Explore Marshall County, Oklahoma with this interactive street and satellite map. Browse all 8 cities and towns in Marshall County below.
| County | Marshall |
| State | Oklahoma (OK) |
| County Seat | Madill |
| Country | United States of America |
| Latitude | 34.028432 |
| Longitude | -96.711979 |
| Cities & Towns | 8 |
| Area Codes | 405 |
Marshall County lies in southern Oklahoma, a land shaped by the persistent work of water and wind. Its terrain is a study in contrasts, shifting from the flatter, cultivated expanses in the east to the more broken, wooded country nearer the Arbuckle Mountains to the west. Lake Texoma, a vast inland sea formed by the Red River and Washita River, dominates the southern edge, its shoreline a defining natural border for much of the county. North of this immense body of water, the land rises in gentle slopes, often painted with the deep red of its soil, a color that seems to hold the memory of sun and dry seasons. The Cross Timbers, a belt of scrub oak and hickory, still mark pockets of the landscape, a testament to a wilder time. Neighboring counties, such as Johnston to the north and Love to the west, share similar geological threads, yet Marshall County possesses its own distinct character, etched by the very rivers that feed its lifeblood and the open skies that stretch above it.
The county’s genesis is rooted in the turbulent, transformative era of Oklahoma’s statehood. Formed in 1907 from lands previously part of the Chickasaw Nation, Marshall County was carved from a territory rich with the history of Indigenous peoples. Its establishment coincided with the influx of settlers drawn by the promise of land and opportunity, many of whom arrived with the dawn of the 20th century. The county seat, Madill, grew around a railroad depot, a common pattern for towns born in this period. The arrival of the railroad was the catalyst, connecting this burgeoning community to the wider world and solidifying its place as a hub for commerce and administration. The early years were marked by the hard work of building a new society, a process often carried out under skies that could be both generous and severe, a rhythm of life dictated by the seasons and the land's own quiet insistence.
Life in Marshall County today flows with a steady, unhurried cadence, a reflection of its agricultural roots and the enduring spirit of its people. Wheat fields, when they stretch to the horizon, offer a golden promise under the vast Oklahoma sky, a sight that has long defined the county’s visual identity. Oil derricks, rising like sentinels on the plains, also punctuate the landscape, a reminder of the subsurface wealth that has shaped its economy. The character of the county is one of quiet resilience, a community that has weathered economic shifts and embraced its heritage. Madill, with its tidy downtown and the courthouse standing as a solid anchor, serves as the central point for county affairs, but smaller communities like Kingston, nestled near the lake’s shimmering expanse, and Woodville, with its own distinct rhythm, contribute to the county’s rich mosaic. The quality of light at dusk, when the red dirt seems to glow and the shadows lengthen across the fields, offers a moment of profound, understated beauty, a feeling of peace that settles over Marshall County as the day draws to a close.
This page provides an interactive map of Marshall County, Oklahoma alongside links to detailed street maps for 8 cities and towns. The county seat is Madill. 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 |