Chronicles of Oklahoma, Volume 76, Number 2, Summer 1998 Page: 116

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Architecture and Hospitality: Ceremonial Ground Camps and Foodways of the Yuchi Indians (Article)

Architecture and Hospitality: Ceremonial Ground Camps and Foodways of the Yuchi Indians

Article discusses the history of the Yuchi tribe and their current practices through examination of their ceremonial ground camps. Jason Baird Jackson provides a detailed portrait of the people group and their daily lives.

The Best City in the Best Country: Enid's Golden Ear, 1916-1941 (Article)

The Best City in the Best Country: Enid's Golden Ear, 1916-1941

Article explores the "golden era" of Enid, Oklahoma, exploring the factors that contributed to its rise as one of the most prosperous cities in the region, which included the construction of railroads and the impact of the oil industry.

"I Should Have Been a Mule": Cotton Pickin' Blues in Southwestern Oklahoma (Article)

"I Should Have Been a Mule": Cotton Pickin' Blues in Southwestern Oklahoma

Article describes the development of the cotton industry in Oklahoma's Jackson County, from its success to its decline. Leo Kelley takes a closer look at the attitudes and lives of cotton farmers in Oklahoma through excerpts from newspapers and personal journals.

Fred Tecumseh Waite: The Outlaw Statesman (Article)

Fred Tecumseh Waite: The Outlaw Statesman

Article describes the life and career of Fred Tecumseh Waite, a Chickasaw politician with a colorful past who argued against the forced allotment of the Dawes Commission. Michael Tower discusses his journey from outlaw to statesman.

"Peculiarly Situated Between Rebellion and Loyalty": Civilized Tribes, Savagery, and the American Civil War (Article)

"Peculiarly Situated Between Rebellion and Loyalty": Civilized Tribes, Savagery, and the American Civil War

Article discusses the concept of "savagism" in the context of participation of the "Five Civilized Tribes" in the Civil War. Tom L. Franzmann investigates details and accounts of brutal practices conducted by both white and American Indian soldiers during the war and deconstructs the ideas that perpetrated society during the time.

For the Record, Summer 1998 (Article)

For the Record, Summer 1998

For the Record section including the minutes of the quarterly board meeting of the Board of Directors of the Oklahoma Historical Society that was held on January 28, 1998.

Notes and Documents, Summer 1998 (Article)

Notes and Documents, Summer 1998

Notes and Documents column including a document honoring T. L. Ballenger, who was inducted into the annual Oklahoma Historians Hall of Fame in 1998.

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Oklahoma Historical Society. Chronicles of Oklahoma, Volume 76, Number 2, Summer 1998, periodical, Summer 1998; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1725774/m1/6/?q=WPA&rotate=270: accessed April 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.

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