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Angie Meadors spent her first 40 years setting the rodeo world on fire as a world-class barrel racer, barrel-horse trainer and model. She and her two-time World Champion Heeler husband, Kollin VonAhn, were living what they thought was their best fairytale life— rolling and winning—on the rodeo road. Then life happened.
Read moreThe following is the “Return to Learn” plan released by Wetumka Schools.
Read moreDr. Marvin Schoenecke is serviing as Provost and Executive Vice President for Campus Life at the Williams Baptist University. Schoenecke, came to Williams from College of the Ozarks in Missouri, and began his duties at WBU in April of 2019.
Read moreBessie Mae Parker passed away Saturday, August 15, 2020, at Mercy Hospital in Oklahoma City at the age of 78.
Read moreGlenda Jean (Montgomery) McElhaney, at the age of 77, passed away on the afternoon of August 11, in the year 2020. Having been in poor health she passed from her loved ones while being hospitalized at St Francis in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Read moreGraveside services for Barbara Ann Chaffin Stewart, 85, of Allen were 2:00 p.m. Tuesday, August 18th, at the Atwood Cemetery, Rev. Coy Howry will officiate.
Read moreDelve into Oklahoma’s African American history from pre-statehood to the Civil Rights movement while exploring the landmarks, historic towns and museums that provide endless opportunities for discovery. Oklahoma’s African American journey is tightly woven into the historical fabric of Oklahoma. Here, learn about the profound impact African Americans have had on the state’s military, frontier, Western and modern history. African Americans first crossed into Indian Territory during the Trail of Tears, when thousands of Native Americans were forcibly removed from their ancestral lands between 1830 and 1842. Many African Americans that made the journey were enslaved by Native Americans, but a group of 500 agreed to move to Indian Territory in exchange for their freedom. This group of 500, which started out as The Gullah, a west African enclave that lived side-by-side with refugee Seminoles in Florida, made the trip as free men. The African Americans that survived the trip either remained enslaved until treaties between the U.S. and American Indian tribes were ratified or lived among the tribes as Black Seminoles.
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