Oklahoma holds 145 documented abandoned places on the Urbex Maps atlas -- a count shaped by the state's layered history: the toxic legacy of the Tri-State Mining District, the oil boom-and-bust cycles of Tulsa and the Oklahoma plains, Native American territory displacement and the federal land runs that created and destroyed communities, institutional campuses from the Progressive Era, and the agricultural ghost towns that emptied as the rural economy collapsed through the Dust Bowl and beyond. Oklahoma's abandonment landscape spans from one of the most toxic Superfund ghost towns in the United States to Art Deco downtown buildings that once made Tulsa the "Oil Capital of the World."
Oklahoma's most significant abandoned places include Picher -- the most toxic ghost town in America, a Tar Creek Superfund site so contaminated that the entire population was bought out and relocated -- the Tulsa Club Building as the centerpiece of Tulsa's declining Art Deco core, the Central State Hospital complex in Norman representing Oklahoma's psychiatric institutional legacy, Fort Supply as one of the best-preserved frontier military forts in the southern plains, and scattered ghost towns and rural ruins across the state's 77 counties.
This guide covers 10 of the most significant abandoned places in Oklahoma, with free GPS coordinates on the Urbex Maps interactive atlas, verified YouTube embeds, and factual historical context.
Free urbex GPS: how Urbex Maps works
Every spot in this guide has a free GPS pin on the Urbex Maps interactive atlas. No account required -- just coordinates with satellite imagery and access notes. The full Oklahoma database has 145 documented locations, covering toxic ghost towns, Art Deco commercial buildings, frontier military forts, state hospitals, and rural ghost towns.
What are the best abandoned places in Oklahoma? The toxic ghost town of Picher in Ottawa County, one of the most contaminated places in the United States, the Art Deco Tulsa Club Building from the oil boom era, and the sprawling Central State Hospital (Griffin Memorial) campus in Norman are the three most notable abandoned places in Oklahoma. All three have free GPS coordinates on the Urbex Maps atlas.
| # | Site | Type | Abandoned Since | Location |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Picher Ghost Town | Mining ghost town | 2009 | Ottawa County |
| 2 | Tulsa Club Building | Commercial / social club | 1998 | Tulsa |
| 3 | Central State Hospital | Psychiatric hospital | 2020 | Norman |
| 4 | Fort Supply Historic Site | Military fort | 1894 | Woodward County |
| 5 | Page Belcher Federal Building | Government office | 2014 | Tulsa |
| 6 | Boggy Depot Ghost Town | Ghost town | 1870s | Atoka County |
| 7 | Tri-State Spook Light Road | Rural road / legend | N/A | Ottawa County |
| 8 | Oklahoma Centennial Botanical Garden | Unbuilt site | N/A | Oklahoma City |
| 9 | Spartan Aircraft Factory | Aircraft factory | 1960s | Tulsa |
| 10 | Spavinaw Hills Ghost Town | Ghost town | 1920s | Mayes County |
1. Picher Ghost Town, Ottawa County
Picher in Ottawa County is the most contaminated ghost town in the United States -- a former lead and zinc mining community whose entire population was bought out and relocated by the federal government between 2006 and 2009 after decades of Superfund designation, chat pile contamination, and the Tar Creek toxic watershed that poisoned groundwater across the Tri-State Mining District of Oklahoma, Kansas, and Missouri. The Tar Creek Superfund site is one of the most severe heavy metal contamination zones in American history, with lead and zinc tailings from nearly a century of mining having saturated the soil, water, and the bodies of children who grew up playing on the chat piles.
Picher was established in 1913 when the Tri-State Mining District became one of the most productive lead and zinc mining regions in the world. At its peak in the 1920s, the district supplied 50% of the lead and zinc used in World War I munitions. Picher itself had a population of over 14,000 people with a fully developed Main Street, schools, and churches.
The mining ended, the companies left, and the contamination remained. The chat piles -- enormous gray mountains of toxic mining waste -- dominated the landscape. By the 1990s, blood lead levels in Picher children were so elevated that federal authorities declared the town officially uninhabitable. The 2008 EF4 tornado killed six residents and destroyed much of the already-emptying town. The federal buyout completed in 2009. The city was officially dissolved.
