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The museum was founded by Frank Cullen and Donald McNeilly. [1] The museum posted historic content online and published Vaudeville Times magazine quarterly from 1998 to 2008 [2] [3] Its virtual museum included a bibliography of sources and an index of vaudevillians. [4] The museum was founded in 1986. [5]
Center of the American Indian (1978–1992), Oklahoma City; Derailed Railroad Company Museum, Blackwell, display moved to Top of Oklahoma Historical Society Museum after creator's death [103]
This is a list of properties and historic districts in Oklahoma that are designated on the National Register of Historic Places. Listings are distributed across all of Oklahoma's 77 counties . The following are approximate unofficial tallies of current listings by county.
Location of Oklahoma County in Oklahoma. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Oklahoma County, Oklahoma, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in a ...
County A in Oklahoma Territory: Abraham Lincoln, the sixteenth president of the United States: 36.04 34,562: 959 sq mi (2,484 km 2) Logan County: 083: Guthrie: 1891: County 1 in Oklahoma Territory: John A. Logan, American Civil War general: 71.18 53,029: 745 sq mi (1,930 km 2) Love County: 085: Marietta: 1907: Pickens County, Chickasaw Nation ...
Five high class vaudeville acts were presented, headlined by singer and comedian Herman Timberg, who had appeared a few weeks earlier at Chicago's Palace Theater. The evening closed with moving pictures. The manager was C. S. Harris. The Orpheum was the main vaudeville stop in Champaign and Urbana, and a member of the noted Orpheum Circuit.
The Oklahoma County jail's current location at 201 N Shartel Ave. is 1,400 feet away from John Rex Elementary School at Sheridan and Walker avenues and about 1,900 feet from Emerson Alternative ...
Theatre Owners Booking Association, or T.O.B.A., was the vaudeville circuit for African American performers in the 1920s. The theaters mostly had white owners, though about a third of them had Black owners, [1] including the recently restored Morton Theater in Athens, Georgia, originally operated by "Pinky" Monroe Morton, and Douglass Theatre in Macon, Georgia owned and operated by Charles ...