Tulsa ( ) is the
second-largest city in the state of
Oklahoma
and 45th-largest city
in the United
States
. With an estimated population of 385,635 in
2008, it is the principal municipality of the Tulsa
Metropolitan Statistical Area,
a region of 916,079 residents projected to reach one million
between 2010 and 2012. In 2008, the
Tulsa-Bartlesville Combined
Statistical Area had a population of 966,531 residents.
The city
serves as the county seat of Tulsa
County
, the most densely populated county in Oklahoma, and
extends into Osage
, Rogers
, and Wagoner
counties.
Tulsa was first settled in the 1830s by the Lachapoka Band of
Creek Native American tribe.
In 1921, it was the site of the infamous
Tulsa Race Riot, one of the largest and most
destructive acts of racial violence in the history of the United
States. For most of the 20th century, the city held the nickname
"
Oil Capital of the World"
and played a major role as one of the most important hubs for the
American
oil industry. Tulsa, along
with several other cities, claims to be the birthplace of
U.S. Route 66.
Tulsa is also known for its
Western
Swing music.
Once heavily dependent on the
oil
industry, economic downturn and subsequent diversification
efforts created an economic base in the
energy,
finance,
aviation,
telecommunications and
technology sectors.
The Tulsa Port of
Catoosa
, at the head of the McClellan-Kerr
Arkansas River Navigation System, is the most inland river port
in the U.S. with access to international waterways.
Two
institutions of higher education
within the city operate at the NCAA Division I level, Oral Roberts
University
and the University of Tulsa
.
Located in
Tornado Alley, the city
frequently experiences
severe
weather.
It is situated on the Arkansas River
at the foothills of the Ozark Mountains
in northeast Oklahoma, a region of the state known
as "Green Country." Considered
the cultural and arts center of Oklahoma, Tulsa houses two
world-renowned art museums, full-time professional opera and ballet
companies, and one of the nation's largest concentrations of
art deco architecture. The city has been
called one of America's most livable large cities by Partners for
Livable Communities,
Forbes, and Relocate
America. People from Tulsa are described as "Tulsans."
History

The Meadow Gold sign greeted Route 66
travelers in Tulsa for decades.
What was ultimately to become Tulsa was originally part of
Indian Territory and was first settled by
the Lochapoka and Creek tribes in 1836. They established a home
under a large oak tree at the present day intersection of Cheyenne
Avenue and 18th Street, and named their new settlement "Tallasi",
meaning "old town" in the Creek language, which later became
"Tulsa". On January 18, 1898, Tulsa was officially incorporated and
elected its first mayor, Edward Calkins.
A small
town near the banks of the Arkansas River
in 1901, Tulsa's first oil well, named Sue Bland
No. 1, was established that year.
By 1905, the discovery
of the large Glenn Pool nearby (site of the present day town of
Glenpool
) prompted a rush of entrepreneurs to the area's
growing number of oil fields; Tulsa's population swelled to over
140,000 between 1901 and 1930. Known as the "Oil Capital of
the World" for most of the 20th century, the city's success in the
energy industry prompted construction booms in the popular
Art Deco style of the time. Profits from the oil
industry continued through the
Great
Depression, helping the city's economy fare better than most in
the United States during the 1930s.

Cain's Ballroom came to be known as
the "Carnegie Hall of Western Swing" in the early 20th
century.
In the early 20th century, Tulsa was home to the "
Black
Wall Street," one of the most prosperous
African American communities in the United
States at the time. Located in the
Greenwood neighborhood, it was
the site of the
Tulsa Race Riot, one
of the nation's costliest acts of racial violence and civil
disorder. Sixteen hours of rioting on May 31 and June 1, 1921
resulted in over 800 people admitted to local hospitals with
injuries, an estimated 10,000 left homeless, 35 city blocks
composed of 1,256 residences destroyed by fire, and $1.8 million in
property damage. Twenty-three black and 16 white citizens were
reported killed, but estimates suggest as many as 300, mostly
blacks, died.
In 1925,
Tulsa businessman Cyrus Avery, known as
the "Father of Route 66," began his campaign to create a road
linking Chicago
to California
by establishing the U.S. Highway 66 Association in Tulsa,
earning the city the nickname the "Birthplace of Route 66." Once
completed,
U.S. Route 66 took an important role in Tulsa's
development as the city served as a popular rest stop for
travelers, who were greeted by Route 66 icons such as the Meadow
Gold Sign and the Blue Whale of Catoosa
. During this period,
Bob Wills and his group
The Texas Playboys began their long
performing stint at a small ballroom in downtown Tulsa.
