Goltry is an incorporated rural small town in Alfalfa County, Oklahoma, United States.
[4] Located there are a town hall, a post office, a farmer's co-op with gas service, a fire department, and a bank, with several blocks of homes.
Originally part of the Cherokee Outlet, the area of present-day Goltry was not open to non-Indian settlement until September 1893.
After the opening, a settlement called Karoma emerged on the John Streich farm, approximately one and one-half miles southeast of present Goltry.
The new community was incorporated and named for Enid resident Charles Goltry, who owned the land and whose milling company constructed a grain elevator there.
[10] Goltry lies midway between the county seat of Cherokee, and the nearest city, Enid, via the aforementioned State Highway 45.