RoadsideThoughts
A Gazetteer for the United States and Canada
Home >> State of Oklahoma >> Roger Mills County >> GrowSitemap...

Do you know of Grow ???

This page is an orphan - a placeholder until we can discover more about Grow. When we encounter a name that is new to us, we add it to our Gazetteer with the hope that we'll discover more information in the future. Such is the case with Grow.<1>

Our sources for Grow (see Mentions and References below) indicate that it was a community with a post office by the same name. Unfortunately our sources aren't clear about the location of Grow other than they indicate that Grow would be found somewhere in Roger Mills County, Oklahoma.

From the Blevins / Hellbock List: The post office opened  in 1900 and closed  in 1918.

Communities Also Named Grow ...

We found one communities that share the name Grow.

Within Oklahoma, the name Grow is unique.

Beyond Oklahoma, there is another community also named Grow in the United States.

  • Communities Elsewhere In North America ...
    • Texas
      • King County
      • Please visit our profile page for the Texas community of Grow [King County].

Miscellaneous References and Mentions for Grow ...

We've created the following list to keep track of the sources that proved useful in adding to our knowledge about Grow:

Found in a comprehensive list of Post Offices that was created by Cameron Blevins and Richard Helbock.<2>

Rand McNally Map of Oklahoma (1911)
Published by Rand McNally & Co.

More Orphans in  Roger Mills County ...

Can you help?

As we explained above, when we encounter a name that might be a community or a post office we add it to our Gazetteer. If we have little information to go with the name, we call them Orphans. Below are Orphans that we believe to be located in Roger Mills County.

Angora 
 Redmoon
BrantleyRome
  
CliffordShirley
 Streeter
Downey 
 Texmo
Hamburg 
HarringtonUral
  
MillsvilleWalnut

Footnotes ...

<1>This entry could have originated in error. It might be that a source had a misprint, was simply wrong or we made a transcription error while referencing it. Many of the documents we reference are from the 1800s and the early 1900s, with some easier to read than others.
<2>A copy of their list with background information can be found at:

      https://cblevins.github.io/us-post-offices/data-biography/