Performing Arts and Music (2010) Stillwater is known as the home of
Red Dirt music, a mixture of country, folk, blues, and rock. Notable Red Dirt artists from Stillwater include
Cross Canadian Ragweed,
Jason Boland & The Stragglers, the Red Dirt Rangers,
The Great Divide,
No Justice, Jenny Labow, the Jason Savory Band, and the father of Red Dirt,
Bob Childers.
Garth Brooks,
Other Lives, and The
All-American Rejects launched their careers playing the local bars like Willie's Saloon and
Eskimo Joe's. Tumbleweed Dance Hall, home of the world-famous annual Calf Fry Festival, was nominated for "Dancehall of the Year" award by the
Academy of Country Music. the Town and Gown Community Theater. OSU's Allied Arts holds performances in the Seretean Center and the Jerry L. Davis Studio Theatre on the
OSU-Stillwater campus. The McKnight Center, a new state-of-the-art performing arts center on campus, opened in 2019. Stillwater is served by several voluntary organizations dedicated to providing entertainment and cultural experiences: the Stillwater Community Singers, the Stillwater Community Band and Stillwater Jazz.
Annual festivals and events Stillwater is home to a number of annual festivals and community events held throughout the year. Residents also benefit from the many events and activities hosted by Oklahoma State University. Since 1920, Oklahoma State University has welcomed alumni to "America’s Greatest Homecoming Celebration." Each year, more than 70,000 alumni and friends return to campus for "Walkaround" and the Homecoming Parade. Spring kicks off with the Stillwater Public Education Foundation's
A Taste of Stillwater, a fundraiser held every March. Other events include the Tumbleweed Calf Fry, the Stillwater Home Builders Association's Home and Garden Show, the Remember the 10 Run, and the OSU Jazz Festival. The Stillwater Arts Festival is now in its third decade. The festival is a two-day, juried art show held in April that features live entertainment, artist demonstrations, and children's activities. Since 2012, Stillwater has hosted the annual Land Run 100, a 100-mile (161 km) bicycling endurance race around north-central Oklahoma. The Oklahoma Special Olympics’ Annual Summer Games take place every May. It is the largest amateur sporting event in Oklahoma and the largest Special Olympics event in the United States. Since 2011, Stillwater has hosted the annual Bob Childers' Gypsy Cafe, a
Red Dirt music festival. Benefits from the event go to the Red Dirt Relief Fund, which supports Oklahoma musicians in crisis. In the summer, there is the Krazy Daze Shopping Extravaganza and the Payne County Fair. On Independence Day, Stillwater hosts the annual Boomer Blast, a fireworks show at Boomer Lake Park. The fall season begins Collegefest, OSU Student Government Association's Lights on Stillwater (a trade-show style event where students learn about local organizations, shops, restaurants, and services), and the Downtown Stillwater Car Show. The annual Downtown Stillwater Halloween Festival is held the Tuesday before Halloween and includes a costume contest. For more than twenty years, the Eskimo Joe's Juke Joint Jog 5K and Fun Run (one-mile race) has been held in the fall to benefit the Stillwater Area United Way. The annual Red Dirt Film Festival is held every March. The independent film festival features screenings, panels, and workshops on the OSU campus. Winter is celebrated with the Downtown Parade of Lights and the Madrigal Dinner Concert on the OSU campus.
Points of interest The Sheerar Museum of Stillwater History is dedicated to collecting, preserving, and interpreting the history of Stillwater. The museum features exhibits on Stillwater and Payne County, including the first land run that opened
Oklahoma Territory for settlement in 1889. The museum also offers a variety of temporary exhibits and programs. The
National Wrestling Hall of Fame and Museum is also located in Stillwater. It is dedicated to preserving the heritage of the sport, celebrating achievements, and encouraging young athletes. The Washington Irving Trail and Museum, located in a rural setting, celebrates the heritage of
Payne County. It is named for American writer
Washington Irving who used to camp in the area. The museum features items from the famous
Oklahoma boomer,
David L. Payne. In October 2013, Oklahoma State University opened the OSU Museum of Art in the renovated Postal Plaza, a former WPA-built Federal Post Office in Downtown Stillwater. The university began collecting art in the 1930s, an endeavor initiated by the former head of the OSU Art Department, Doel Reed. The university also operates the Gardiner Art Gallery on campus in the Bartlett Center for the Visual Arts, home of the OSU Art Department. Exhibits in the gallery, which are open to the public, vary from student and faculty exhibits to national shows.
The Botanic Garden at Oklahoma State University covers more than with thousands of species of flowers, shrubs, grasses, and trees. It features specialized gardens like butterfly and organic gardens, turf and nursery research centers, and a Centennial Grove. It also has a studio garden where
OETA's show
Oklahoma Gardening is filmed. The facility also has an authentic Japanese Tea Ceremony Garden. The David L. Payne Memorial Monument, located in Boomer Lake Park, honors
Oklahoma boomer,
David L. Payne. In 1995, his body was exhumed and moved from Wellington, Kansas, to this site.
Payne County, Oklahoma, is named for him. The International Friendship Garden is located at the City of Stillwater Community Center and was built in 1997 by the Kameoka Landscape Gardeners Association to celebrate the tenth anniversary of the sister city relationship between Stillwater and
Kameoka, Japan. The gardeners shipped 22 tons of materials, tools, and supplies to Stillwater from Japan. Over a two-week period, they constructed a traditional Japanese garden. They also built a small tea garden at OSU's Oklahoma Botanical Garden and Arboretum. The International Friendship Garden was dedicated on Sunday, July 26, 1998, with a delegation from Kameoka in attendance. The Stillwater Public Library dedicated a bronze statue of Oklahoma historian and author
Angie Debo on November 18, 2010. Created by local artist Phyllis Mantik, the statue depicts a young Debo sitting on a rock with several books by her side. Mantik chose to depict the historian as a young woman to illustrate that, at an early age, she chose the life of a scholar. To highlight Debo's importance to Oklahoma's Native American community, the base of the statue is surrounded by the seals of Oklahoma's 38 federally recognized Native American tribes. The first
Sonic Drive-In location was opened in Stillwater in 1959 by
Troy Smith of the
Shawnee, Oklahoma-based Top Hat Drive-In. The restaurant, now remodeled, is at 215 N Main St, and features the original sign as well as a statue of the first franchise manager, Gene Longworth. ''
Payne County's Grandest Elm Tree'' is located in Stillwater. It has gained large attention from bystanders and neighbors of the attraction. The Stillwater Farmers' Market operates April through October on Wednesdays and Saturdays. The following Stillwater sites are listed on the
National Register of Historic Places: •
James E. Berry House (502 S. Duck St.) •
Campus Fire Station (600 W. University Ave.) •
Citizens Bank Building (107 E. 9th Ave.) •
Cottonwood Community Center (N.W. of Stillwater) •
William Frick House (1016 S. West St.) •
Hoke Building (121 W. 7th Ave.) •
Josephine Reifsnyder Lustron House (2119 Sherwood) •
Magruder Plots (Oklahoma State University-Stillwater) • Murphy House (419 S. Monroe St.) •
Oklahoma A & M College Agronomy Barn and Seed House (2902 W. 6th St. Building #610) •
Old Central (Oklahoma State University-Stillwater) •
Payne County Courthouse (606 S. Husband St.) •
Pleasant Valley School (1901 S. Sangre Rd.) •
Selph Building (119 W. 7th Ave.) •
Santa Fe Depot (400 E. 10th Ave.) •
Walker Building (117 W. 7th Ave.) ==Media==