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  1. In Oklahoma in 1920 approximately 4 percent had electricity. Nationally, by 1934 an estimated 11 percent of American farms had access to electric power, but Oklahoma lagged behind. By the early 1930s, during the Depression, a prosperous farmer (if any still existed) could generate power at home.

    • Little House on The Prairie
    • Thank You Mr. President
    • The Great Pause
    • Keeping The Line

    The Phelps family roots run deep in the sandrock of northeastern Caddo County. Clifton’s grandfather, Julian Knight “JK” Phelps, drew the original 160-acre plot in the 1901 Land Lottery. JK Phelps relocated from Springfield, Nebraska, to western Oklahoma with his wife, Nettie Elizabeth (Clifton’s namesake), their four children and a trusty horse. I...

    The majority of cities were fully electric by 1930, while nine out of 10 rural homes in Oklahoma were without electric service even into the mid-1930s. Private companies were reluctant to spend resources on electrification away from a city. “It wasn’t profitable to serve the rural areas,” says Boyd Lee, vice president of strategic planning for Bing...

    The same year that Clifton was born, Adolph Hitler took power in Germany. The same year the Phelps family farm was electrified, World War II began. Two years later in 1941, Japan bombed Pearl Harbor and the United States entered the war. Most of the labor and supplies required for electrification were now fueling the war effort. “If you didn’t have...

    The Phelps family legacy certainly speaks to this passion for promoting rural electrification. Clifton’s uncle John began serving on the Caddo Electric board (now CKenergy Electric after it merged with Kiwash Electric) in 1941, helping spearhead growth through the war and post-war years. Clifton’s father, Julian, replaced John on the board in 1951....

  2. This is a list of electricity-generating power stations in the U.S. state of Oklahoma, sorted by type and name. In 2021, Oklahoma had a total summer capacity of 29,824 MW through all of its power plants, and a net generation of 80,755 GWh. [2]

  3. The first wind farm was built north of Woodward in 2003. Two technical factors combined to make the early twenty-first century a boom time for Oklahoma wind power. First, the turbines' efficiency rapidly improved.

  4. Most of Oklahoma's nuclear energy history revolves around a homegrown corporation. On May 8, 1952, the Kerr-McGee Company purchased the Navajo Uranium Company in Arizona, diversifying the conglomerate and bringing it into the nuclear age.

  5. Oct 15, 2024 · Some of these movies were actually filmed in Oklahoma but all of them are about or partially set in Oklahoma. While a few of these movies take place in or near Tulsa, the state of Oklahoma is the inspiration or setting for classic movies and cult favorites.

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  7. May 3, 2020 · Cinematic classics: Several iconic films have been made in Oklahoma in the past 100 years. Although Oklahoma has experienced a marked uptick in the number of films produced here in recent years, the Sooner State actually has been in the movie business for more than 100 years.

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