- Home
- The Paranormal
- Vikings! In Oklahoma?
Vikings! In Oklahoma?
- By Tracy Morris
- Published 02/18/2008
- The Paranormal
-
Rating:




Tracy Morris
Tracy S. Morris is the author of the award-winning Tranquility series of Southern paranormal humor mysteries.
http://www.yarddogpress.com/allen&.htm
Morris's story Fish Story will appear in the Baen anthology Strip Mauled
Her new novel Bride of Tranquility Is available now from Yard Dog Press.
Her website is http://www.tracysmorris.com/
It sounds a little bit like the plot of a Hollywood movie starring Antonio Bandaras. But residents of Heavener maintain that around 900 A.D, Vikings paddled their longships down the Eastern Seaboard, around the tip of Florida, through the Gulf of Mexico, up the Mississippi and Arkansas rivers and then traveled overland into Eastern Oklahoma – where they put up a billboard.
Okay, they may have built settlements and planted crops, but none of those things have been found. What has been found is a large flat stone – twelve feet high, ten feet wide, sixteen inches thick, rectangular in shape and sitting in a mountaintop ravine – with six-inch high Norse runes carved deeply into it.
Translations of the runes vary. Some people maintain that they're a date – November 11, 1012, while others say that they read “Glome's Valley,” as either a land claim or a kind of early Viking graffiti.
Whether Vikings actually were in Oklahoma, they came and left long ago. And the evidence that they were here might have lived on in obscurity if not for a few key events.
Flash forward in time to 1838, when thousands of Native Americans were forcibly moved from Tennessee into Eastern Oklahoma. The new arrivals noticed the stone, which became known as Indian Rock by European settlers – even though the carvings were not recognized by anyone as either Native or Latin writing.
In the 1920's a Heavener resident sent copies of the runes to the Smithsonian for identification. The Museum wrote back to say that the writing was Norse, but that it didn't make sense for Norsemen to have made them. In all likelihood, museum officials reasoned, a Scandinavian settler must have made the carvings by working from a primary school grammar book from his homeland.
As settlers moved into the area, they found more and more of these engraved stones. However most of them were destroyed by treasure hunters. The same fate might have befallen the runestone, if not for the efforts of Gloria Farley, a local school teacher.
Farley researched and wrote extensively about the stone. Through her efforts, the name of the stone was changed from Indian Rock to The Heavener Runestone, and the Heavener Runestone State park was established. Eventually, she found four more examples of Viking Runes carved into the Oklahoma landscape. Some of these are now on display in the Heavner Runestone State park.
So did Vikings settle in rural Eastern Oklahoma? Authorities in history say no. What is known however is that Norsemen did establish settlements in Newfoundland and similar stones with Runic writing have been found in Minnesota.
More importantly, stranger things have happened. In 1939, two fishermen pulled a small Bull Shark out of the Mississippi river near in Alton, Illinois, about 1,750 freshwater miles outside of its natural habitat.
If a shark can be thousands of miles away from where it's supposed to be, why not a Viking?
Spread The Word
Related Articles
- Movie Review (counter) - The Chronicles Of Narnia: The Voyage Of The Dawn Treader (2010)
- Video Game Review - Ghostbusters: The Video Game
- Calling all Browncoats!
- The Crescent Hotel: Guests Checked In, But They Didn't Check Out.
- Graphic Novel/Manga Review--In Odd We Trust
- Tunguska 100 years later: The day the sky rained fire.
- One Eyed Willie couldn't have hid it better: The legend of the Oak Island Money Pit.
- Aliens on the Brain: Vatican, British Ministry of Defense and ET.
- James Dean and the curse of the Little Bastard.
- When animals attack – the 18th century style
- Stull Cemetery: The Devil's graveyard? Er . . . Maybe Not.
- The strange story of Dr. Lowry: a ghost whose actions came back to haunt him.
- "Bang! Zoom!" Google Takes Us Back to the Moon
- Paranormal Pitfalls
- Bigfoot makes news again
- Lydia's Bridge
- NCPI: Ghost hunters, not a CBS show of the week.
Related Links
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heavener_Runestone
- http://privatei.com/~bartjean/chap9.htm
- http://www.heavener.k12.ok.us/community/local_authors/gloria_farley.htm
- http://www.heavener.k12.ok.us/community/runestone/rune.htm
- http://www.oklahomaparks.com/detail.asp?id=1+5U+5325
- http://www.texaschapbookpress.com/magellanslog87/vikings.htm
- http://www.ntxe-news.com/cgi-bin/artman/exec/view.cgi?archive=7&num=18654
Comments












