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Oklahoma, Pittsburg County, 4.06 Acre Paradise Valley, Lot 26, Electricity. TERMS $460/Month
Oklahoma, Pittsburg County, 4.06 Acre Paradise Valley, Lot 26, Electricity. TERMS $460/Month
 
Our Price: 46,000
Down Payment: $121.00

Down Payment with Selected Options: $121.00

Quantity in Stock:SOLD

Product Code: OK_PITTSBURG_PARADISEVALLEY26


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Description
 

Paradise Valley

Oklahoma, Pittsburg County, 4.06 Acre Paradise Valley. TERMS $460/Month

LOT 26

Financing:
This lot is being offered for sale with financing. Simply make the small down payment, and the land contracts will be emailed and hard copy mailed to you immediately. You can start using or building your land while you are making payments.

Down Payment: $121

Monthly Payments: $460

Sales Price: $46,000

Interest Rate: 9%

10% DISCOUNT ON REMAINING BALANCE IF PAID EARLY


Checkout:
The checkout above bills the down payment only.















Location and Legal Description

Paradise Valley, Pittsburg County, Oklahoma
4.06 Acres

Paradise Valley is the perfect balance between countryside living with the convenience of larger cities close by. This property consist of rolling meadows with dense trees throughout, along with the other tracts that share the creek that runs though. Utilities such as power along the country road and cell phone signal within most of the property, Paradise Valley gives you the options of rural yet convenient living.











Entrance to subdivision

SIZE: 4.06 Acres

TAXES: Less than $4 per year, per acre and are current.

UTILITIES: Electricity

ZONING:Residential

Pittsburg County, Oklahoma

Located in southeastern Oklahoma, Pittsburg County was named after Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Early explorers and traders traveled the area in the 1700s. In the early 1800s, the Texas Road and part of the California Road were early travel routes in Pittsburg County. During the Civil War, two Confederate posts were established in the county, Camp Jumper and a camp in Perryville. In the Battle of Perryville in 1863, Union forces burned the camp and the town. Coal mining in Pittsburg County began prior to the 1880s and was a major industry in the area.

Hunters come from all over to look for deer, wild turkey, wild boar, quail, and squirrel in Pittsburg County. Oklahoma hunters have on average taken nearly 100,000 deer a year for the last several deer seasons and the state is looking for ways to increase this number. Deer season is a huge event in this region of Southeastern Oklahoma!

TSoutheast Oklahoma is far more mountainous and forested than any other part of the state, containing most of the Ouachita Mountains in Oklahoma, the Arbuckle Mountains, and five other mountain ranges. The Ouachita National Forest, Oklahoma's only national forest, is also in this area. Kiamichi Country also houses "The World's Highest Hill," a 1,999-foot peak near Poteau, with the official designation for a "mountain" being anything 2,000-feet or taller. The region contains Oklahoma's largest lake by surface area, Eufaula Lake. Other major lakes include Robert S. Kerr Reservoir, Sardis Lake, Hugo Lake, McGee Creek Reservoir, Pine Creek Lake, Brok