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4 entries match your criteria.  

 
 

Historical Markers in Park Hill, Oklahoma

 
Clickable Map of Cherokee County, Oklahoma and Immediately Adjacent Jurisdictions image/svg+xml 2019-10-06 U.S. Census Bureau, Abe.suleiman; Lokal_Profil; HMdb.org; J.J.Prats/dc:title> https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Usa_counties_large.svg Cherokee County, OK (8) Adair County, OK (1) Delaware County, OK (4) Mayes County, OK (14) Muskogee County, OK (75) Sequoyah County, OK (3) Wagoner County, OK (17)  CherokeeCounty(8) Cherokee County (8)  AdairCounty(1) Adair County (1)  DelawareCounty(4) Delaware County (4)  MayesCounty(14) Mayes County (14)  MuskogeeCounty(75) Muskogee County (75)  SequoyahCounty(3) Sequoyah County (3)  WagonerCounty(17) Wagoner County (17)
Tahlequah is the county seat for Cherokee County
Park Hill is in Cherokee County
      Cherokee County (8)  
ADJACENT TO CHEROKEE COUNTY
      Adair County (1)  
      Delaware County (4)  
      Mayes County (14)  
      Muskogee County (75)  
      Sequoyah County (3)  
      Wagoner County (17)  
 
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1 Oklahoma, Cherokee County, Park Hill — Park Hill
Center of Cherokee culture was one mile east on Park Hill Creek; Home of Chief John Ross, Samuel Austin Worcester, Elias Boudinot, other pioneers and The Mission Press which printed millions of pages for the benefit of the Cherokee people nearly . . . Map (db m52751) HM
2 Oklahoma, Cherokee County, Park Hill — 66 — Park Hill Press
Established July, 1837, Rev. S.A. Worcester, Supt. Over 25 million pages were printed in Indian languages and in English by 1861. Printers and translators were John F. Wheeler, John W. Candy, Edwin Archer, Stephen Foreman. Near site are graves of . . . Map (db m52755) HM
3 Oklahoma, Cherokee County, Park Hill — 67 — Riley's Chapel
First Annual Indian Mission Conference of the Methodist Church was held in Oklahoma at Riley's Chapel, Oct. 23, 1844, Bishop Thomas A. Morris presiding. Conference area was west to the Rocky Mts., east to Ark.-Mo. line. Rev. Thomas Bertholf, . . . Map (db m52757) HM
4 Oklahoma, Cherokee County, Park Hill — Trail of Tears
(front) The United States Government, unable to conclude an agreement with the duly authorized leaders of the Cherokee Nation, signed a treaty with a minority faction willing to cede the last remaining portion of the original Cherokee . . . Map (db m77932) HM
 
 
  
 
 
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Apr. 27, 2024