Post office buildings -- Oklahoma
Found in 7 Collections and/or Records:
Cheyenne and Arapaho Native Americans and government officials at the Beidler Building (post office) for meeting concerning the Cheyenne and Arapaho rights in the Cherokee Outlet. Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Territory, May 23, 1889. Copied from a print made f, 1889
Black and white copy prints of Norman and Cheyenne, Oklahoma Territory and state. Also photographs of Drumright and Broken Bow, Oklahoma, the University of Oklahoma, cowboys, businesses, and Cheyenne-Arapaho Indians.
Delegates to council on Cheyenne and Arapaho rights in the Cherokee Outlet posed in front of the Beidler building, the second post office building in Oklahoma City. Cheyenne and Arapaho leaders with the Honorable John D. Miles, commissioner; ex-governor C, 1889
Black and white copy prints of Norman and Cheyenne, Oklahoma Territory and state. Also photographs of Drumright and Broken Bow, Oklahoma, the University of Oklahoma, cowboys, businesses, and Cheyenne-Arapaho Indians.
First Post Office. Sharon, Oklahoma circa 1912., circa 1912
Black and white copy prints of the town of Hackberry, which later became Sharon, Oklahoma, showing businesses, street scenes, and the railroad depot.
Hollis Public Library Photograph Collection
Black and white copy prints of Hollis, Bethel, Dryden, Looney and Metcalf, Oklahoma. Includes scenes of businesses, postal service, agriculture, parades, schools, school children, and studio portraits from these communities during both the territorial and statehood periods.
Joe Funchis and Pearl Fipps Funchis, seated in a horse-drawn carriage, on their wedding day. Carriage is in front of Okemah, Oklahoma, post office. 1908, 1908
Black and white copy prints of the towns of Moore and Snyder, Oklahoma Territory; Norman, Cement, Welch, Frederick, Stroud, Davidson, Vinita, Tipton, Peek, Ioland, Damon, and Elmore City, Oklahoma; and Coweta, Indian Territory. Included are scenes of businesses, the oil industry, railroads, parades, the University of Oklahoma, football, cotton marketing, and fire fighters.
Tom Cunningham Photograph Collection
Black and white original prints of Hollis, Oklahoma Territory. Included are scenes of cotton marketing, postal services, the Cunningham family, and blacksmiths.
Wilkins Oklahoma Post Office and store., undated
Black and white original prints of sawmills, quarries, lime kilns, lumber yards, glass factories, smelters, oil wells and storage tanks, and ranches in Oklahoma. The collection includes photographs of numerous Oklahoma cities and towns; the University of Oklahoma; of railroads, automobiles, and airplanes; of Apache, Cheyenne, Comanche, Kiowa, Sioux, and Wichita Indians; of limestone and gypsum deposits in Oklahoma; and of the Oklahoma salt plains. Quanah Parker, Wanda Parker, Hollow Horn Bear, Hunting Horse, Mad Wolf, Geronimo, Bear Claw, and Amy Toughfeathers are among the photographs of individuals in the collection.