Parades
Found in 102 Collections and/or Records:
‘89ers parade in Oklahoma City, April 22, 1925., 1925 April 22
Black and white original and copy prints of Oklahoma marshals, outlaws, frontier life, and agriculture along with scenes of the communities of Perry, Guthrie, Fort Sill and Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. The collection also includes photographs of Apache, Cherokee, Cheyenne, Comanche, Kiowa, Sioux and Wichita Indians. William M. Tilghman Manuscript Collection also in repository.
a. Downtown gathering in Oklahoma City, 1890. b. Band, c. 1918., 1890
Black-and-white copy prints of street scenes, businesses, parades, government buildings, churches, athletic events, parks, depots, and interurban trains in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Territory and state. Unpublished finding aid available.
A float drawn by four horses in Labor Day Parade, bearing the Queen of the Day. Negative enclosed., Undated
Black and white copy prints of Shawnee, Indian Territory, including photographs of a trade union parade, businesses, a cotton gin, and railroad construction.
A parade celebrating the first anniversary of the opening of Anadarko (Okla.) August 6, 1902., 1902, Aug 6
a. Parade in 1901. b. A view of downtown Oklahoma City., undated
Black-and-white copy prints of street scenes, businesses, parades, government buildings, churches, athletic events, parks, depots, and interurban trains in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Territory and state. Unpublished finding aid available.
A parade in an unknown early day Native American territory town. Note the hats worn by the Native Americans., undated
Black and white original prints of Fairview, Oklahoma Territory. Included are scenes of parades, businesses, and a fair. Andrew Beattie Walker Manuscript Collection also in repository.
A parade in Frederick, Okla., undated
Black and white original prints of Frederick and Manitou, Oklahoma, including scenes of businesses, farming, and city streets. The collection also contains a photograph of Theodore Roosevelt and his friends on a wolf hunt near Frederick, Oklahoma in 1905.
a. Parade in Oklahoma City, 1890. b. Gathering at the MK&T depot. c. Capitol Hill baseball team., 1890
Black-and-white copy prints of street scenes, businesses, parades, government buildings, churches, athletic events, parks, depots, and interurban trains in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Territory and state. Unpublished finding aid available.
A parade in Woodward., Undated
Black and white copy prints of towns in Woodward County, Oklahoma including Woodward, Richmond, Curtis, Tangier, Mooreland, Haskew, Mutual and Enid. The collection also contains photographs of agriculture, businesses, cowboys, the range cattle industry, schools, and the United States Cavalry. Woodward County Manuscript Collection also in repository.
A parade on Labor Day. Negative enclosed. 2 copies., Undated
Black and white copy prints of Shawnee, Indian Territory, including photographs of a trade union parade, businesses, a cotton gin, and railroad construction.
a. Protest at the state capitol in Oklahoma City. b. Parade in Oklahoma City, 1902. c. Fourth of July celebration in Oklahoma City, 1890., undated
Black-and-white copy prints of street scenes, businesses, parades, government buildings, churches, athletic events, parks, depots, and interurban trains in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Territory and state. Unpublished finding aid available.
A street scene at the 1st anniversary parade of Anadarko (Okla.), showing a wagon with a “Give Us Statehood” banner on its side, followed by a line of American Indians on horseback. August 6, 1902., 1902, Aug 6
A street scene showing the 1st anniversary parade in downtown Anadarko (Okla.) August 6, 1902., 1902, Aug 6
American Indian men and women on horseback, lined up for a July 4th parade. [Anadarko?] OK., undated
American Indians on horseback forming a line for a July 4th parade. Anadarko (Okla.) 1900., 1900
Another shot of the Manuel Perez (Jr.?) float. Negative, 5x7., undated
Black-and-white negatives and copy prints of Manuel Perez, Jr., taken primarily at Camp Mackall, North Carolina, during training for his service in the 511th Parachute Infantry Regiment of the U.S. Army in World War II. Unpublished finding aid available.
Apache chief Geronimo and City Marshal J.F. Hefley leading the Independence Day parade. Anadarko (Okla.) July 4, 1902., 1902, July 4
Apache spirit dancers at a parade. May be at Gallup. Colored, undated
Black and white original and copy prints of Navajo, Kiowa, Seminole, Pueblo, Cherokee, and Apache Indians. Also included are photographs of baskets from the Aleut, Apache, Attu, Cahuilla, Chemehuevi, Cheyenne, Chippewa, Clallam, Eskimo, Delaware, Havasupai, Haida, Hupa, Klikitat, Kickapoo, Karok, Klamath, Lillooet, Maidu, Makah, Modoc, Mono, Navajo, Nez Perce, Nootka, Paiute, Papago, Penobscot, Pima, Pomo, Pueblo, Hopi, Quinault, Seneca, Shoshoni, Tlingit, Ntlakyapamuk, Umatilla, Wailaki, Wasco, Washo, Winnebago, and Yokut tribes. The collection also contains views of archaeological work in the southwest United States, including Oklahoma City, Fort Sill, Okeene, Anadarko, Idabel, and Ardmore, Oklahoma; San Ildefonso, Santa Fe and Chimayo, New Mexico; and San Antonio, Texas. Alice Marriott Manuscript Collection also in repository.