In 1935,
Cain's
Ballroom
became the
base for the group, which is largely credited for creating Western Swing music. The venue
continued to attract famous musicians through its history, and is
still in operation today. For the remainder of the mid-20th
century, a master plan called for the construction of parks,
churches, museums, rose gardens, improved infrastructure, and
increased national advertising. The
Spavinaw Dam, built during this era to
accommodate the city's water needs, was considered one of the
largest public works projects of the era. In the 1950s, Time
magazine dubbed Tulsa "America's Most Beautiful City."
A national recession greatly affected the city's economy in 1982,
as areas of Texas and Oklahoma heavily dependent on oil witnessed
a freefall in gas prices and a mass
exodus of oil industries. Tulsa, heavily dependent on the oil
industry, was one of the hardest hit cities by the fall of oil
prices. By 1992, the state's economy had fully recovered, but
leaders would attempt to expand into sectors unrelated to oil and
energy.
In 2003, the "
Vision 2025" program was
approved by voters with the purpose of enhancing and revitalizing
Tulsa's infrastructure and tourism industry.
The keystone project
of the initiative, the BOK
Center
, was designed to be a home for the city's minor
league hockey and arena football teams, as well as a venue for
major concerts and conventions. The multi-purpose arena,
designed by famed architect
Cesar Pelli,
broke ground in 2005 and was opened on August 30, 2008.
Law and government

The Tulsa City Hall serves as the base
for most city government functions.
A
mayor-council government
has been in place in Tulsa since 1989 when the city converted from
a
city commission
government deemed wasteful and less efficient. Since the
change, Tulsa mayors have been given more power in accordance with
a
strong
mayoral system and have greater control of a more consolidated
array of governmental branches.
Plurality voting is used to elect
mayors, who serve a term in office of four years. The present mayor
of Tulsa is
Kathryn Taylor, a
Democrat, who previously
served as Secretary of Commerce and Tourism for the state of
Oklahoma. Taylor, who unseated
Republican William LaFortune in his reelection campaign
of April 2006, did not seek reelection in 2009. Republican
Dewey F. Bartlett, Jr. won the
2009 election and
will take office on December 7, 2009. Another notable Tulsa
political figure,
Jim Inhofe, who now
represents Oklahoma in the
United
States Senate, served as the mayor of Tulsa early in his
political career.
A city councilor from each of the city's nine council districts is
elected every two years, each serving a term of two years.
Councilors are elected from their own respective districts based on
a
plurality voting system,
and serve on the Tulsa City Council. Roscoe Turner of District
Three currently serves as the council chairman along with Vice
Chairman John Eagleton of District Seven. As a whole, the council
acts as the legislative body of city government, which aims to pass
laws, approve the city budget, and manage efficiency in city
government. In accordance with the mayor-council form of
government, the Tulsa City Council and the office of the Mayor
coordinate in city government operations. A third body of the
government, the city auditor, is elected independently of the city
council and mayor to ensure that the auditor can act in an
objective manner. The auditor is elected for a term of two years.
Phil Wood, a Democrat, held the position for 21 years before being
defeated by Republican Preston Doerflinger in the 2009 election.
The city serves as the
seat of county
government for Tulsa County, and lies mostly within
Oklahoma's 1st
congressional district, with its far northwestern areas in
southern Osage County in
Oklahoma's 3rd
congressional district.
Municipal and State laws are enforced in Tulsa by the Tulsa Police
Department, an organization of about 770 officers as of 2006. In
2004, Tulsa's crime rate was 7806.1 per 100,000 people, about 1.5
times the national average. There were 58 murders, 1096 robberies,
and 6,592 burglaries in 2004.
Sister cities
In accordance with the Tulsa Global Alliance, which operates in
conjunction with
Sister
Cities International, an organization that began under
President
Dwight Eisenhower in
1956, Tulsa has been given eight international
sister cities in an attempt to foster
cross-cultural understanding:
Geography
Tulsa is
located in the northeastern corner of Oklahoma
, northeast of Oklahoma City
; situated between the edge of the Great Plains
and the foot of the Ozark Mountains
in a generally forested region of rolling
hills. The city touches the eastern extent of the
Cross
Timbers
, an ecoregion of forest
and prairie transitioning from the drier
plains of the west to the wetter forests of the east. With a
wetter climate than points westward, Tulsa serves as a gateway to
"
Green Country", a popular and
official designation for northeast Oklahoma that stems from the
region's green vegetation and relatively high amount of hills and
lakes compared to central and western areas of Oklahoma, which lie
largely in the drier Great Plains region of the Central United
States. Northeastern Oklahoma is the most topographically diverse
part of the state, containing seven of Oklahoma's 11 eco-regions
and more than half of its state parks.
The region
encompasses 30 lakes or reservoirs and borders the neighboring
states of Kansas
, Missouri
, and Arkansas
. The
geographic coordinates of the
city of Tulsa are (36.131294, -95.937332), with an elevation of
213 meters (700 ft) above
sea
level.
Topography

As seen from space, most of Tulsa lies
east of the Arkansas River.
