Ep 174 Keystone Lake
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Ep 174: Keystone Lake — The Towns Beneath the Waves
What if the place you called home was chosen to be wiped off the map?
In Episode 174, Tiff dives deep into the murky waters of Keystone Lake, Oklahoma’s second-largest reservoir, to uncover a rich history of American exploration, Native American heritage, and 20th-century engineering that forever rewrote the local geography. Before it was a massive 23,000-acre playground for boaters, this rugged valley was known as the "Triangle Country"—a wilderness walked by the likes of Washington Irving and Thomas Nuttall.
But in the late 1950s, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers arrived with a $123 million plan to tame the Arkansas and Cimarron rivers. The cost of progress? The total submersion of entire communities.
We explore the fascinating and heartbreaking stories of Oklahoma's "drowned towns":
Keystone: The bustling railroad hub built at the "key" river confluence, now sitting completely underwater just north of the dam.
Mannford & Prue: Two communities that refused to die, banding together to meticulously rebuild entirely new towns on higher ground.
Appalachia: A settlement completely wiped off the map, leaving only the sandy shores of Appalachia Bay as its monument.
Cleveland: The Land Run town saved by an existential engineering marvel—a massive levee system that keeps the lake at bay just feet from residents' doorsteps.
Finally, Tiff looks into the "Kooky and Spooky" side of Keystone Lake. From divers reporting unsettling, shadowy shapes navigating the underwater ruins, to local legends of a witch's smoldering chimney and the phantom cries of a baby near the old bridges—this episode balances heavy history with local folklore. Plus, Tiff wraps up with a look at other Oklahoma lakes sitting atop ghost towns and how historic droughts are bringing these lost main streets back to the surface.
Sources:
US Army Corps of Engineers
The TCC Connection
Wikipedia
Tulsa People
The Oklahoman
National Endowment for the Humanities