The mission of the Oklahoma Historical Society (OHS) is to collect, preserve, and share the history and culture of the state of Oklahoma and its people. The OHS was founded on May 27, 1893, by members of the Territorial Press Association.
This issue is part of the following collection of related materials.
The Chronicles of Oklahoma
The Chronicles of Oklahoma is the scholarly journal published by the Oklahoma Historical Society. It is a quarterly publication and was first published in 1921.
Article details the events that transpired which resulted in the killing of Ed Chambers, a cowboy and cattleman who lived during Oklahoma's pioneering days, as told by a witness.
Necrology section for Volume 7, Number 1, March 1929. It includes documents honoring Robert Hall Parham, a newspaper man; Doctor L. C. Tennent, a doctor and former Confederate soldier; Thomas E. Oakes, one of the oldest citizens of Choctaw County; Thomas P. Braidwood, a founding member of No-Man's Land; Dr. W. W. Van Noy, a traveling doctor; Clarence Henry Colbert, a stockman and farmer; and Joel H. Nail, a Confederate Officer of the Choctaws.
Notes and Documents section for Volume 7, Number 1, March 1929. It includes a list of new members of the historical society, the minutes of the meeting of the annual meeting of the Oklahoma Historical Society held on January 23, 1929, the minutes of the meeting of the Board of Directors held on the same day, and the annual report of the treasurer to the society.
Notes and Documents, Chronicles of Oklahoma, Volume 7, Number 1, March 1929 - ark:/67531/metadc2191695