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English: Editable Vector Map of the Tulsa Oklahoma US in SVG format. Can be edited in the following programs: Adobe Illustrator, CorelDraw, InkScape Principal streets and roads, names places, residential streets and roads, road number labels, water objects, land use areas.
Original file (20,839 × 12,880 pixels, file size: 55.79 MB, MIME type: image/jpeg) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
The original school building was at the corner of Elgin Avenue and Easton Street, in the Greenwood district of Tulsa. [6] By 1920, the four-room high school had been replaced by a three-story brick building. This continued to operate for nearly three decades. [5] Original building, Booker T. Washington High School in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Menus featured such items as chipped beef, boiled vegetables, stewed fruits, and rolled oats. The price to buy a lunch at school was up to 15 cents. U.S. Department of Agriculture / Flickr
This page was last edited on 22 January 2025, at 07:20 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Central High School is the oldest high school in Tulsa, Oklahoma. It was founded in 1906 as Tulsa High School, and located in downtown Tulsa until 1976. The school now has a 47-acre (19 ha) campus in northwest Tulsa. Tulsa Central is part of the Tulsa Public Schools, Oklahoma's largest school district, and is a public school for students from ...
Will Rogers Middle and High School, located at 3909 E. 5th Place in Tulsa, Oklahoma, was built by Tulsa Public Schools in 1939 using WPA workers and designed by Joseph R. Koberling, Jr. and Leon B. Senter. It was named for the humorist Will Rogers, who died in 1935, along with Wiley Post in a plane crash. Significant additions were made to the ...
The Tulsa metropolitan area is the economic engine of the Green Country as well as Eastern Oklahoma. In 2017 the Tulsa metropolitan area's GDP was $57.7 billion, [18] up from 43.4 billion in 2009, nearly thirty percent of Oklahoma's economy, and the 53rd largest in the nation. [19]