The city
is split by the prominent Arkansas River
, which flows in a wide, sandy-bottomed
channel. Its flow through the Tulsa area is
controlled by upstream flood control reservoirs
, but its width and depth can vary widely throughout
the year, such as during periods of high rainfall or severe
drought. However, a low-water dam maintains a full channel
at all times in the area adjacent to downtown Tulsa. This portion
of the river is known as Zink Lake. Heavily wooded and with
abundant parks and water areas, the city holds several prominent
hills with names such as "Shadow Mountain" and "Turkey Mountain",
which create varied terrain, especially in its southern portions.
While its central and northern sections are generally flat to
gently undulating, the Osage Hills extension into the northwestern
part of the city further varies the landscape.
Holmes Peak, the
proposed future site of The American
monument in the northwest corner of the city, is
the tallest point in five counties at 1030 ft
(314 m). According to the
United States Census Bureau, the
city has a total area of 483.9
square kilometers (186.8
sq mi). 473.1 square
kilometers (182.6 sq mi) of it is land and
10.9 square kilometers (4.2 sq mi) of it (2.24%) is
water.
Climate
Tulsa is situated near the heart of
Tornado Alley and has a
temperate climate of the
subtropical variety with a yearly
average temperature of and an average rainfall of 39 in
(99 cm). As is typical of temperate zones, weather patterns
vary by season with occasional extremes in temperature and
rainfall.

Lightning over downtown Tulsa is
common in the spring months.
Primarily in the spring and early summer months, the city is
subjected to severe
thunderstorms
containing large
hail, damaging winds, and,
occasionally,
tornadoes, providing the
area with a disproportionate share of its annual
rainfall. Severe weather is not limited, though, to
this season; on December 5, 1975, and on December 24, 1982, for
example, Tulsa experienced tornadoes. Due to its potential for
major flooding events, the city has developed one of the most
extensive flood control systems in the nation. A comprehensive
flood management plan was developed in 1984 following a severe
flood caused by a stalled
weather front that dropped of rain
overnight, killing 14, injuring 288, and destroying 7,000 buildings
totaling $180 million in damage. In the early 1990s and again in
2000,the
Federal
Emergency Management Agency honored Tulsa as leading the nation
in flood plain management.
Temperatures of 40 °C (104 °F) or higher are sometimes observed
from July to early September, usually accompanied by high humidity
brought in by southerly winds. Lack of air circulation due to heat
and humidity during the summer months leads to higher
concentrations of
ozone, prompting the city to
release "Ozone Alerts", encouraging all parties to do their part in
complying with the
Clean Air Act and
United
States Environmental Protection Agency standards. The autumn
season is usually short, consisting of pleasant, sunny days
followed by cool nights. Winter temperatures, while generally mild,
occasionally experience extremes below -20 °C (0 °F) while annual
snowfall averages about 9 inches.
Cityscape
Architecture
A building boom in the early 20th century gave Tulsa one of the
largest concentrations of
art deco
architecture in the United States. Most commonly in the zigzag and
streamline styles, the city's art
deco is dotted throughout its older neighborhoods, primarily in
downtown and midtown.
A collection of large art deco structures
such as the Mid-Continent Tower
, the Boston Avenue Methodist
Church
, and the Philtower, have
attracted events promoting preservation and architectural
interest. In 2001, Tulsa served as the host city for the
International Art Deco Congress, a semiannual event designed to
promote art deco architecture internationally. Building booms in
the 1970s and 80s gave the city a larger base of contemporary
architectural styles.
The BOK Tower
, built during this period, is the tallest building
in Oklahoma and the surrounding states of Missouri
, New
Mexico
, Arkansas
, and Kansas
.
Tulsa also has the second-, third-, and fourth-tallest buildings in
the state, including the
Cityplex
Tower, which is located apart from the city's
central business district.
One of the area's
unique architectural complexes, Oral Roberts University
, is built in a Post-Modern Futuristic style,
incorporating bright gold structures with sharp, jetting edges and
clear geometric shapes. The BOK Center
, Tulsa's new arena, incorporates many of the city's
most prominent themes, including Native American, art deco, and
contemporary architectural styles. Intended to be an
architectural icon, the building was designed by César Pelli, the architect of the famous
Petronas
Towers
in Malaysia
.
Neighborhoods
Downtown Tulsa is an area of approximately surrounded by an
inner-dispersal loop created by Interstate 244, Highway 64, and
Highway 75. The area serves as Tulsa's financial and business
district, and is the topic of a large initiative to draw tourism,
which includes plans to capitalize on the area's historic
architecture.
Much of Tulsa's convention space is located
in downtown, such as the Tulsa Performing Arts Center
and the Tulsa Convention Center
, and beginning in 2008, the BOK Center
. Prominent downtown sub-districts include the
Blue Dome District, the Brady Arts district, and the Greenwood Historical District,
the site of ONEOK
Field
, a new baseball stadium for the Tulsa Drillers, now under construction with a
scheduled opening in 2010.

