All vital records in Oklahoma can be accessed by writing to the Oklahoma Vital Records Service below.
Vital Records Service
Oklahoma State Dept of Health
1000 Northeast Tenth, Room 117
Oklahoma City, OK 73117
Ph: (405) 271-4040
The center has records from 1908.
It costs from $15 to obtain Oklahoma vital records.
A Personal check or money order will need to be made payable to Vital Records Service. Phone (405) 271-4040 to verify the current fees, this will be a recorded message on how to apply. More information is also available from the center for health statistics website.
You may also be able to access some Oklahoma vital records at any of the county vital records offices below. However not all offices keep records, so you may have to write to the address above.
Adair
Alfalfa
Atoka
Beaver
Beckham
Blaine
Bryan
Caddo
Canadian
Carter
Cherokee
Choctaw
Cimarron
Cleveland
Coal
Comanche
Cotton
Craig
Creek
Custer
Delaware
Dewey
Ellis
Garfield
Garvin
Grady
Grant
Greer
Harmon
Harper
Haskell
Hughes
Jackson
Jefferson
Johnston
Kay
Kingfisher
Kiowa
Latimer
LeFlore
Lincoln
Logan
Love
Major
Marshall
Mayes
McClain
McCurtain
McIntosh
Murray
Muskogee
Noble
Nowata
Okfuskee
Oklahoma
Okmulgee
Osage
Ottawa
Pawnee
Payne
Pittsburg
Pontotoc
Pottawatomie
Pushmataha
Roger Mills
Rogers
Seminole
Sequoyah
Stephens
Texas
Tillman
Tulsa
Wagoner
Washington
Washita
Woods
Woodward
Oklahoma Court Records
You can search through Oklahoma court records and criminal records at any county court house. Click the link for more detailed instructions and directions.
Oklahoma has one of the most geographically diverse lands in the nation. Four mountain ranges are spread throughout the land and high plains are common in the northeast. Prairie and woodlands are predominant in the central part of the state and over 500 creek and rivers flow throughout all of the land. North-central Oklahoma is home to the world's largest area of protected tallgrass prairie.
Historically, Oklahomans have had enormous luck with their economy, but also enormous tragedy. For much of the 20th century, Oklahoma was well known for being the Oil Capital of the World, due to the amount of oil pools that were being discovered. This state became an important focal point for oil industries, and in turn helped Oklahoma's economy thrive, with towns' populations and wealth increasing. However, it was not long after that Oklahoma experienced one of the worst ecological disasters in its history. The Dust Bowl, also nicknamed the 'Dirty Thirties' was a period in the 1930's in which severe dust storms, caused by ongoing draught and human error, caused major agricultural damage to the Oklahoma area, which forced many residents out of their homeland.
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