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  2. First Maroon War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Maroon_War

    The First Maroon War was a conflict between the Jamaican Maroons and the colonial British authorities that started around 1728 and continued until the peace treaties of 1739 and 1740. It was led by Indigenous Jamaican born to the land who helped liberated Africans to set up communities in the mountains who were coming off of slave ships.

  3. Gilcrease Museum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gilcrease_Museum

    Portrait of Cherokee leader Cunne Shote (1762) by Francis Parsons. Gilcrease Museum, also known as the Thomas Gilcrease Institute of American History and Art, [1] is a museum northwest of downtown Tulsa, Oklahoma housing the world's largest, most comprehensive collection of art of the American West, as well as a growing collection of art and artifacts from Central and South America.

  4. History of Jamaica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Jamaica

    Early in the 18th century, the Maroons took a heavy toll on British colonial militiamen who sent against them in the interior, in what came to be known as the First Maroon War. In 1728, the British authorities sent Robert Hunter to assume the office of governor of Jamaica; Hunter's arrival led to an intensification of the conflict. However ...

  5. Jamaican Maroons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamaican_Maroons

    Cudjoe's Town (Trelawny Town), ruled by Cudjoe, and secured recognition from the British after the First Maroon War (1728–1740). Most of the Trelawny Maroons were deported after the Second Maroon War to Nova Scotia, and then to Sierra Leone. Eventually, after Emancipation, in the 1840s, a few hundred Trelawny Maroons eventually returned from ...

  6. List of museums in Oklahoma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_museums_in_Oklahoma

    Oklahoma City Museum of Art: Oklahoma City: Oklahoma: Central: Art: Collection includes American and European painting and sculpture, drawings and prints, photography, glass by Dale Chihuly, information: Oklahoma City National Memorial: Oklahoma City: Oklahoma: Central: History: Memorial and museum about the Oklahoma City bombing on April 19 ...

  7. A Tulsa Race Massacre victim was recently ID’d as a World War ...

    www.aol.com/tulsa-race-massacre-victim-recently...

    In a photo provided by the city of Tulsa, a monument to honor people found or exhumed during a probe into the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre stands in Tulsa, Oklahoma, on Tuesday, November 12. (City of ...

  8. Oklahoma history: As anti-war protests ramped up in ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/oklahoma-history-anti-war-protests...

    Hundreds of thousands of anti-war protesters jammed the streets in April 1971 in Washington, D.C., and as the demonstration against U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War heightened, more than 7,000 ...

  9. Route 66 Historical Village - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Route_66_Historical_Village

    The Route 66 Historical Village at 3770 Southwest Boulevard in Tulsa, Oklahoma, is an open-air museum along historic U.S. Route 66 (US 66, Route 66). [1] The village includes a 194-foot-tall (59 m) oil derrick at the historic site of the first oil strike in Tulsa on June 25, 1901, which helped make Tulsa the "Oil Capital of the World". [1]