[Photograph 2012.201.B0052.0640] Metadata
Metadata describes a digital item, providing (if known) such information as creator, publisher, contents, size, relationship to other resources, and more. Metadata may also contain "preservation" components that help us to maintain the integrity of digital files over time.
Title
- Main Title [Photograph 2012.201.B0052.0640]
- Added Title Oklahoma Safety Week Was Hardly Over When This Car, Driven By Molinda Edline Cox
Date
- Creation: 1951-09-07
Language
- No Language
Description
- Content Description: Photograph taken for a newspaper owned by the Oklahoma Publishing Company. Caption: "OKLAHOMA SAFETY WEEK WAS HARDLY OVER WHEN THIS CAR, DRIVEN BY MOLINDA EDLINE COX, Midwest City, crashed into the Tinker air force base fence on SE 29 and came to rest at the foot of the huge safety sign. She said she didn't see the stop sign. The car skidded 90 feet straight across the intersection. Tinker officials estimated $125 damage to the fence. There was about $200 damage to the car. Trooper Leo White of the highway patrol issued her a ticket for running the stop sign. The picture was taken by Tinker as a damage record shortly after the accident September 4."
- Physical Description: 1 photograph
Subject
- University of North Texas Libraries Browse Structure: Business, Economics and Finance - Journalism
- Keyword: Accidents
- Keyword: Auto
- Keyword: County
- Keyword: Closed
- Keyword: 1950
- Keyword: newspaper photographs
- OPUBCO folder structure: ACCIDENTS / AUTO / COUNTY / CLOSED / 1950
Primary Source
- Item is a Primary Source
Coverage
- Place Name: United States - Oklahoma - Oklahoma County - Oklahoma City
- Coverage Date: 1951-09-07
- Time Period: mod-tim
Collection
-
Name: Oklahoma Publishing Company Photography CollectionCode: OKPCP
Institution
-
Name: Oklahoma Historical SocietyCode: OKHS
Resource Type
- Photograph
Format
- Image
Identifier
- Accession or Local Control No: 2012.201.B0052.0640
- Archival Resource Key: ark:/67531/metadc190424
Note
- Display Note: PublishDate: 9-7-1951 Oklahoman