The Arkansas River marks the division
between West Tulsa and other regions of the city.
The city's historical residential core lies in an area known as
Midtown, containing upscale neighborhoods built in the early 1900s
with architecture ranging from
art deco to
Greek Revival.
The University of
Tulsa
, the Swan Lake
neighborhood, Philbrook Museum, and
the upscale shopping districts of Utica
Square, Cherry Street, and Brookside are located in this
region. A large portion of the city's southern half was
developed since the 1970s, containing low density housing and
retail developments.
This region, marked by secluded homes and
suburban neighborhoods, contains one of the state's largest
shopping malls, Woodland Hills
Mall, as well as Southern Hills Country Club
and Oral Roberts University
.East of Highway 169, a diverse racial makeup
marks the eastern portions of the city, with large Asian and Mexican
communities and much of the city's manufacturing
industry.
Areas of
Tulsa west of the Arkansas River are called West Tulsa
, and are marked by large parks, wilderness
reserves, and large oil refineries. The northern tier of the
city is home to a large percentage of Tulsa's
African-American community.
Included in the
region is OSU-Tulsa, the Gilcrease Museum, the Tulsa
International Airport
, the Tulsa
Zoo
, the Tulsa Air and Space Museum
, and the nation's third-largest municipal park,
Mohawk Park.
Economy

The BOK Tower serves as the world
headquarters for Williams Companies.

River developments such as the
"Riverwalk Crossing" stem from recent economic initiatives.
Though the
oil industry has
historically dominated Tulsa's economy, efforts in economic
diversification have created a base in the sectors of
aerospace,
finance,
technology,
telecommunications,
high tech, and
manufacturing.
The Tulsa
International Airport
(TUL) and the Tulsa Port of Catoosa
, the nation's most inland seaport, connect the
region with international trade and transportation. An
American Airlines maintenance base
at Tulsa International Airport is the city's largest employer and
the largest maintenance facility in the world, serving as the
airline's global maintenance and engineering headquarters, while
the Tulsa Port of Catoosa and the Tulsa International Airport house
extensive industrial parks.
Products from Tulsa manufacturers account for about 60% of
Oklahoma's exports, and in 2001, the city's total
gross product was in the top one-third of metropolitan
areas, states, and countries, with more than $29 billion in total
goods, growing at a rate of $250 million each year. In 2006, Forbes
magazine rated Tulsa as second in the nation in income growth, and
one of the best cities to do business in the country. Usually among
the lowest in the nation in terms of cost of doing business, the
Tulsa Metropolitan Area in 2005 was rated among the five lowest
metropolitan areas in the United States for that category.
A number of large financial corporations are headquartered in
Tulsa, the largest being the
BOK Financial Corporation. The
semi-national
convenience store
chain
QuikTrip, the national car rental
companies of
Vanguard
(parent to National and Alamo) and
Dollar-Thrifty, and
Mazzio's semi-national pizza chain also call Tulsa
home. Many international oil and gas-related companies have
headquarters in Tulsa, including
Williams Companies,
SemGroup,
Syntroleum,
ONEOK, Samson and Excel Energy. Meanwhile,
there are 30 companies in Tulsa that employ more than 1,000 people,
though small businesses make up more than 80% of the city's
companies.
Tulsa also has a
IC Bus Factory
During a national recession from 2001 to 2003, the city lost 28,000
jobs. In response, a development initiative,
Vision 2025, promised to incite economic growth
and recreate lost jobs. Projects spurred by the initiative promised
urban revitalization, infrastructure improvement, tourism
development, riverfront retail development, and further
diversification of the economy. As of 2007, employment levels have
surpassed pre-recession heights and the city is in a significant
economic development and investment surge.
Education
There are three primary public school districts in the city of
Tulsa.
Tulsa Public
Schools, with nine high schools and over 41,000 students, is
the 2nd largest school district in Oklahoma
and includes Booker T.
Washington High School
, a magnet school
judged to be the 65th best high school in the United States by
Newsweek Magazine in 2008.
Each with
one upper high school, Jenks
and Union schools are the
city's two other primary districts, covering the southern portion
of the city near the towns of Jenks and Broken
Arrow
. In 2006, there were more than 90,000
students attending Tulsa County's public schools.
The Catholic Diocese
of Tulsa supports a system of parochial and diocesan schools,
including Bishop Kelley High School
. Another Catholic high school, Cascia Hall
Preparatory School
, is administered by Augustinians. Most other private schools
have religious affiliations with various Jewish and Protestant
denominations, including
Holland
Hall School, affiliated with the
Episcopal
Church.
