Explore Harmon County, Oklahoma with this interactive street and satellite map. Browse all 2 cities and towns in Harmon County below.
| County | Harmon |
| State | Oklahoma (OK) |
| County Seat | Hollis |
| Country | United States of America |
| Latitude | 34.679647 |
| Longitude | -99.841627 |
| Cities & Towns | 2 |
| Area Codes | 405 |
Harmon County, a sweep of Oklahoma's southwestern reaches, unfurls under a sky often painted in broad strokes of prairie gold and bruised twilight. Its terrain is a study in muted earth tones, a landscape shaped by the patient erosion of wind and water. The land generally slopes southward, a gentle inclination that guides the meager flow of its waterways. The North Fork of the Red River, though often a whisper of its potential, marks a significant geological and hydrological presence, its banks a testament to the occasional, yet powerful, shifts in the land’s mood. Beyond this primary artery, a network of smaller creeks and draws, often dry for long stretches, carve ephemeral paths across the plains, their presence felt more in the subtle dips and rises of the earth than in a constant, audible current. To the north, the county brushes against the broader expanse of Greer County, while the south and west dissolve into the characteristic plains of the Texas Panhandle, a shared dominion of wind-scoured horizons. Distinct sub-regions emerge not from dramatic elevation changes, but from the subtle variations in soil color – the ruddy cast of the red dirt dominating much of the county, a visual echo of the iron-rich earth that defines this part of the state.
The genesis of Harmon County is a story intertwined with the grander narrative of Oklahoma's formation, a chapter written in the wake of the Land Runs and the eventual consolidation of territories. Established in 1909, a year after statehood, its boundaries were drawn from portions of Greer County, a territory itself born from a contentious dispute with Texas. The county seat, Hollis, emerged as the natural focal point. Its selection and subsequent growth were less a matter of dramatic decree and more a slow accretion of necessity and convenience, a place where the scattered homesteads and nascent communities could converge for trade, governance, and social connection. The very air in Harmon County seems to hold a memory of the Indian Territory, a spectral resonance of the Comanche and Wichita peoples who once navigated these same windswept plains. The subsequent arrival of settlers, drawn by the promise of agricultural land and later, the allure of oil, layered new textures onto this ancient canvas, each wave leaving its faint, indelible imprint.
Life in Harmon County moves with a quiet cadence, dictated less by the frantic pulse of urban centers and more by the predictable rhythms of the seasons and the land. Agriculture remains a cornerstone, with wheat fields stretching to the horizon, their golden stalks shimmering under the relentless Oklahoma sun. The oil industry, too, has left its mark, a scattering of derricks dotting the landscape like skeletal sentinels, a constant reminder of the subterranean wealth that has, at times, animated the county's economy. The character of the place is one of resilience and self-sufficiency, a community forged in the crucible of open spaces and the often-unforgiving elements. Hollis, the county seat, serves as the central hub, its main street a familiar artery where the daily business of life unfolds. Beyond the town, smaller communities like Vinson and Gould exist as quiet markers on the map, each with its own subtle story, its own collection of homes and lives lived out against the vast, indifferent beauty of the southwestern Oklahoma plains. The quality of light at dusk here, a slow bleed of orange and purple into the deepening gray, possesses a profound stillness, a moment when the land itself seems to exhale.
This page provides an interactive map of Harmon County, Oklahoma alongside links to detailed street maps for 2 cities and towns. The county seat is Hollis. Each city and town map page includes live weather, local news and precise GPS coordinates.
Location data is sourced from the USGS GNIS database and verified by coordinates, not name matching alone.
| Page generated | June 2026 |
| Location data | USGS GNIS database; coordinates matched to 2020 US Census records |