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Harmon County Authority
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Harmon County Authority

Harmon County has 2,406 residents and a median household income of $43,333.

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Gould Gould Gould Hollis Hollis Hollis

Harmon County sits in the far southwestern corner of Oklahoma, sharing its western border with Texas and its southern edge with the Red River. It is one of Oklahoma's smallest counties by population, with the 2020 U.S. Census recording approximately 2,653 residents (U.S. Census Bureau, 2020 Decennial Census), and its county seat of Hollis serves as the administrative and commercial hub for a landscape shaped by cotton fields, rangeland, and the wide prairie sky of the Southwestern Plains. Understanding how Harmon County's government operates, what services it delivers, and where its demographic and economic boundaries lie matters for anyone navigating property, public records, or civic life in this corner of the state.


Definition and Scope

Harmon County was established in 1909 when Oklahoma's territorial grid of counties was organized at statehood, carved from Greer County after a long and genuinely strange boundary dispute — the U.S. Supreme Court had to weigh in, in 1896, to settle whether Greer County even belonged to Oklahoma or Texas (Oklahoma Historical Society, Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture). Texas lost. Harmon County covers 539 square miles (Oklahoma Department of Commerce) and operates under the standard Oklahoma county government structure defined by Oklahoma state statute.

The county's jurisdictional scope covers all unincorporated land within those 539 square miles, plus the incorporated municipalities of Hollis (the county seat), Gould, Hollis, and Vinson. County authority applies to road maintenance on county roads, property tax assessment and collection, district court functions, election administration, and emergency management. State agencies — including the Oklahoma Department of Transportation for state highways and the Oklahoma Department of Human Services for welfare programs — operate in the county but are not under county administrative control.

What falls outside Harmon County's scope: federal lands managed by U.S. agencies, tribal jurisdictions where applicable, and the state highway network. Readers interested in broader Oklahoma governance frameworks can explore the Oklahoma Government Authority, which covers state-level agency structures, legislative processes, and how county governments interact with Oklahoma City's administrative apparatus.

For a broader view of how Harmon County fits within the state's 77-county system, the Oklahoma counties overview and the home page provide useful geographic and administrative context.


How It Works

Harmon County's government operates through three elected commissioners, one per district, who form the Board of County Commissioners. This board controls the county's budget, manages county-owned infrastructure, and sets policy for unincorporated areas. The county also elects a sheriff, a court clerk, a county clerk, a treasurer, an assessor, a district attorney (shared in a multi-county judicial district), and a county superintendent of public instruction.

The county treasurer collects property taxes based on assessments produced by the county assessor's office. Oklahoma's homestead exemption reduces assessed value by $1,000 for qualifying primary residences (Oklahoma Tax Commission), a modest number that nonetheless matters considerably in a county where median household income, based on U.S. Census American Community Survey 5-year estimates, sits well below the state median of approximately $56,000.

The Hollis school district (Hollis Public Schools) serves the county's K-12 population and functions independently of county government, governed by its own elected board and funded through a combination of state formula aid and local millage.

Emergency services are structured around the Harmon County Sheriff's Office and volunteer fire departments — a pattern typical across rural Oklahoma counties where paid full-time departments are not financially viable for small tax bases.


Common Scenarios

The situations that bring residents into contact with Harmon County government follow a predictable pattern across rural Oklahoma:


Decision Boundaries

Harmon County's administrative authority ends cleanly at its borders, but the practical reality is more layered. Residents living near the Texas state line may find that services — hospitals, specialty retail, even some government functions — are closer in Childress or other Texas Panhandle communities than in Oklahoma. The nearest large hospital network is in Amarillo, Texas, roughly 90 miles southwest, rather than in Oklahoma City, which sits approximately 200 miles northeast.

The county contrasts sharply with its more populous neighbors. Jackson County, immediately to the east, holds Altus and its Air Force Base, giving it a significantly larger population base and more diversified service infrastructure. Harmon County's 2,653 residents make it one of the 10 least populous counties in Oklahoma, which shapes every resource allocation decision from road budgets to school consolidation pressures.

Compared to Greer County to the north — from which Harmon was originally carved — the county is similarly rural but slightly smaller in both area and population, with comparable agricultural economies anchored in livestock and dryland farming.

For matters governed by Oklahoma state law rather than county ordinance — licensing, environmental regulation, professional credentialing — the relevant authority is a state agency, not the Board of County Commissioners.


References

Read Next

Oklahoma Counties: Complete Government Structure Guide This page covers the formal structure of Oklahoma county government, how counties relate to state authority, where... Jackson County Oklahoma: Government, Services, and Demographics The county covers approximately 797 square miles of rolling plains and red-dirt farmland, with a population of around 25,000... Greer County Oklahoma: Government, Services, and Demographics ANA › United States Authority › Oklahoma State Authority › Greer County Oklahoma: Government, Services, and Demographics Greer...

Federal Disaster Declarations (17)

Severe Winter Storms
February 2021 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4587-OK
Severe Winter Storm
February 2021 · Emergency declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · EM-3555-OK
COVID-19 Pandemic Federal Disaster
January 2020 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance only (institutional reimbursement) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4530-OK
COVID-19 Emergency
January 2020 · Emergency declaration · Public Assistance only (institutional reimbursement) · EM-3462-OK
Wildfires
April 2018 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · incident type: fire · DR-4373-OK
Severe Winter Storms And Flooding
December 2015 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4256-OK
Severe Storms, Tornadoes, Straight-Line Winds, And Flooding
May 2015 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4222-OK
Severe Winter Storm
January 2010 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-1883-OK
Severe Winter Storm
December 2009 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-1876-OK
Severe Winter Storm
January 2010 · Emergency declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · EM-3308-OK
Severe Storms And Flooding
June 2008 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-1775-OK
Severe Winter Storms
December 2007 · Emergency declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · EM-3280-OK
Severe Winter Storms And Flooding
January 2007 · Emergency declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · EM-3272-OK
Extreme Wildfire Threat
November 2005 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · incident type: fire · DR-1623-OK
Hurricane Katrina (hosted evacuees, no local impact)
August 2005 · Emergency declaration · hosted federal evacuees (no local impact) · EM-3219-OK
Severe Winter Ice Storm
January 2002 · Major disaster declaration · Individual Assistance to residents · DR-1401-OK
Severe Winter Ice Storm
December 2000 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · DR-1355-OK

Codes & laws coverage

County ordinances indexing

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Laws & Codes

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  • 2010-6638 Executive Order 11423, as Amended; Notice of Receipt of Application To Amend the Presidential Permit for the Nogales-Mariposa International · source
  • 2010-7182 Formations of, Acquisitions by, and Mergers of Bank Holding Companies · source
  • 2010-5053 Sunshine Act Meeting · source
  • 2010-5225 Draft Regulatory Guide: Issuance, Availability · source
  • 2010-1714 January 2010 Pay Adjustments · source
  • 2010-2336 Self-Regulatory Organizations; Chicago Board Options Exchange, Incorporated; Order Approving Proposed Rule Change To Establish a Pilot Progr · source
  • E9-31380 Use of Additional Portable Oxygen Concentrator Devices on Board Aircraft · source
  • 2010-5057 Combined Notice of Filings #1 · source
  • 2010-8705 South Carolina Electric & Gas Company, South Carolina; Notice of Public Meeting on Environmental Assessment · source
  • 2010-4170 Notice of Buy American Waiver Under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 · source

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