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Ponca City Public Schools is the public school district in Ponca City, Oklahoma. It operates seven elementary schools, two middle schools (one serves grades 6 and 7, the other serves grade 8), and Ponca City High School. It employs 760 people and has over 5,000 students. The entire school system shares the Wildcat mascot.
Ponca City High School is a public high school that serves approximately 1,500 students in grades 9–12, located in Ponca City, Oklahoma. [4] The current main principal is Thad Dilbeck. [5] The school's boundary includes Ponca City and White Eagle. [6] The school operates on a semester schedule.
Middle schools. East Middle School serves Ponca City's estimated 380 eighth-grade students in the Ponca City Public School system. West Middle School serves most of the district's sixth- and seventh-grade students. Elementary schools. Ponca City has currently eight elementary schools to serve the district's pre-K through fifth-grade students:
Built in 1927, the Employee Quarters and Guest Building contained two classrooms and an office for the school's principal. After all classes later moved into the 1932 School Building, this structure was remodeled to serve as employees' apartments. After the school closed, the building was converted to a fitness center for the Pawnee tribe.
The Ponca Reservation of the Ponca Tribe of Nebraska is located in northeast Nebraska, with the seat of tribal government located in Niobrara, Knox County. [1] The Indian reservation is also the location of the historic Ponca Fort called Nanza. The Ponca tribe does not actually have a reservation because the state of Nebraska will not allow ...
The Ponca signed their last treaty with the US in 1865. [11] In the 1868 US-Sioux Treaty of Fort Laramie [12] the US mistakenly included all Ponca lands in the Great Sioux Reservation. Conflict between the Ponca and the Sioux/Lakota, who now claimed the land as their own by US law, forced the US to remove the Ponca from their own ancestral lands.
Carrell decided to keep WBBZ permanently in Ponca City, [11] while retaining full ownership. WBBZ was a charter member of the Oklahoma Network when it was formed in 1937. [12] C. L. Carrell operated WBBZ until his death in 1933, after which his widow, Adelaide Lillian Carrell, took over as owner and station manager.
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