The
largest library system in the Tulsa Metropolitan Area, the Tulsa
City-County Library
, contains over 1.7 million volumes in 25 library
facilities. The library is active in the community, holding
events and programs at most branches, including free computer
classes, children's storytimes, business and job assistance, and
scholarly databases with information on a variety of topics. The
McFarlin Library at the
University of Tulsa is a
federal depository
library holding over three million items. Founded in 1930, the
library is known for its collection of Native American works and
the original works of Irish author
James
Joyce. The Tulsa City-County Library and the University of
Tulsa's Law Library are also federal depository libraries, making
Tulsa the only city in Oklahoma with more than two federal
depository libraries.
Higher education
Tulsa has
15 institutions of higher education, including two private
universities: the University of Tulsa
, a school founded in 1894; and Oral Roberts
University
, a school founded by evangelist Oral Roberts in 1963. Tulsa also has a
Tulsa branch of Langston University, the only
HBCU in the state founded in 1897. The University of
Tulsa has an enrollment of 4,192 undergraduate and graduate
students and is ranked 83rd among national doctoral universities in
U.S. News and World Report's 2009
edition of America's Best Colleges and among the best 123 Western
Colleges by the
Princeton Review in
2007, which also ranks it in the top ten schools nationally for
quality of life, overall happiness of students, and relationship
with the community. Oral Roberts University, a
charismatic Christian institution with
an enrollment of 5,109 undergraduate and graduate students, was
rated in 2007 by the Princeton Review one of the 123 best in the
Western United States and among the West's top 50 Master's
Universities by U.S. News and World Report in 2005.
Rogers State University is
the Tulsa area's only public four-year university, though Tulsa
Community College has a partnership allowing students to complete
four-year Bachelor's degrees through OU-Tulsa, OSU-Tulsa, LU-Tulsa
and NSU-Broken Arrow. The largest community college in Oklahoma,
Tulsa Community College
(TCC) operates four campuses spread across the area as well as a
conference center in Midtown.
Oklahoma State University
houses three campuses in the city, the
OSU
Center for Health Sciences, the
OSU College of
Osteopathic Medicine, and
OSU - Tulsa, accommodating
upper-level undergraduate and graduate courses.
The University
of Oklahoma
operates what is known as the OU-Tulsa Schusterman
Center, offering bachelors, master's and doctoral degree programs
in conjunction with the main campus in Norman and the OU Health
Sciences Center in Oklahoma City. The OU-Tulsa Schusterman
Center also houses the OU College of Medicine, Tulsa. The Spartan
School of Aeronautics enrolls 1,500 students at its flight programs
near Tulsa International Airport and the city's
vocational education is headed by
Tulsa Technology Center, the
oldest and largest vocational technology institution in the
state.
Culture

The Philbrook Museum, a former oil
baron's estate, features extensive gardens and artwork.
Though Oklahoma is placed entirely in the
Southern United States by the
United States Census
Bureau, Tulsa is influenced by the nearby
Midwest,
Southwest, and
Southern cultural regions, as well as
a historical native American presence. These influences are
expressed in the city's museums, cultural centers, performing arts
venues, ethnic festivals, park systems, zoos, wildlife preserves,
and large and growing collections of public sculptures, monuments,
and artwork.
Arts and theatre
Located in the former estate of
oil
pioneer
Waite Phillips,
Philbrook Museum is considered one of the
top 50
fine art museums in the United
States, and is one of five to offer a combination of historic home,
gardens, and art collections. The collections of
Thomas Gilcrease are housed at the
Gilcrease Museum, which also holds the
world's largest, most comprehensive collection of art and artifacts
of the American West. With remnants of the Holocaust and artifacts
relevant to Judaism in Oklahoma, the Sherwin Miller Museum of
Jewish Art preserves the largest collection of
Judaica in the
Southwest United States.
Other
museums, such as the Tulsa Air and Space Museum
, the Oklahoma Jazz Hall of Fame, and the Tulsa
Geosciences Center, document histories of the region, while the
Greenwood Cultural Center preserves the culture of the city's
African American heritage, housing a collection of artifacts and
photography that document the history of the Black Wall Street
prior to the Tulsa Race Riot of
1921.
Since 1969, public displays of artwork in Tulsa have been funded by
one percent of its annual city budget. Each year, a sculpture from
a local artist is installed along the Arkansas River trail system,
while other sculptures stand at local parks, such as an enlarged
version of
Cyrus Dallin's
Appeal to the Great Spirit
sculpture at
Woodward Park. At the
entrance to Oral Roberts University stands a large statue of
praying hands, which, at high, is the largest bronze sculpture in
the world.
As a testament to the city's oil heritage,
the Golden
Driller
guards the front entrance to the Tulsa County
Fairgrounds.
The iconic Golden Driller, built in 1953 for the 1966 International
Petroleum Expo, now stands at the Tulsa County Fairgrounds.
