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    Centennial Land Run Monument

    Centennial Land Run Monument

    4.8(27 reviews)
    17.0 miBricktown

    On a quiet weekday morning, the Centennial Land Run Monument feels almost cinematic. All that…read morebronze motion is frozen in a moment of time along the Bricktown Canal. The whole installation commemorates the Land Run of 1889, when settlers surged into the Unassigned Lands to stake homesteads in what would become Oklahoma Territory. The scale of the installation here is enormous, with dozens of figures charging forward. Horses stretched mid-stride, wagons tilting, every dace carved with urgency. One has clearly fallen in their haste. It really does tell the tale. We had the place mostly to ourselves which made it easy to slow and take in the detail. The only interruption was a family who decided the clearly posted "no climbing" sign was more of a suggestion than a rule and that's why we can't have nice things. Grrr! But even that didn't take away from the artistry. Paul Moore spent more than twenty years bringing this to life and the result is one of the largest bronze sculpture installations in the world, honoring the settlers who raced out on April 22, 1889. [Review 426 of 2026 - 174 in Oklahoma - 25609 overall]

    The Centennial Land Run Monument in Oklahoma City is a striking tribute to one of the state's most…read morepivotal historical event, the 1889 Land Run. The Monument consists of 47 bronze statues in total. This includes 38 people, 34 horses, three wagons, a cannon, a dog, and a frightened jackrabbit. They are all bigger than life and has such great detail. I think you could stand there for hours and never see all of the details. It stands at about 100 yards or so and stretches across a small river. Well worth the visit. Best access is then the bass pro parking lot all the way to the back and under the interstate.

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    Centennial Land Run Monument - Centennial Land Run Monument, Oklahoma City

    Centennial Land Run Monument, Oklahoma City

    Centennial Land Run Monument - Centennial Land Run Monument, Oklahoma City

    Centennial Land Run Monument, Oklahoma City

    Centennial Land Run Monument - Centennial Land Run Monument, Oklahoma City

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    Centennial Land Run Monument, Oklahoma City

    Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum - Statue located adjacent to memorial on a church property- a memorial to the OKC bombing.

    Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum

    4.9(492 reviews)
    17.9 miPark Plaza

    don't think I had ever really heard about the Oklahoma City bombing when it happened. I was…read moreprobably still in elementary school at the time. It wasn't until October, when I passed through OKC with German and a friend mentioned the memorial, that I looked it up. This time, passing through again and not in a rush, I decided to visit the memorial on a Sunday. I couldn't find the parking garage mentioned on the website, so I parked across the street in the post office lot since it was Sunday (I don't think this would be okay on weekdays). When I asked a staff member about parking, she said that was fine. The memorial grounds themselves are beautiful and open to the public 24/7 for free. You can walk around the Gate of Time and the Field of Empty Chairs, which was especially moving, though the atmosphere felt quite heavy and chilling. it was decorated with the Christmas wreath, but there's definitely nothing about holidays cheer can be felt here Please note that bags larger than 14 inches are not allowed inside the museum. Museum admission is $18, and you're supposed to get free parking at a nearby garage, though directions weren't very clear. The museum starts on the second floor and tells the story of the 168 people who died in the 1995 bombing. What struck me most was how it emphasized that it was just an ordinary morning--people checking in to work before 9 a.m., unaware of what was about to happen. The museum was a bit crowded when I visited, likely because it was Sunday, and some visitors brought young kids who were running around, which felt a little distracting given the nature of the space. I don't think many people still actively think about this event, but if you ever find yourself in Oklahoma City, I do think it's worth visiting. It's a powerful and sobering experience.

    Whether you were alive or not in 1995, everyone should visit the memorial and museum. The impact it…read moremade on me was sobering and while it was difficult at times, it is important to remember, to honor, to pay our respect to the victims. The memorial is beautiful, the museum is incredibly well done and surrounding grounds are well maintained. I cannot encourage you enough to visit!

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    Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum
    Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum
    Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum - Museum

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    Museum

    David L Boren Boulevard Historical Marker - David L. Boren Boulevard Historical Marker, Norman

    David L Boren Boulevard Historical Marker

    2.0(1 review)
    0.9 mi

    This faded marker is located on the campus of the University of Oklahoma (Go Sooners!) in front of…read morethe National Weather Service building. It was installed by the University and is not part of the Oklahoma Historical Society program. The marker is on two sides. On the front, "This boulevard was named in honor of David L. Boren, the 13th President of the University of Oklahoma by the University of Oklahoma Board of Regents to mark the 10th anniversary of his presidency. Prior to becoming President of the University of Oklahoma, Borne served as Governor of Oklahoma and as a U.S. Senator. He is the first person in state history to have served the state in all three positions. He spent nearly three decades in elective politics, including 8 years in the state legislature. From Oklahoma to Washington, Boren carried a commitment to reform, including campaign finance reform, lobbying reform, open meetings laws, and increased competitive bidding on public projects. When Bored left the U.S. Senate in 1994 to become President of OU, he had an approval rating of 91 percent after being reelected with 83 percent of the vote in 1990, the highest percentage in the nation in a U.S. Senate contest in that election year. Boren grew up in Seminole, Oklahoma where he was a highs school debater. He graduated from Yale University in 1963 in the top 1% of his class and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He was selected as a Rhodes Scholar and earned a master's degree in politics, philosophy and economics from Oxford University, England, in 1965. He received a law degree from the University of Oklahoma College of Law in 1968" On the reverse, "where he received the Bledsoe Prize as the outstanding graduate by a vote of the faculty. At OU, Boren created many new major programs including the establishment of the Honors College, a new freshman writing program, an interdisciplinary religious studies program and new programs in international studies. The number of new facilities built on the campus during the Boren years matched the explosion in new programs. Major new garden areas were also created on OU's campuses under the leadership of First Lady Molly Shi Boren. Boren led the effort to establish the Research Campus and to position the University as a major force for the development of research and intellectual property to transform the state's economy. The first two buildings on the Research Campus were the National Weather Center and the Stephenson Research and Technology Center. In the first 10 years of Boren's presidency, endowed professorships more than quadrupled, the OU donor base grew from from 18,000 to more than 92,000 and over $1 billion in private gifts were received. Above all, the Boren years are marked by President Boren's emphasis on putting students first." Boren was born in Washington DC and graduated from Yale University where he majored in American history. [Review 16212 overall - 53 in Oklahoma - 1718 of 2021.]

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    David L Boren Boulevard Historical Marker - David L. Boren Boulevard Historical Marker, Norman

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    David L. Boren Boulevard Historical Marker, Norman

    James Garner Statue - landmarks - Updated May 2026

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