Oklahoma Mortgage Lenders
The following cities have mortgage lenders in Oklahoma:
Often ridiculed by the rest of the country as dust-filled and boring, Oklahoma has had a traumatic and far from dull history. In the 1830s all this land, held to be useless, was set aside as Indian Territory ; a convenient dumping ground for the so-called Five Civilized Tribes who blocked white settlement in the southern states. The Choctaw and Chickasaw of Mississippi, the Seminole of Florida, and the Creek of Alabama were each assigned a share, while the rest (though already inhabited by indigenous Indians) was given to the Cherokee from Carolina, Tennessee and Georgia, who followed in 1838 on the four-month trek notorious as "the Trail of Tears". Today the state has a large Native American population - Oklahoma is the Choctaw word for "red man" - and even the smallest towns tend to have museums of Native American history.
Oklahoma is not the flat and unchanging expanse of popular imagination. Most of its places of interest, such as attractive Tulsa, lie in the hilly wooded northeast; only the sparse and treeless west is devoid of appeal, on the far side of the central "tornado alley" prairie grassland which holds the state's revitalized capital, Oklahoma City . The lakes and parks of the south, which bears more than a passing resemblance to neighboring Arkansas (complete with mountains, foliage and bluegrass music), have made tourism Oklahoma's second industry after oil.
Oklahoma has a relatively low cost of living for this reason it is easy to find a great deal on a home. Oklahoma is a great place to settle down and raise a family. The price of a home in Oklahoma only rose by about 4% from 2003 to 2004. This made it one of the lowest areas of home price increase in the United States. Oklahoma mortgage lenders in the cities above will help you obtain the best possible deal on your Oklahoma home loan.
Our directory currently includes lenders in the following Oklahoma cities:
Norman , Oklahoma City ,