Tulsa contains several permanent dance, theater, and concert
groups, including the
Tulsa Ballet, the
Tulsa Opera, the
Tulsa Symphony Orchestra,
Light Opera Oklahoma,
Tulsa Signature Symphony, the
Heller Theatre and
Theatre Tulsa, the oldest continuously
operating
community theatre
company west of the
Mississippi
River. Tulsa also houses the Tulsa Spotlight Theater, which
shows the longest-running play in America (The Drunkard) every
Saturday night.
Large performing arts complexes include the
Tulsa
Convention Center
, the Tulsa Performing Arts Center
, Expo Square Pavilion
, the Mabee
Center
, the Tulsa Performing Arts Center for Education,
and the River Parks Amphitheater and Tulsa's largest venue, the
BOK
Center
. Ten miles west of the city, an outdoor
amphitheater called "Discoveryland!" holds the official title of
the world performance headquarters for the musical Oklahoma!, while Cain's Ballroom
, considered the birthplace of Western Swing, housed the performance
headquarters of Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys during the 1930s.
The
centerpiece of the downtown Brady Arts District, the Brady Theater
, is the largest of the city's five operating
performing arts venues that are listed on the National Register of
Historic Places. The city's film community hosts annual
festivals such as the Tulsa United Film Festival and Tulsa
Overground Film and Music Festival. The Blue Dome District is home
to the annual
Diversafest (DFest), an
annual live event that showcases independent and emerging artists.
Attendance at DFest in 2008 surpassed 60,000 people for the two
days. DFest takes place in the last weekend of July.
Outdoor recreation
The City of Tulsa manages 140 parks spread over 6,000 acres
(24 km²). Most notably,
Woodward
Park, a tract located in midtown Tulsa, doubles as a
botanical gardens featuring the Tulsa
Municipal Rose Garden and more than 6,000 rose plants in 250
varieties. Along the Arkansas River, a linear park system runs
through more than of shore with of hard-surfaced biking and running
trails. An additional of unpaved trails run through Turkey Mountain
Urban Wildreness Area at the summit of Turkey Mountain featuring
hiking, biking, horseback riding, and vistas overlooking downtown
Tulsa.

The river parks trail system traverses
the banks of the Arkansas River.
The
city's zoo, the Tulsa Zoo and Living Museum
, was voted "America's Favorite Zoo" in 2005 by
Microsoft Game Studios in
connection with a national promotion of its Zoo Tycoon 2 computer game. Doubling as
a museum that documents the cultures and history of various
climates in North America, the zoo encompasses a total of with
approximately 1,500 animals and 436 species. The zoo is located in
Mohawk Park, the third largest municipal park in the United States.
On the
west bank of the Arkansas River in the suburb of Jenks
, the
Oklahoma Aquarium is the state’s
only freestanding aquarium, containing over 200 exhibits, including
a shark tank.
The
Tulsa State Fair, operating in late
September and early October, attracts over one million people
during its 10 day run, and the city's Oktoberfest
celebration was named one of the top 10 in the
world by USA Today and one of the top
German food festivals in the nation by Bon
Appetit magazine. The annual Mayfest arts and crafts
festival entertained more than 375,000 people in its four day run
in downtown during 2007. On a smaller scale, the city hosts block
parties during a city-wide "Block Party Day" each year, with
festivals varying in size throughout city neighborhoods. Tulsa has
one major amusement park attraction, Big Splash Water Park,
featuring multi-story water slides and large wave pools. Until
2006, the city also hosted
Bell's
Amusement Park, which closed after Tulsa County officials
declined to renew its lease agreement.
Sports
Tulsa supports a wide array of sports at the professional and
collegiate levels. Currently, the city hosts two
NCAA Division I colleges and
five professional,
minor league sports
teams, playing in basketball, arena football, baseball, hockey, and
soccer.
Beginning in 2010, Tulsa will host a
yet-to-be-named franchise in the WNBA; the team had
previously played in the Detroit
area as the Detroit
Shock. The city also contains one of the nation's
top rated golf courses, Southern Hills Country Club
, which is one of two courses that have hosted seven
majors: four PGA Championships and three U.S. Open, the most recent in 2007. The course
has held five amateur championships and from 2001 to 2008 the
LPGA had a regular tour stop, most recently
known as the
SemGroup
Championship at Cedar Ridge Country Club.
The 18,000-seat
BOK
Center
is the centerpiece of the Vision 2025 projects and
was completed in August 2008. The BOK Center
had the top ten ticket sales in the world for the
first quarter of 2009. It is also the home for the city's
minor league hockey and
arena
football teams, and will also host the new WNBA team. Until its
last season in 1984, the city hosted the
Tulsa Roughnecks, which played in the
now-defunct
North American
Soccer League. Also in 1984, the city hosted the
Oklahoma Outlaws for a single season, which
belonged to the now-defunct
United States Football
League.
