Mayes County

Mayes County

Mayes County was named for Samuel Houston Mayes, Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation from 1895 to 1899.

Mayes

Mayes County

Battle of Cabin Creek

The first Battle of Cabin Creek was fought July 1 and 2, 1863, where Cabin Creek crossed the old Fort Gibson Military Road. The second battle occur...

Mayes

Mayes County

Battle of Locust Grove

Federal troops suddenly attacked a Confederate camp along the ridge near here are dawn, July 2, 1862. The surprised Confederates hardly returned ...

Mayes

Mayes County

Cabin Creek Battlefield

Emplacements can still be seen where cannons were set to defend the crossing of Cabin Creek. There are many unmarked graves of soldiers who died wh...

Mayes

Mayes County

Cabin Creek Battlefield

On Sept. 18, 1864, a Confederate force of 2,000, mainly Gen. Stand Watie's Indian Brigade, intercepted a Union supply train enroute from Kansas to ...

Mayes

Mayes County

Chouteau's Post

Oldest permanent American settlement in state. Grew out of Chaouteau's furn trade at St. Louis, with Osages after they settled in this region in 18...

Mayes

Mayes County

J. B. Milam Memorial Marker

J. BARTLEY MILAM, Principal Chief of the Cherokees. The Cherokee government had been dismantled in 1907 when Oklahoma became a state. In 1941, ...

Mayes

Mayes County

Jean Pierre Chouteau Bridge

The Chouteau family had extensive holdings which included salt works and trading posts. Jean Pierre and his brother, Auguste, from a base in St. Lo...

Mayes

Mayes County

Paradise Tree

Paradise Tree Paradise Tree The first tree planted in the state of Oklahoma was the Paradise Tree. It was brought over from France by A. P. Cho...

Mayes

Mayes County

Union Mission

Union Mission was the site of the first school to be established in what would become the state of Oklahoma. It was also the location of the first ...


  1. County information from Wikipedia.
  2. Population from U.S. Census Bureau, 2020.