Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Saybrook Colony was a short-lived English colony established in New England in 1635 at the mouth of the Connecticut River in what is today Old Saybrook, Connecticut. Saybrook was founded by a group of Puritan noblemen as a potential political refuge from the personal rule of Charles I .
Joseph B. Thoburn and John W. Sharp. History of the Oklahoma Press and the Oklahoma Press Association (Oklahoma City: Oklahoma Press Association, 1930). Federal Writers' Project (1941), "Newspapers", Oklahoma: a Guide to the Sooner State, American Guide Series, Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, pp. 74– 82, ISBN 9781603540353 – via ...
Oklahoma City: The Oklahoma Dispatch: 1981 [63] 1980s [63] Weekly [63] LCCN sn95076087; OCLC 32900258; Attested through at least 1983. [63] Published by Richard Keaton Nash. [63] Oklahoma City: The Oklahoma Guide: 1889 [1] 1889 [1] Monthly / "sporadic" [1] "We know little else about the journal except the fact of its existence." [1] Oklahoma ...
The Oklahoman is the largest daily newspaper in Oklahoma, United States, and is the only regional daily that covers the Greater Oklahoma City area. [2] The Alliance for Audited Media (formerly Audit Bureau Circulation) lists it as the 59th largest U.S. newspaper in circulation.
U.S. District Judge Tim Leonard has the Nov. 22-23, 1963, newspapers from The Daily Oklahoman, OKC Times, Oklahoma Daily, Washington Post and the Dallas Morning News on the Kennedy assassination.
The Norman Transcript is a daily newspaper published in Norman, Oklahoma, United States, covering Cleveland and McClain counties, in the southern suburbs of Oklahoma City. It is owned by Community Newspaper Holdings Inc. The newspaper is the oldest business in Norman. It was founded by settler Edward Philip Ingle on July 13, 1889.
"There's so much to the history of Fort Smith: the city itself, but then also how it relates to Indian territory and all of that history," Gray said. ... "Oklahoma currently is home to 39 ...
Australian Peter Norman, the silver medalist in the 200-meter run at the 1968 Olympic Games, supported Tommie Smith and John Carlos in their protest against unfair treatment of blacks in the ...