Sources: [Wikipedia - Picher, Oklahoma](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Picher,_Oklahoma), [EPA Tar Creek Superfund](https://www.epa.gov/superfund)
2. Tulsa Club Building, Tulsa
The Tulsa Club Building at 6th and Cincinnati in downtown Tulsa is one of the most architecturally significant examples of Art Deco commercial architecture in Oklahoma -- a 15-story tower completed in 1927 at the absolute peak of Tulsa's oil-money prosperity, when the city styled itself the "Oil Capital of the World." The Tulsa Club was the premier private club for Tulsa's oil industry elite, its dining rooms and event spaces the setting for the deals and social rituals of the men who controlled the mid-continent oil fields.
The building's Art Deco facade -- terracotta cladding, geometric ornament, the characteristic vertical massing of the style -- represented the architectural confidence of 1920s Tulsa oil money. The Tulsa Club declined with the oil industry's consolidation and suburbanization of Tulsa's business community. Various redevelopment proposals have circulated over the years, with the building's Art Deco character making it a candidate for hotel or mixed-use conversion, but as of 2026 the structure remains in a state of managed decline.
Sources: [Wikipedia - Tulsa Club Building](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tulsa_Club_Building)
3. Central State Hospital (Griffin Memorial), Norman
Central State Hospital -- now Griffin Memorial Hospital -- in Norman is Oklahoma's oldest psychiatric institution, established in 1895 as the Oklahoma Hospital for the Insane just six years before Oklahoma Territory achieved statehood. The original campus followed the Kirkbride plan of therapeutic asylum design: a central administrative block with flanking patient wings, set on agricultural land that patients farmed as part of their treatment.
The campus grew through the early 20th century as Oklahoma's population expanded. The older portions -- the Victorian-era buildings from the territorial and early statehood period -- are in various states of vacancy alongside the active Griffin Memorial psychiatric facility in newer buildings. The contrast between active mental health care and abandoned 19th-century asylum architecture makes the Norman campus one of the more complex institutional sites in Oklahoma.
Sources: [Wikipedia - Griffin Memorial Hospital](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Griffin_Memorial_Hospital)
4. Fort Supply Historic Site, Woodward County
Fort Supply in Woodward County is one of the best-preserved frontier military posts in the southern Great Plains -- an Army supply depot established in November 1868 as the forward base for General George Armstrong Custer's winter campaign against the Southern Cheyenne and Arapaho peoples. Fort Supply was built in just weeks before Custer's 7th Cavalry launched the Battle of Washita on November 27, 1868 -- the surprise dawn attack on Black Kettle's Cheyenne village that remains one of the most controversial events of the Plains Indian Wars.
The log blockhouse that survives is one of the few intact examples of frontier log military construction from the 1860s southern plains campaigns. Fort Supply served as a permanent military post from 1868 to 1894, after which the site became the Fort Supply State Hospital in 1908. The Fort Supply Historic Site now preserves several original 1868 military structures.
Sources: [Wikipedia - Fort Supply, Oklahoma](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Supply,_Oklahoma)
5. Page Belcher Federal Building, Tulsa
The Page Belcher Federal Building in downtown Tulsa is the primary federal courthouse for the Northern District of Oklahoma -- a mid-century Modern structure completed in 1967 that represents the federal government's postwar investment in Tulsa's downtown. The building sits in a landscape of decline: surrounding blocks that were once prime commercial real estate are now surface parking lots, and the federal building anchors a downtown that has struggled with disinvestment since the 1980s.
The adjacent blocks reflect Tulsa's struggle with downtown hollowing: the demolition of historic Art Deco buildings, vacant properties, and the long shadow of the Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921 that destroyed the Greenwood District ("Black Wall Street") just north of downtown -- patterns of disinvestment whose consequences are still visible in the urban landscape.
Sources: [Wikipedia - Page Belcher Federal Building](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Page_Belcher_Federal_Building)
6. Boggy Depot State Park Ghost Town, Atoka County
Boggy Depot in Atoka County was one of the most important communities in the Choctaw Nation of Indian Territory -- a trading post on Clear Boggy Creek established in the 1830s after the forced relocation of the Choctaw from Mississippi. By the 1850s it was the largest community in the territory. Boggy Depot served as a Confederate supply depot during the Civil War; the Choctaw Nation had allied with the Confederacy.
The Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad bypassed Boggy Depot in 1872, routing through what became Atoka instead. The community died almost immediately -- within a decade the former largest town in the Choctaw Nation was empty. Boggy Depot State Park now preserves the site of the former town, with interpretive markers and the cemetery as the primary surviving physical evidence.
