Hochatown State Park

State park in Oklahoma, United States

34°10′50″N 94°43′50″W / 34.18056°N 94.73056°W / 34.18056; -94.73056Created1966

Hochatown State Park was once an independent Oklahoma state park in far-southeastern Oklahoma, north of the city of Broken Bow. It was combined into Beavers Bend State Park in 2017. It is a popular destination for tourists from Oklahoma and Texas interested in camping or boating on Broken Bow Lake.

Background

Hochatown State Park was named after the small town of Hochatown. Present-day Hochatown is actually the second community in the area to bear the name. The original community was forced to relocate to its current location on U.S. Route 259 when Broken Bow Lake was created through the damming of Mountain Fork River by the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the late 1960s. Remnants of "Old Hochatown" can still be seen today while scuba diving at the bottom of Broken Bow Lake.[1]

This park was originally part of Beavers Bend State Park but was separated as its own park in 1966. In 2017 the Oklahoma Department of Tourism and Recreation combined the parks. This area of the park focuses on meeting the needs of visitors wishing to enjoy Broken Bow Lake. Accommodations inside the park range from the 40-room Lakeview Lodge to campsites in the Stevens Gap, Carson Creek and Cedar Creek areas. Recreation amenities and facilities include a fish cleaning station, group shelters and picnic sites, full and semi-modern RV campsites, primitive sites, comfort stations, sanitary waste stations, lighted boat ramps, swimming beaches, playgrounds, hiking trails. Other lodging choices at Beavers Bend State Park include 47 cabins and two group camps; some of which offer river views.

References

  1. ^ Morris, John Wesley (1978). Ghost Towns of Oklahoma. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0806114200.

External links

  • Beavers Bend & Hochatown State Park
  • Broken Bow Lake
  • Cedar Creek Golf Course at Beavers Bend
  • v
  • t
  • e
Protected areas of Oklahoma
Federal
National Historic Sites
National Forests
National Recreation Areas
USFS National Recreation Areas
National Scenic Areas
National Grasslands
National Memorials
National Wildlife Refuges
State
State Parks
Grand Lake State Park areas
Wildlife Management Areas
Other
  • Arcadia Conservation Education Area
  • Atoka Public Hunting Area
  • Black Mesa Nature Preserve
  • Hugo Lake
Oklahoma Historical Society
Oklahoma Commissioners of the Land Office
Manages land for revenue to fund schools
Local
Former state parks


This article related to a protected area in Oklahoma is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e