Amazing... 👶👶👶👶👶
Takes me back to Lawton in the 1970s😊