Tulsa has
two universities that compete at the NCAA
Division I level: the University of
Tulsa
Golden Hurricane, and the Oral Roberts
University
Golden Eagles. The University of Tulsa's
basketball program has reached the
Sweet Sixteen
three times, made an appearance in the
Elite
Eight in 2000, won the
NIT championship in 1981 and
2001, and won the inaugural
College Basketball
Invitational in 2008. Sixteen bowl games have been played by
the school in football, including the
Sugar
Bowl (twice) and the
Orange Bowl.
Oral Roberts University's basketball team reached the
Elite Eight in 1974 and won the
Mid-Continent Conference title three
straight years, from 2005 to 2007. At the secondary level, the
Tulsa area is home to several high school athletic programs that
are frequently ranked among the best nationally.
The city's
running and
cycling communities support events such as the
Tulsa Tough cycling race, the Route 66
Marathon, and the
Tulsa Run, which
features over 8000 participants annually. Gambling is supported by
a community of
Indian gaming venues
that have been allowed to expand gambling options. In 2005,
compacts between the state and various tribes
allowed facilities to offer table card games and slot machines.
Another
popular gambling draw, Horse racing
events are housed by the Fair Meadows Race Track
and Will Rogers
Downs in nearby Claremore
.

The University of Tulsa football team
competes at the NCAA Division 1 level.
Demographics
As of the
census of 2006, there were 382,872
people, 165,743 households, and 99,114 families residing in the
city, with a
population density
of 830.9/km² (2,152.0/sq mi). There were 179,405 housing units
at an average density of 982.3/sq mi (379.2/km²). Of 165,743
households, 28.5% had children under the age of 18 living with
them, 43.1% were
married couples living
together, 12.9% had a female householder with no husband present,
and 40.2% were non-families. Of all households, 33.9% are made up
of only one person, and 9.8% had someone living alone who was 65
years of age or older. The average household size was 2.31 people
and the average family size was 2.98.
In the city proper, the age distribution was 24.8% of the
population under the age of 18, 10.9% from 18 to 24, 29.9% from 25
to 44, 21.5% from 45 to 64, and 12.9% who were 65 years of age or
older, while the median age was 34 years. For every 100 females
there were 93.5 males, while for every 100 females over the age of
17 there were 90.4 males. The median income for a household in the
city was $35,316, and the median income for a family was $44,518.
Males had a median income of $32,779 versus $25,587 for females,
and the
per capita income for the
city was $21,534. About 10.9% of families and 14.1% of the
population were below the
poverty line,
including 20.5% of those under age 18 and 8.3% of those age 65 or
over. In 2006, the racial makeup of the city was 70.09%
white, 15.47%
African American, 4.72%
Native American, 1.82%
Asian, 0.05%
Pacific Islander, 3.45% from
other
races, and 4.40% from two or more races.
Hispanics or Latinos of any
race formed at least 7.15% of the population with possibly more
unregistered persons living within the city.
Religiously, Tulsa is overwhelmingly
Protestant. The city is located in a geographic
strip of high church attendance and widespread beliefs in biblical
Christianity often called the "
Bible
Belt", and its history as a hub for
televangelists such as Oral Roberts along with
a predominance of Christian beliefs and values often lead Tulsa to
be considered the "
buckle of the Bible
Belt." In 2000, the metropolitan area of Tulsa had 364,533
Protestant Christians, including 166,550
Southern Baptists and 78,221
Methodists.
Meanwhile, the area had 43,854 Catholic, 2,650 Jews, 2,200 Muslims, and 1,590
Unitarian-Universalists,
which includes the largest Unitarian Universalist
one-church congregation in the world
.
Metropolitan area

The Tulsa MSA's location (red) in the
state of Oklahoma with the Tulsa-Bartlesville CSA (pink)
The Tulsa
Metropolitan Area, or
the region immediately surrounding Tulsa with strong social and
economic ties to the city, occupies a large portion of the state's
northeastern quadrant. It is informally known as "
Green Country", a name derived from the
state's official tourism designation for all of northeastern
Oklahoma, though its usage in relation to the Tulsa Metropolitan
Area can be traced to the early part of the 20th century.
The
United States Census
Bureau defines the sphere of the city's influence as the Tulsa
Metropolitan Statistical
Area (MSA), spanning seven counties: Tulsa
, Rogers
, Osage
, Wagoner
, Okmulgee
, Pawnee
, and Creek
. The 2007 US Census Estimate shows the Tulsa
MSA to have 905,755 residents with a population expected to reach
one million between 2010 and 2012.
The Tulsa-Bartlesville Combined Statistical Area (CSA) is
created by adding the nearby Bartlesville, Oklahoma
micropolitan area, consisting of Washington
County
in Northeastern Oklahoma. In 2008, US Census
Estimates show the Tulsa-Bartlesville CMSA to have 966,531
residents.
