Four Counties Corner is a suburban unincorporated community that is centered on the quad-point where four counties meet: Kingfisher, Logan, Oklahoma and Canadian. It is one of only two such county quad-points in the state of Oklahoma, and is also a public school district tri-point, with the districts of Deer Creek, Cashion, and Piedmont all meeting at this same corner.[1]
Four Counties Corner, Oklahoma | |
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Coordinates: 35°43′33.37″N 97°40′26.18″W / 35.7259361°N 97.6739389°W | |
Country | United States |
State | Oklahoma |
County | Oklahoma, Kingfisher, Logan, Canadian |
Elevation | 1,165 ft (355 m) |
Time zone | UTC-6 (Central (CST)) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC-5 (CDT) |
Area code | 405 |
It was previously known as "Lockridge."
History
editThe community was first known as "Lockridge," a small community created after the land run of 1889, the name being derived from the first letters of the four counties that meet at the ridge near the quad-point.[2] At its height (in the first decade of the 1900s) the town had five general stores, a drug store, a hardware store, two saloons, a train depot, two grain elevators, a cotton gin, a creamery, a post office, a service station and garage and a telephone company."[3] and the post office closing in 1928.[4]
The town went into serious decline in 1922 when the St. Louis, El Reno and Western Railway closed its depot in Lockridge, with most of the businesses closing over the next two decades,[3] and the post office closing in 1928.[4]
St. Patrick's Catholic Church (one of the oldest rural Catholic churches in Oklahoma) was open from 1891 to 1959,[5] until 1967 when the building burnt down, but the cemetery remains.[6]
Present
editToday, Four Counties Corner is in the process of transitioning from a rural community to a suburban one, with growing population in the area due to the expansion of the Oklahoma City metropolitan area.
The Four Counties electric substation[7] of Western Farmers Electric Coop (built in 2021) is located one mile west of the quad-point and serves electric customers throughout the four county area.[8]
References
edit- ^ This was confirmed via mapping data available at
- ^ Stewart, George R. (1970). American place-names; a concise and selective dictionary for the continental United States of America. New York: Oxford University Press.
- ^ a b Kuhlman, Judy "Intersection holds memories of passed away town's past" The Oklahoman (June 6, 1999)
- ^ a b "Lockridge, Oklahoma" Rootsweb
- ^ "History of St. Patrick's" OKCemeteries.net
- ^ "St. Patrick's (Lockridge) Cemetery - Oklahoma City, OK - Worldwide Cemeteries on". Waymarking.com. Retrieved May 4, 2022.
- ^ "" Oklahoma Living: Electric Cooperatives of Oklahoma newsletter (2019)
- ^ "More power to the people: Cimarron Electric Cooperative new substation nears completion east of Okarche" The Okarche Warrior (July 14, 2021)