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  1. "Oklahoma!" (music by Richard Rogers, lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II) was adopted as the state song and anthem of Oklahoma in 1953. This "fresh new tune from a musical and a movie of the same name" replaced Oklahoma's original state song ("Oklahoma, A Toast," adopted in 1935) because it was considered by many to be "too slow and too much like a funeral dirge" (quotes from Oklahoma Historical ...

    • State Motto

      The official state motto of Oklahoma is "Labor Omnia Vincit"...

  2. The state of Oklahoma officially adopted the song as its state song in 1953. [1] It is the only official state song from a Broadway musical. State Representative George Nigh, who later served as the state's Governor, was the principal author of the legislation designating the state song. [2]

  3. In 1935 the state song of Oklahoma was “Oklahoma—A Toast,” written by Kingfisher native Harriet Parker Camden. The song was very reverent and the lyrics described iconic images of Oklahoma including sunflowers and fields of cotton. George Nigh, the youngest legislator elected to the Oklahoma House of Representatives at the age of twenty ...

  4. Feb 4, 2022 · "Oklahoma!" is the title song from the 1943 Broadway musical of the same name, with music and lyrics written by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein. In 195...

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  5. Dec 4, 2004 · The first declares that the words and music of "Oklahoma" are the official song and anthem of Oklahoma. A provision is also made for the custody of the the official state song: the State Librarian at the State Library. Thirdly, the words to the song are codified in the Oklahoma Statutes. TITLE 25. §25-94.1. Official state song. The official ...

  6. Plen’y of heart and plen’y of hope. Oklahoma, where the wind comes sweepin’ down the plain, And the wavin’ wheat can sure smell sweet. When the wind comes right behind the rain. Oklahoma, ev’ry night my honey lamb and I. Sit alone and talk and watch a hawk makin’ lazy circles in the sky. We know we belong to the land.

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  8. The song "Oklahoma!" not only became the state's official song in 1953, but the musical of that title also changed the nature of the Broadway genre. The narrative originated in a stage play, Green Grow the Lilacs (titled from an Irish folk song and subtitled "A Folk-Play in Six Scenes"), by Oklahoma native Lynn Riggs. Riggs's play was produced ...

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