Atoka
The city of Atoka was named for Capt. Atoka, Choctaw leader and signer of the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek, 1830, providing Choctaw removal from Mississippi to Indian Territory.
Atoka County was organized in the Choctaw Nation in 1854. This was an important Atoka Agreement with the United States, to close Choctaw and Chickasaw governments, and signed in this city in 1897. – Historical Marker
The city was founded in 1867 by Rev. J.S. Murrow, a Baptist Missionary. Capt. Atoka was buried about twenty miles east of town near the town of Farris. When the section was surveyed, the chief\\\’s resting place was found and marked. Be sure to visit the Confederate Memorial Museum, Cemetery, and Information Center with memorabilia from a Civil War battle fought on February 13, 1864, stone artifacts, tableaux, clothing and weapons.
Boggy Depot Cemetery
Adjoining Boggy Depot Townsite is the 1830s Middle Boggy Battlefield Site and Cemetery. The townsite and cemetery are listed on the National Register of Historic Places and on the Oklahoma's…
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Confederate Cemetery
The "burying ground" was first used by emigrants traveling on the Butterfield Stage road who…
Learn more →Atoka Golf Club
Atoka golf club is a public 9-hole course with bent grass greens with water in…
Learn more →Butterfield Stage Line
Standing at the forefront of the old Butterfield road imagine the stage coach hustling along…
Learn more →Confederate Memorial Museum and Cemetery
The museum offers a unique look into the varied history of southeastern Oklahoma. From pre-historic…
Learn more →Boggy Depot Townsite
Prelude to a State Boggy Depot's contribution to Oklahoma outlasted all her structures, for it…
Learn more →Battle of Boggy Creek
Union Official Records Report of the Battle (O.R. SERIES I VOLUME XXII/2 S# 33) Early…
Learn more →Historic Downtown
Take in some of Atoka's History by viewing the historic downtown buildings. 1901 Bank Building…
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