Resource Type

[Photograph 2012.201.B0421B.0224]

Photograph used for a story in the Oklahoma Times newspaper. Caption: "Peaceful looking frame home near southwest city limits of Stroud was scene early Sunday of double slaying in which Mrs. Betty McCullough, wife of a soldier in Vietnam, and her 16-year-old sister, Mary Alice Valliquette, were beaten and stabbed."
Date: June 11, 1967
Creator: Brown, Don
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History

[Photograph 2012.201.B0299B.0279]

Photograph used for a story in the Oklahoma Times newspaper. Caption: "Neighbor Lloyd Howard tells how he was awaken by 6-year-old son of Mrs. Betty McCullough after he discovered the bodies of his mother and her sister."
Date: June 11, 1967
Creator: Brown, Don
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History

[Photograph 2012.201.B1265.0554]

Photograph used for a story in the Oklahoma Times newspaper. Caption: "Surveying damage to her home on east side of Stroud, Mrs. Elmer Goodwin looks out storm door shattered by tornado Sunday night."
Date: June 11, 1967
Creator: Lucas, Jim
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History

[Photograph 2012.201.B1265.0542]

Photograph used for a story in the Daily Oklahoman newspaper. Caption: "Storm debris from his unroofed house in Stroud is surveyed by Elmer Goodwin."
Date: June 11, 1967
Creator: Lucas, Jim
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History

[Photograph 2012.201.B1265.0544]

Photograph used for a story in the Oklahoma Times newspaper. Caption: "Flipped by tornado that skipped over Stroud Sunday night is this trainer airplane at the municipal airport."
Date: June 11, 1967
Creator: Lucas, Jim
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History

[Photograph 2012.201.B0299B.0278]

Photograph used for a story in the Daily Oklahoman newspaper. Caption: "Lloyd Howard, 50-year-old Stroud carpenter, stood in his front yard Sunday, motioned with his thumb, and told reporters a suspicious car he had seen about the time two Stroud sisters were slain "looked exactly like that one there of my son's."
Date: June 11, 1967
Creator: Brown, Don
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History