On State Highway 9 at Garland-Tamaha Road, on the right when traveling west on State Highway 9.
Site of Civil War naval battle. Confederate Indian forces led by Brig. Gen. Stand Watie, forced aground and captured Union Steamboat J.R. Williams with cargo worth $120,000, on June 15, 1864. Southern troops included Choctaws, Chickasaws, Creeks and . . . — — Map (db m64073) HM
On East Main Street (Oklahoma Route 9) east of SE 2nd Street, on the right when traveling east.
Honoring all who served and in everlasting memory of those who made the supreme sacrifice in World War I and in World War II To keep forever living the freedom for which they fought we dedicate this memorial to our war dead of both World Wars . . . — — Map (db m165639) WM
On East Main Street (Oklahoma Route 9) east of SE 2nd Street, on the right when traveling east.
[front side] The signing of the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek on Sept. 27, 1830, was the final negotiation to remove the Choctaws from their ancestral homelands in Mississippi and Alabama to Indian Territory. The trip covered 600 miles. . . . — — Map (db m165637) HM
On State Highway 9 at Tamaha Road, on the right when traveling west on State Highway 9.
One of the earliest port towns and trading centers in Choctaw Nation, I.T. Choctaws brought from Mississippi up Arkansas River to Tamaha on steamboats as early as 1831. Tamaha developed as port and ferry crossing around 1836. Post office built 1884 . . . — — Map (db m76457) HM
On East Main Street (Oklahoma Route 9) just east of SE 2nd Street, on the right when traveling east.
This monument is dedicated to the thousands that lie forgotten in unmarked graves throughout present day Haskell County, Oklahoma, formally Sans Bois County, Choctaw Nation, Indian Territory. From the late 1840’s until the first days of the Civil . . . — — Map (db m165638) HM
On Grant Street west of Main Street, on the right when traveling west.
Memorial to one of the earliest port towns and trading centers in the Choctaw Nation, I.T. Choctaws brought from Mississippi up Arkansas River to Tamaha on steamboats as early as 1831. Tamaha developed as port and ferry crossing around 1836. Post . . . — — Map (db m77875) HM