In November 1992, the
Okmulgee Downtown Historic District (NRIS number 92001693) was added to the
National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in Okmulgee County. The area is roughly bounded by Fourth Street, Eighth Street, Okmulgee Avenue and the Frisco tracks. In support of Okmulgee's downtown, an organization has been formed called Okmulgee Main Street, one of the various national
Main Street programs that aim to reenergize their respective downtowns and commercial districts through preservation-based economic development and community revitalization. This group is helping to propel the “Okmulgee Rising” movement that started in the city in 2014. The process is aided in part by tax incentives for preserving historic properties. Among the downtown structures is the Orpheum Theater at 210 W 7th St, which opened as the Cook Opera House on August 23, 1920 with 1,200-seat capacity. This is the finest and last surviving of three grand theatres formerly located in Okmulgee. The Orpheum's architecture, which is an elegant derivation of Spanish
Baroque Revival, includes a colorful lobby which is the finest example in Oklahoma of the interior use of polychrome
terra cotta. was built in 1916 and is also NRHP-listed. The
Creeks initially built a two-story log council house to serve as their capital. This building burned in 1878 and was replaced with the stone
Creek Council House building that stands today. Ownership of the building changed over the years, but in November 2010 the City sold the building back to the tribe for $3.2 million. The building currently houses the Creek Council House Museum, with artifacts and exhibits about the history of the
Muscogee tribe and the arts and crafts of other Native American tribes. The building is NRHP-listed. In 2012 the Muscogee (Creek) Nation purchased the Okmulgee Golf Club, also known as the Okmulgee Country Club, at 1400 S. Mission Street, an NRHP-listed location complete with the original 1920 golf course and the 1925 clubhouse built using locally sourced limestone. Historic churches include
First Baptist Central Church, an historically black church built in 1915 and NRHP-listed;
Eastside Baptist Church, built in 1921 and NRHP-listed; and,
St. Anthony's, a
Spanish Colonial Revival-style Catholic church built in 1927 and NRHP-listed. Historic mansions remaining from the boom days include the Okmulgee Elks Lodge at 701 S. Mission, being a 7-acre site that was originally the Wilson Mansion from 1922; the Southern Mansion just off
US-75 on Banyan Road, being the 1928 home for
Creek orphan Katie Fixico; the
Kennedy Mansion from 1904 at 502 S. Okmulgee Avenue, which is NRHP-listed; and, the "Historic Okmulgee Mansion" at 1700 E. 6th Street, now law offices. The
Nuyaka Mission site is located on McKeown Rd. (aka E0945 Rd) just off N 120 Rd (aka N3850 Rd) approximately 15.7 miles west of the intersection of
U.S. Route 75 and
State Highway 56 (aka 6th Street) in Okmulgee, and is NRHP-listed. ==Events==