Carter County Oklahoma has 25 places on the National Register of Historic Places including 2 places of National significance and 2 places of Statewide significance. Significant places include Lake Murray State Park, Lake Murray State Park, Brady Cabin and Dornick Hills Country Club and Ardmore Carnegie Library.
Several famous people are associated with these Carter County historic places including Roy M. Johnson, Galt,Edward, et al., Pearl Sayer and John Ringling.
Some of the country's most noteable architects helped create the Carter County places including Works Progress Administration, Civilian Conservation Corps, Perry Duke Maxwell, James J. Eaves, WPA, White, J.B., and Son, Hugh McIntyre, C.E. Troutman, E. R. McConnell and S. Wemyss Smith. Prominent architectural styles found in Carter Country are Classical Revival, Late 19th And 20th Century Revivals and Bungalow/Craftsman.
Historic Significance:
Event, Architecture/Engineering
Architectural Style:
Other
Area of Significance:
Architecture, Economics, Landscape Architecture
Period of Significance:
1925-1949
Historic Function:
Landscape, Recreation And Culture
Historic Sub-function:
Outdoor Recreation, Park
Current Function:
Landscape, Recreation And Culture
Current Sub-function:
Outdoor Recreation, Park
In 1933, the Dust Bowl choked Oklahoma, turning cotton fields into barren deserts. Farmers lost everything. So Uncle Sam bought up thousands of ruined, eroded acres in Carter County. They wanted a park. To build it, the state brought in the Civilian Conservation Corps and the Works Progress Administration. Desperate young men moved into camps. They earned a dollar a day, sending most of it home to starving families. They cleared scrub oak. With raw muscle and dynamite, they quarried heavy, blue-gray limestone from local ridges. But they had no heavy machinery. They built Tucker Tower, a strange, medieval-style fortress rising sixty-five feet above the water, originally meant as a summer home for the governor.
Actually, Lake Murray is Oklahoma's first and largest state park. That explains the federal listing. The park spans over twelve thousand acres, showcasing some of the most intact New Deal recreational architecture in the country. Those CCC boys did not just throw up a few cheap cabins. They crafted everything. They hand-laid stone bridges, built rustic picnic shelters, and carved out roads designed to melt into the rocky Arbuckle foothills. Look closely. You can still see their chisel marks on the heavy stone tables. Pure sweat. It preserved a slice of 1930s survival, carved directly into the dirt.