Band in the parade at inauguration., undated
Black and white copy prints of the inauguration of Oklahoma governor Charles N. Haskell and the barbecue celebration which followed the inauguration. The collection also includes a scene of the Sequoyah Convention. Charles Nathaniel Haskell Manuscript Collection also in repository.
Band in the parade for the Indian Fair, Tonkawa. Band members are: Victor Walling – bass horn; Newton Crawford – trombone; Charles Bull – cornet; Charles Strain and Merton Shoff – snare drums; Ferguson – bass drum; Ernest Buck and Harry Perry – clarinets., undated
Black and white original and copy prints of Tonkawa, Oklahoma Territory and state, and scenes of farming, railroad construction, schools and businesses. Also includes scenes of Caddo, Omaha, Wichita, Cheyenne, Tonkawa, Comanche, Kiowa, and Apache Indians. Tonkawa Public Library Manuscripts Collection also in repository.
Cars in the “Leon Phillips” parade. In them are Mrs. Bertha Phillips, Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Phillips, Bert Steffies, and Ed Falkenberg, undated
Black and white original prints of Oklahoma Governor Leon C. Phillips and his family and friends. Leon Chase Phillips Manuscript Collection also in repository.
Comanche boy riding a horse in an Independence Day parade. Anadarko (Okla.) July 4, 1902., 1902, July 4
Decoration Day Parade in Guthrie, April 30, going east on Oklahoma Avenue to Capitol Square where services were held. The parade was headed by U.S. Calvary under Capt. Arthur MacArthur, the father of General Douglas MacArthur, who with his mother often visited his father at Camp MacArthur on Cottonwood Creek southeast of the city during 1889. The frame of a building (Billiard Hall) is visible. Guthrie, O.T., May 30, 1889., 30 May 1889
Black and white original and copy prints of the towns of Guthrie, Edmond, El Reno, Oklahoma City, Perry, Kingfisher and Anadarko, Oklahoma. Scenes of farming, railroads, mining, outlaws, the U.S. Army, Boomers, the University of Oklahoma and businesses are included, along with those of Cheyenne, Shawnee, Wichita, Apache, Potawatomi, Kickapoo, Comanche, Kiowa, Pawnee, Osage, Wyandotte, Ponca, Iroquois, Seminole and Iowa Indians.
Elaborately carved band wagon pulled on street by three teams of horses., Undated
Black and white copy and contact prints of the Miller Brothers 101 Ranch near Marland, Oklahoma, and of the 101 Wild West Show, photographed by Vince Dillon.
Elva Groves Photograph Collection
Black and white prints, mostly of cowboys and cattle, farms and farmers, railroad depots, and rolling stock, in and around Wray, Colorado. The collection also includes photographs of Geronimo, of a bridge across the Brazos River that had been damaged by stampeding cattle, and of the interior of a mine near Cripple Creek, Colorado.
First statehood anniversary parade, Mutual, Oklahoma, 1908., 1908
Black and white copy prints of towns in Woodward County, Oklahoma including Woodward, Richmond, Curtis, Tangier, Mooreland, Haskew, Mutual and Enid. The collection also contains photographs of agriculture, businesses, cowboys, the range cattle industry, schools, and the United States Cavalry. Woodward County Manuscript Collection also in repository.
Fourth of July parade. Anadarko (Okla.) 1902., 1902
Fourth of July Parade. Wagon in parade full of people. A picnic was later held at Andrews Park. Norman, Oklahoma, 1910. Norman Transcript, donated by Clyde Bogle., 1910 July 4
Black and white copy prints of Norman, Oklahoma Territory and state, including street scenes, businesses, parades and schools.
Frank Phillips Photograph Collection
Freshmen parade during OU vs. Kendall game, October 1919. 1,000 freshmen in parade led by band., 1919 October
Black-and-white original and copy prints of OU football games against Missouri and Kendall in 1919 at Boyd Field. The Ruf-Neks are pictured, as well as the OU mascot, Mex the dog. Other photographs depict university bands, clubs, and buildings. The collection also includes numerous photographs of R. Boyd Gunning, a University of Oklahoma administrator. Unpublished finding aid available.