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The McCurtain Gazette-News was founded in Idabel, Oklahoma, in 1905 as the Idabel Signal. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The paper has been published by Bruce Willingham and the Willingham family since 1988. [ 3 ] In 2023, the paper had a circulation of about 4,400 readers and published three issues weekly.
McCurtain County is one of Oklahoma's most racially diverse counties, but remains highly economically and racially segregated. [3] On March 6, the McCurtain Gazette-News brought suit against the McCurtain County Board of County Commissioners, the county Sheriff's Office, Sheriff Kevin Clardy, and county investigator Alicia Manning in federal ...
McCurtain County National Bank in Broken Bow, Oklahoma. The area now included in McCurtain County was part of the Choctaw Nation before Oklahoma became a state. The territory of the present-day county fell within the Apukshunnubbee District, one of three administrative superregions comprising the Choctaw Nation, and was divided among six of its counties: Bok Tuklo, Cedar, Eagle, Nashoba, Red ...
The Oklahoma Sheriffs’ Association suspended the McCurtain County sheriff and two other staffers Tuesday after they were secretly recorded talking about killing reporters and lynching Black ...
In 2012, the Bulletin was combined with the Jenks Journal and Glenpool Post to form the South County Leader. The South County Leader ceased publication in 2014. [13] Branding Iron: Atoka: 1884 1884 [14] The Broken Arrow Ledger: Broken Arrow: 1904: 2017: Purchased by Tulsa World: Cheyenne Transporter: Darlington Agency: 1879 1886 [15] Choctaw ...
Idabel is a city in and the county seat of McCurtain County, Oklahoma, United States. The population was 7,010 at the 2010 census . [ 4 ] It is in Oklahoma's southeast corner, a tourist area known as Choctaw Country .
Trump’s first 2024 campaign rally will be held near the site of a deadly Texas ... while maintaining plausible deniability,” the newspaper notes. Mr Trump won McLennan County by more than 20 ...
The Black Hat Club [1] in Idabel, Oklahoma, was a whites-only club operating on the Black side of town. [2] The club attracted racial incidents. [1]Late January 19, 1980, a group of local Black youths: 15-year-old Henry Lee Johnson, his 13-year-old brother Victor, and other teenage boys entered the parking lot of the club through a hole in the gate.