Beginning in the early 1940s, Hugo, Okla., became known as “Circus City USA.”
That’s because the place was teeming with circus people and their animals during the winter months.
The traveling circuses during that era would camp in Hugo from
December through March, because of a mild climate due to its location between
the Kiamichi Mountains and the Red River of the South.
This small city in southern Oklahoma, which is conveniently situated on U.S. Route 70, a major east-west transcontinental highway, “offered a respite from harsher winters, making it ideal for circus troupes to rest, repair their gear and train for the next season,” wrote journalist James Pratt of Edmond, Okla.
The first to come in 1941 was Obert Miller, founder of the Kelly Miller Circus, which originated in Wilson, Kan. Word spread and soon Hugo became a magnet for more than 20 other traveling circuses.
“Hugo became a bustling off-season hub, with circus performers, animal trainers and roustabouts forming a tight-knit community,” Pratt said.
The
Kelly Miller Circus began in 1937, literally as a small dog and pony show, in a
tent that was hand-sewn by Obert Miller and his two sons, Dores Richard “D.R.” and
Kelly.
Obert and his wife, Mary, worked the animal acts and handled the bookings. Kelly sold tickets and clowned. His wife, Dale, played the calliope. D.R. and his wife, Isla, did a wire act and trapeze.
The show steadily grew and expanded. By 1950, it had reached the stature of being one of the country’s major motorized circuses and was noted for carrying the largest menagerie of wild animals.
Although the “traveling circus business” is no longer booming, a few companies have survived, including Kelly Miller, Carson & Barnes, Culpepper & Merriweather and The Great Benjamins circuses.
All have ties to Hugo. (The best
source for historical circus information is the Frisco Depot Museum in Hugo.)
About 5,130 people live in Hugo today, and they cling to their “circus city” heritage.
Many “Scenic 70” tourists come to reverently meander through the
“Showmen’s Rest” section of the Mount Olive Cemetery in town.
The graves of Obert and Mary Miller form the centerpiece. Their marker is etched with the main entrance of a circus, complete with ticket booth.
“In Showmen’s Rest, the final curtain has fallen, but the show, somehow, goes on,” Brandes said.
In 1993, D.R. and Isla Miller established the Endangered Ark Foundation in Hugo as a 250-acre preserve for retired circus elephants.
The Miller family’s herd of 16
Asian elephants is one of the largest in the United States. The males and
females reside in separate barns on the ranch.
“Visitors
can get an up-close look at the majestic creatures, feed them and see how
they’re pampered in retirement,” according to Karyn Olmos, executive director of
Endangered Ark.
Recently, leaders of the Hugo Area Chamber of Commerce were instrumental in formulating a resolution to commemorate the 100-year anniversary of Route 70.
They joined with other local chambers along the route in journeying to the state capital in Oklahoma City to witness an overwhelmingly favorable vote in the state senate on April 7, 2026.
The bill was sponsored by Sen. David Bullard, whose district
includes Hugo.
Perhaps
it can be a model for other Route 70 states – North Carolina, Tennessee,
Arkansas, Texas, New Mexico and Arizona.

























































