Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
John Henry was a late entry into the Inaugural Breeders Cup in 1984 but a strained ligament in his left foreleg caused him to be withdrawn from the race and retired. John Henry's final race record stood at 83 starts, 39 wins, 15 seconds, and 9 thirds with $6,591,860 in earnings.
website, located in the historic Samuel Travis Mansion, changing exhibits of Tulsa and Oklahoma history Tulsa Zoo and Living Museum: Tulsa: Tulsa: Green Country: Zoo: Twister Museum: Wakita: Grant: Red Carpet Country: Media: website, location and items used in filming the movie Twister: University of Central Oklahoma Galleries: Edmond: Oklahoma ...
The horse John Henry won the race twice. [5] [6] On August 30, 1981, Willie Shoemaker became the first jockey to win a $1 million thoroughbred horse race when John Henry took the inaugural Arlington Million by a nose over The Bart. The track famously ran the Arlington Million in 1985 under the shadow of a burnt-out grandstand, after a fire had ...
James Pepper Henry is a Native American museum director and vice-chairman of the Kaw Nation. [1] He was the executive director of the First Americans Museum in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, which opened on 18 September 2021.
General John F. Reynolds, by Henry Kirke Bush-Brown, Gettysburg Battlefield, 1898–99. General John Sedgwick, by Henry Kirke Bush-Brown, Gettysburg Battlefield, 1910–13. Major-General Robert E. Lee atop Virginia State Monument, by Frederick William Sievers, 1917. General Oliver O. Howard, by Robert Aitken, Gettysburg Battlefield, 1932.
James Pepper Henry was named director and CEO of the long-delayed museum in 2017, shepherding it through its public opening in fall 2021 and beyond.
The memorial statue "Dash for Cash" in front of the American Quarter Horse Association museum in Amarillo, Texas. The American Quarter Horse Hall of Fame and Museum was created by the American Quarter Horse Association (AQHA), based in Amarillo, Texas. Ground breaking construction of the Hall of Fame Museum began in 1989. [1]
Viola Fletcher, 110, and Lessie Benningfield Randle, 109, are the last known survivors of one of the single worst acts of violence against Black people in U.S. history.