Oklahoma City National Memorial and Museum.
The most valuable commercial depot sites were those at Guthrie and Oklahoma City. Guthrie was the presumed but yet-to-be-named capital, and Oklahoma City lay astride a natural route for a future east-west railroad line. The run of 1889 was the scene not only of a horse race for farms; it was also the setting for foot races for commercial and.
EJI’s Community Remembrance Project. EJI’s Community Remembrance Project is part of our campaign to recognize the victims of lynching by collecting soil from lynching sites, erecting historical markers, and developing the National Memorial for Peace and Justice, which acknowledges the horrors of racial injustice. As part of its effort to help towns, cities, and states confront and recover.
The Land Run of 1889, although not without precedent in the history of the West, began the disposal of the federal public domain in Oklahoma. The legal basis for opening the Oklahoma District, now called the Unassigned Lands, came in 1889 when, in the U.S. Congress, Illinois Rep. William Springer amended the Indian Appropriations Bill to authorize Pres. Benjamin Harrison to proclaim the two.
National Archives and Records Administration 8601 Adelphi Road College Park, MD 20740-6001 The National Archives and Records Administration's facility in College Park, Maryland, holds U.S. Navy records created during and after World War II. Records at the National Archives are organized into Record Groups, which bring together the records of a particular agency or office. A listing and links.
The official site of the Oklahoma City Thunder. Includes news, scores, schedules, statistics, photos and video.
After 11 years and nearly 10 million visitors, the Newseum closed to the public on Dec. 31, 2019. Learn More. Freedom Forum. Fostering First Amendment freedoms for all. The Freedom Forum will continue the Newseum’s important First Amendment mission through public programs, digital initiatives and traveling exhibits. Learn More. Featured Content 1. Today’s Front Pages. Through a special.
Submit your best photos, browse our archive and share your favorites from the Smithsonian magazine Photo Contest.