Serial/Series Title

Notes and Documents, Spring 1969 (open access)

Notes and Documents, Spring 1969

Notes and Documents column including a note announcing the distribution of the Annual Index of The Chronicles, a narrative of Thomas Young hunting wild game within the Indian Territories, and a list of books catalogued by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Date: Spring 1969
Creator: Young, Thomas Fox
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History
Notes and Documents, Summer 1969 (open access)

Notes and Documents, Summer 1969

Notes and Documents column including a note regarding special reprints of the Chronicles on sale, a narrative about an educator working in rural Oklahoma, notes regarding the Studebaker family buying Cheyenne-Arapaho land, a notice about finding lost Studebaker family members, and a description of a park donated by the Studebaker family.
Date: Summer 1969
Creator: Oklahoma Historical Society
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History
Notes and Documents, Autumn 1969 (open access)

Notes and Documents, Autumn 1969

Notes and Documents column including an announcement of the distribution of the annual index for The Chronicle, an introduction to an article about Belva Lockwood: an advocator for the protection of American Indian lands in North Carolina and the first female lawyer in the United States, an article detailing her accomplishments, an article about the first performance of a Trail of Tears play in Park Hill, an article detailing the founding of Vinita, and an announcement of the dedication of the new Social Sciences Center at the University of Oklahoma to Edward Everett Dale.
Date: Autumn 1969
Creator: Oklahoma Historical Society
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History
Notes and Documents, Winter 1969 (open access)

Notes and Documents, Winter 1969

Notes and Documents column including an article by an anthropologist disproving the Heavener Runestone was created by Vikings an an ordinance for the operation of a waterwork in Eufaula.
Date: Winter 1969
Creator: Bell, Robert E. & Samuel, W. R.
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History