Wildman Oklahoma Ghost Town

Gypsy Heart

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Nov 29, 2005
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The Ghost Town of Wildman, Oklahoma was located in Kiowa County about fifteen and one half miles south and seven miles east of present day Hobart. The town’s Post Office was only in business from May 1901 to November 1904.

The town got its name from the type of people that liked to come there. The town was described as “a wild west, hard shooting, tough mining town made up of grizzled miners and unscrupulous gamblers with a liberal seasoning of bandits”. Sounds like my kind of place, when I was twenty-five years old! It was said that the first “diggings developed in Wildman was the graveyard”.

Wildman was started when the federal government opened the Wichita Mountains area to miners in the fall of 1900. The town at one time had two grocery stores, two hotels, a general store, an assayer’s office, a restaurant, a drug store and a hardware store. Of course there were more saloons and places to gamble than anything else in the town. The town also had it’s own newspaper for a while. It was called the Otter Creek Miner.

Today, nothing is left of the old town except for possibly an old foundation or two and the cyanide ore mill. The buildings were all removed so that the land could be used for agriculture.

Since Wildman was a mining town there were several tunnels and mining shafts dug into the granite hills in the area, especially around Nest Egg Mountain. One of the more widely known mines was the Gold Bells Mine. I believe the location of this mine can still be seen today. The newspapers of the day reported that gold, silver, lead, copper and platinum had been found and some of what was found assayed in the thousands of dollars per ton. Even though there were some high assayer’s reports it doesn’t appear that there was that much gold taken out of the area. Even if there wasn’t that much found, at today’s prices any gold would be worth finding.

If you are in this area looking around you might want to look for what was said to be a very rich mine that was supposed to have been worked for years by the Spanish. That is until the Indians decided they had had enough of the Spaniards and let them know their feelings by attacking the miners. This mine is supposed to be located on the west side of Otter Creek less than half a mile from the south side of the mountains.

This mine was supposed to have been marked by a series of oak trees that had the limbs cut off of one side. The sides without the limbs are supposed to be in the direction the mine is located. By now, these trees may be long gone but it would be my opinion the Spanish would have also used some other types of markers in the area, markers made of stone that might still be around.
http://okietreasurehunter.blogspot.com/2008/04/wildman-oklahoma-ghost-town.html
If you are a history enthusiast you could even try looking for some of the old miner claim markers from the 1900’s. Some of these can be pretty interesting since they might still have the handwritten claim in them.
 

RGINN

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Oct 16, 2007
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I thought Wildman was named for Frank Wildman. However, it was founded more or less by E. A. Williams, an old time surveryor and prospector. If you find anything on this guy please share it. He claimed to have found various gold deposits in western Oklahoma and also reported finding 'Cascorillo', which he claimed to be an old Spanish mining village located on Turkey Creek south of Canute. There's not much in Oklahoma history about this. I've been out there, and suspect what he found was the remains of a Washita Valley Culture village. Archaeologists could tell us more if they found the spot. Thanks for all the info you post; I enjoy it.
 

RGINN

Gold Member
Oct 16, 2007
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Summit County, CO
🏆 Honorable Mentions:
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Detector(s) used
White's DFX, White's Classic 1 Coinmaster, Nokta Pointer
Primary Interest:
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I apologize for my previous post as I did not mean to say Washita. I meant to say wash it ah. That deletion was ignorant, but I understand the reasoning behind it. And Gypsy Witch, keep doing research and posting, as you're inspiring a few folks to get out and discover Oklahoma first hand. Thanks.
 

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