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  1. Welcome to Chickasha! The Gateway to Southwest Oklahoma, Chickasha is home to nearly 17,000 people. The city is only 30 minutes south of the Oklahoma City metro area, easily accessible by U.S. Highways 81 or 62, or on four-lane Interstate 44. Visitors are drawn to the city for the Festival of Light, Arts Festival, sporting events and other ...

  2. Historic Chickasha. Several locations in Chickasha are listed on the National Register of Historic Places, including the Grady County Courthouse, Griffin House, New Hope Baptist Church, and the US Post Office and Federal Courthouse, which is currently utilized as Chickashas City Hall .

  3. 1. Pay homage to a giant Leg Lamp. The most popular attraction in Chickasha is the 50-foot tall sculpture of a leg lamp based on the 1983 holiday film “A Christmas Story”. The larger-than-life leg lamp stands atop a gigantic wooden crate marked fragile.

  4. Dec 22, 2021 · 1. Relax at Shannon Springs Park. Source: Photo by Wikimedia Commons user MARELBU used under CC BY 3.0. Home to the ever-popular Festival of Lights, Shannon Springs Park is one of the major landmarks in town. It is a 43-acre (17.40 hectare) park that features a very large lake where everyone is free to fish.

  5. Plan a trip to Chickasha, located in central Oklahoma, for year-round excitement. The city is perhaps best known for its annual Festival of Light, a stunning holiday light display featuring 3.5 million twinkling lights held at Shannon Springs Park.

  6. Come see what it's all about. Chickasha has so many things to offer, all with some small town charm. The gateway to Southwest Oklahoma, Chickasha is home to nearly 17,000 people. The city is only 30 minutes south of the Oklahoma City metro area, easily accessible by U.S. Highways 81 or 62, or on four-lane Interstate 44.

  7. Chickasha, city, seat (1907) of Grady county, central Oklahoma, U.S., on the Washita River, southwest of Oklahoma City. Founded in 1892 near a Rock Island Railroad stop, it was named for an Indian tribe and populated largely by Kiowa and Comanche Indians until 1901, when the area was opened to.

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