Infrastructure
Transportation in Tulsa is aided by Tulsa Transit's bus network of 97 vehicles and
two primary airports, while the Tulsa Port of Catoosa
provides transportation of goods and industry
through international trade routes. Though internal
transportation is largely dependent on automobiles, the city is
consistently ranked in the five lowest metropolitan areas for
average price of gas at the pump. As reported by the
Oklahoma Department of
Transportation in 2005, Tulsa's busiest freeway is
US 169 with about 106,000 vehicles daily
between 51st and 61st Streets, and its second busiest freeway is
Interstate 44 with about 88,000
vehicles between Yale and Sheridan Avenues. Currently, there are no
mass transit rail lines in Tulsa, though the prospect of passenger
rail lines from downtown Tulsa to the suburb of Broken Arrow is
currently being studied.
Freight railways
bisect the city in every direction, and include
BNSF,
UP,
SK&O, and OSRR rail lines.
One of its four primary care hospitals, the Cancer Treatment
Centers of America has its southwest regional facility in
Tulsa.
The
Tulsa
International Airport
, home to ten commercial airlines, seven cargo
carriers, and several charter airlines, serves more than three
million travelers annually with almost 80 departures every day,
contributing nearly $3.2 billion to the economy. In 2007,
the airport completed most of an expansion project, which included
larger terminal sizes and the addition of restaurants and shops.
Riverside-Jones airport, a general aviation airport in West Tulsa
, saw 235,039 takeoffs and landings in 2006, making
it the busiest airport in Oklahoma and seventh busiest in the
nation. Its operations contribute over $3.2 million to the
economy annually.
At the head of the McClellan-Kerr
Arkansas River Navigation System, the Tulsa Port of
Catoosa
is the most inland ocean-going port in the United
States and connects barge traffic from Tulsa
to the Mississippi River via the
Verdigris and Arkansas
rivers. The port is one of the largest in
the United States and contributes to one of the busiest waterways
in the world via its course to the Gulf of Mexico. Long distance
passenger rail transportation serves Tulsa only through
Greyhound bus lines, which provides bus
connections to nearby cities with
AMTRAK
stations.
The Saint Francis Health System owns nine hospitals with a central
location at Saint Francis Hospital in the southern part of the
city. The facility contains 700 doctors and 918 beds, and with more
than 3,000 employees, the network is the second largest healthcare
employer in the state. The health system also operates a heart
hospital, which was named by
General
Electric in 2004 one of the most advanced heart hospitals in
the nation. St. John Hospital, located in an 11-story midtown
center, employs nearly 700 doctors. Other networks, such as
Hillcrest Health System, operate a number of facilities in varying
sizes. Tulsa is also the site of the
Cancer Treatment Centers of
America's Southwest Regional Medical Center, one of only four
such regional facilities and one of the largest cancer treatment
hospitals in the nation. Beginning in 2007, the city elected to
renew a five-year contract with
EMSA for
ambulance service after a period of consideration to switch to the
Tulsa Fire Department for providing such services.
Media
The Tulsa World operates primarily from its headquarters in
downtown Tulsa.
Tulsa's leading newspaper is the daily
Tulsa World, the second most widely
circulated newspaper in Oklahoma with a Sunday circulation of
189,789.
Urban Tulsa, another large publication, is a
weekly newspaper covering entertainment and cultural events.
Covering primarily economic events and stocks, the Tulsa Business
Journal caters to Tulsa's business sector. Other important
publications include, the
Oklahoma Indian Times, the
Tulsa Daily Commerce and Legal News, the
Tulsa
Beacon, and the
Tulsa Free Press. Until 1992, the
Tulsa Tribune served as a
daily major newspaper competing with the
Tulsa World. The
paper was acquired by the
Tulsa World that year.
Tulsa is also served by television and radio broadcasting networks.
All major U.S.
television
networks are represented in Tulsa.
Cable television service in the area is
provided by
Cox Communications.
As in most major American cities, local radio stations in the Tulsa
area are controlled by a small handful of large
broadcasting companies.
The late famous radio
personality Paul Harvey was born in
Tulsa and worked at local radio station KVOO
in his
early career.
Western Swing, a musical genre with roots in
Country Music, was made popular at
Tulsa's Cain's
Ballroom
.
The Tulsa Sound, a variation of
Rockabilly,
Blues,
and
Rock 'n' Roll, was started and
largely developed by local musicians
J.
J. Cale and
Leon Russell in the 1960s and 1970s.
The Tulsa Sound heavily influenced musician and songwriter
Eric Clapton, among others.Musicians from Tulsa
or that started their musical careers in Tulsa include
Garth Brooks,
The Gap
Band,
Hanson,
Caroline's Spine,
Ronnie Dunn,
Gene
Autry,
David Gates,
Bob Wills, and
David Cook.
See also
References
- "Opening of BOK Center draws thousands
downtown," Tulsa World, August 30, 2008.
- "
External links