Sources: [Wikipedia - Boggy Depot](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boggy_Depot), [Oklahoma State Parks](https://www.travelok.com/state-parks)
7. Tri-State Spook Light Road, Ottawa County
The Tri-State Spook Light -- also called the Hornet Spook Light or the Devil's Jack-O-Lantern -- is one of the most persistently documented unexplained light phenomena in the American Midwest: a luminous orange sphere reported on a gravel road on the Oklahoma-Missouri border since at least the 1880s, appearing at distances ranging from a few feet to a mile, bobbing, splitting, and changing color before disappearing.
The Spook Light road is located in the same Ottawa County landscape as the Picher toxic ghost town -- just miles to the west. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers investigated the phenomenon in 1946 and was unable to provide a definitive explanation. Proposed explanations include swamp gas, car headlight refraction (though documented reports predate automobiles), and electromagnetic effects from the underlying geology.
Sources: [Wikipedia - Hornet Spook Light](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hornet_Spook_Light)
8. Oklahoma Centennial Botanical Garden Site, Oklahoma City
The Oklahoma Centennial Botanical Garden was conceived as the flagship project for Oklahoma's 100th anniversary of statehood in 2007 -- a botanical garden and riverfront park on the Oklahoma River in Oklahoma City. The project was planned with glass conservatories, themed garden sections, and a waterfront promenade. Funding shortfalls and political complications prevented completion.
The site has remained in a state of incomplete development, reflecting the broader pattern of ambitious civic projects that Oklahoma City has pursued with varying success. The successful MAPS program transformed the downtown core; the botanical garden represents the category of civic ambition that outran available resources. The site remains a subject of periodic discussion in Oklahoma City planning circles.
Sources: [Oklahoma City Parks and Recreation](https://www.okc.gov/departments/parks-recreation)
9. Spartan Aircraft Factory, Tulsa
The Spartan Aircraft Company in Tulsa is one of the most historically significant aviation industry sites in the southern United States -- a civilian aviation manufacturer founded in 1928 that became one of the most important military pilot training programs of World War II. The Spartan School of Aeronautics trained over 10,000 military pilots between 1939 and 1945 under contracts with both the U.S. Army Air Corps and the British Royal Air Force.
Spartan was founded by William Skelly, an Oklahoma oil magnate. The Spartan Executive -- a sleek, all-metal monoplane produced in the late 1930s -- was one of the most elegant private aircraft of the prewar era. The factory complex includes industrial buildings from multiple construction phases. The company continued operations after the war but never returned to its wartime scale; the factory has been in various states of partial use and vacancy for decades.
Sources: [Wikipedia - Spartan Aircraft Company](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spartan_Aircraft_Company)
10. Spavinaw Hills Ghost Town, Mayes County
The Spavinaw Hills area in Mayes County represents the broader pattern of rural Cherokee Nation community decline in northeastern Oklahoma -- the hollowing out of small farming and ranching communities as the agricultural economy consolidated, young people moved to Tulsa and other cities, and the infrastructure of rural life was abandoned. The area was settled primarily by Cherokee Nation citizens after the Civil War, with small farming communities establishing themselves in the hills and creek valleys of this former Indian Territory.
The ghost towns of the Spavinaw Hills area are among the most completely vanished of Oklahoma's agricultural communities -- foundations in fields, cemetery plots, the occasional limestone block structure, and the characteristic depressions of old root cellars in overgrown house lots. Their historical significance lies in their documentation of the Cherokee Nation's post-Removal agricultural society, built and then abandoned over less than a century.
Sources: [Oklahoma Historical Society - Spavinaw](https://www.okhistory.org)
FAQ: Frequently Asked Questions about Abandoned Places in Oklahoma
How many abandoned places are there in Oklahoma?
The Urbex Maps database currently lists 145 documented abandoned locations in Oklahoma, reflecting the toxic legacy of lead and zinc mining in the Tri-State district, the oil boom-and-bust cycles, the deinstitutionalization of large state psychiatric campuses, and the agricultural ghost towns across Oklahoma's 77 counties.
Is urban exploration legal in Oklahoma?
Criminal trespass in Oklahoma is addressed under Oklahoma Statutes Title 21, Section 1835. Many significant sites are on state or federal land: Fort Supply Historic Site is a state historic site with public access, Boggy Depot State Park is a public park, and Picher's structures fall within the EPA Superfund area. The toxic contamination at Picher creates additional health risks beyond ordinary trespass law.
Is Picher Oklahoma still standing?
Some structures in Picher remain standing as of 2026. The town was officially dissolved and its municipal charter revoked, but physical remnants persist. The toxic contamination from lead and zinc mine tailings makes any extended time on the site a significant health risk.
