Oklahoma Miscellaneous
Data Alabaster Caverns State Park, located in Woodward County
six miles south of Freedom near State Highway 50, encompasses one of the world's
largest gypsum caves open to the public. An inland sea covered the area over two
hundred million years ago during the Permian Age. The water evaporated and left
large deposits of gypsum and other minerals. An upheaval of the earth raised the
gypsum bed close to the surface, and over time, water streams tunneled caverns
through the formation. The caverns contain an abundance of crystals of selenite
and white and pink gypsum as well as deposits of rare black alabaster. The main
cavern is three-fourths of a mile long, with a maximum height of fifty feet and
width of sixty feet. It branches into numerous caves with uniquely named boulder
formations, such as "Ship's Prow," and into chambers called "Devil's Kitchen" or
"Crystal Vault." The cavern temperature ranges from 52° F to 58° year round.
No official record of first discovery has surfaced to
date; however, the caverns once served as safe haven for outlaws. Evidence
suggests that the first known exploration of the caves occurred in 1898. Hugh
Litton homesteaded the area during the Cherokee Outlet Run of 1893. In the 1920s
and 1930s various individuals leased the land comprising Alabaster Caverns and
allowed limited touring of the locally known "Bat Caves" for a nominal fee.
Public tours of the cavern increased with the 1939 purchase and renovation of
the caverns by Englishman Charles Grass. Grass preferred to call the natural
wonder "Alabaster Caverns." Due to Grass's failing
health, in late 1952 five businessmen from Freedom and members of the Waynoka
Railroad Labor League spearheaded a movement for the State of Oklahoma to
purchase the cavern land. Oklahoma purchased the two hundred acres from Grass on
September 1, 1953, for thirty-four thousand dollars, at which time the caverns
came under the jurisdiction of the Oklahoma Planning and Resources Board. After
additions to the property, the state reclassified the area as a state park in
1956. It served as a nuclear fallout shelter in the mid-1950s. The cavern also provides shelter to five species of bats. With the
bat population fluctuating up to ten thousand, tourists can encounter the cave
myotis, western big-eared bat, eastern pipistrelle, western big brown bat, and
Mexican free-tailed bat throughout the year. The park lies inside Cedar Canyon
and provides facilities for picnicking, riding, hiking, and, with proper
equipment, "wildcaving" of the five undeveloped caves in the park. Alabaster
Caverns has developed into one of Oklahoma's most popular tourist stops with
over forty thousand visitors per year.
Woodward County
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