100 Mile Yard Sale Tour and Craft Show
Starting date:
Ending date:
Event Details
Please join us for the Annual Oklahoma 100 mile yard sale tour that will include Hominy, Cleveland, Pawnee, Jennings, Hallett, and Mannford with more cities being announced soon. Each town will be holding it's own city-wide yard sale with flea markets along the route. Maps will be provided. Hominy will be holding a craft show downtown during the yard sale tour. Please email for vendor information.
100 Mile Yard Sale Tour and Craft Show
Phone : 918-519-6251 (Always call and confirm events.)
Email Address : Hominyareachamber@gmail.com
Web: ok100mileyardsale.webs.com/
City Wide Garage Sales
Attractions and Upcoming Events
Rexall Drug Store
Constructed in 1907, the building has always served the community as a drug store. Its affiliation with Rexall dates to the 1920s. The second floor was used for many years by various professions including law, dentistry, and photography.
Hominy, OK Historic Buildings"City of Murals"
Artist Cha' Tullis, a Blackfoot Indian, began painting giant murals in Hominy in April 1990. Along with other local artists, 40 and more spectacular murals depict Indian folklore and are a delight to behold, located on various buildings throughout town.
Cha'
Hominy, OK ArtsMKT Railroad Depot and Hospitality Center
The present depot was expanded in 1925 from the original depot built about 1910. Missouri-Kansas-Texas service started in 1904 and continued until 1977. During the oil boom years of the 1920s, nine freight and four passenger grains stopped in Hominy each day.
Hominy, OK Railroad HistoryOutdoor Sculptures
Cha' Tullis also has created several outstanding metal sculptures of Indians high atop Standpipe Hill in Hominy, as well as a handsome buffalo that stands next to the Gazebo on the Green downtown.
These concrete buffalo graze peacefully in a vacant lot along West Main.
Hominy, OK
Arts
Osage Round House
Built in 1919 to replace an earlier roundhouse, it is the only surviving community round house in Osage County. Traditionally the focus for village activities, it has been used for dances, gatherings, and meetings and is a symbol of tribal unity and tradition to the Osage Indians.
Hominy, OK Ethnic Heritage