What is the Tri-State Spook Light?
The Spook Light Road (E 50 Road in Ottawa County, Missouri, just across the Oklahoma state line) is a public road. Visitors park along the road after dark and observe the western horizon for the phenomenon. The road passes through private agricultural land; visitors should remain on the road surface.
Why was Picher so toxic?
Picher was mined for lead and zinc from 1913 to 1970 using underground shaft mining. Processing created enormous chat mountains -- finely ground waste rock containing lead, cadmium, and zinc -- surrounding the town. Rain washed contaminants into groundwater and into Tar Creek. The soil beneath the town was riddled with mine tunnels creating subsidence risks in addition to chemical contamination.
Can you still visit Picher Oklahoma?
Picher was officially dissolved as a municipality in 2009 after the federal government offered buyouts to all remaining residents due to catastrophic lead and zinc contamination from decades of mining. Most structures have been demolished, but some foundations, roads, and the enormous chat piles (mountains of mining waste) remain visible. The area is within the Tar Creek Superfund site and is not formally closed to visitors, but the environmental hazards are real: lead-contaminated soil and unstable underground mine voids make the ground itself dangerous.
What is the Tri-State Spook Light near the Oklahoma border?
The Tri-State Spook Light (also called the Joplin Spook Light or Hornet Spook Light) is an unexplained luminous phenomenon reported along a rural gravel road near the Oklahoma-Missouri-Kansas border since at least the 1800s. Witnesses describe a floating orange or yellow light that appears at the western end of the road after dark. Explanations range from atmospheric refraction of distant headlights to swamp gas. The road (East 50 Road / Devil's Promenade) is public and accessible at night. There is no fee and no infrastructure.
Are any of the Art Deco buildings in downtown Tulsa open for tours?
Several of Tulsa's Art Deco buildings are active commercial properties and can be viewed from the street. The Tulsa Club Building on this list was vacant for years but has undergone renovation into a hotel (The Tulsa Club Hotel). The Philtower, the Boston Avenue Methodist Church, and the Philcade Building are other notable Art Deco landmarks that can be visited. The Tulsa Art Deco Museum (inside the Philcade) offers exhibits and walking tour information about Tulsa's oil-era architectural heritage.
What is Boggy Depot and why did it become a ghost town?
Boggy Depot was a major Choctaw Nation settlement and trading post in what is now Atoka County, southeastern Oklahoma. The town thrived in the 1840s through 1860s as a stop on the Butterfield Overland Mail route and a commercial center for the Choctaw Nation. When the Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad bypassed the town in the 1870s, residents and businesses relocated to the new rail stops. The town emptied within a decade. Today, Boggy Depot State Park preserves the cemetery and a few remnants of the original settlement.
How toxic is the ground in Picher compared to other Superfund sites?
The Tar Creek Superfund site, which includes Picher and surrounding communities, is ranked among the most contaminated sites in the Environmental Protection Agency's National Priorities List. Decades of lead and zinc mining left behind an estimated 75 million tons of chat (crushed mining waste) contaminated with lead, zinc, cadmium, and other heavy metals. Children in Picher tested with blood lead levels far above the CDC threshold for concern. The underground mine workings have caused sinkholes and ground subsidence that made the entire townsite structurally unstable.
Conclusion: Oklahoma, where toxic legacy and oil wealth abandonment tell their story across 77 counties
Oklahoma's abandoned places span one of the most dramatic ranges in the American interior: from the most toxic ghost town in the United States to Art Deco towers of the oil boom era, from frontier military posts to Cherokee Nation agricultural communities. With 145 locations on the Urbex Maps atlas, Oklahoma rewards careful attention to the layers of its history.
Explore more abandoned places in the United States
- ●Abandoned Places in Texas: 10 Iconic Urbex Spots
- ●Abandoned Places in Arkansas: 10 Iconic Urbex Spots
- ●Abandoned Places in Missouri: 10 Iconic Urbex Spots
- ●Picher Oklahoma: Tar Creek Toxic Ghost Town
- ●Ghost Towns USA: 20 Iconic Places Where Time Stopped
- ●Abandoned Places in the USA: 50 States, 50 Iconic Urbex Spots
Explore More Abandoned Places Nearby
Looking for more abandoned locations? Check out these neighboring states:
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- ●Abandoned Places in Colorado
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Or explore our complete guide: Abandoned Places USA: 50 Iconic Spots, One Per State.
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