comparemela.com

Latest Breaking News On - மரபு திருவிழா - Page 1 : comparemela.com

Your guide to summer fun in Oklahoma — from road trips to museums to nature and more

Your guide to summer fun in Oklahoma from road trips to museums to nature and more Brandy McDonnell, Oklahoman © Sarah Phipps, The Oklahoman File Crape myrtles bloom at the Myriad Botanical Gardens in downtown Oklahoma City, Thursday, July 11, 2019. After months of lying low during the COVID-19 pandemic, all but the most diehard homebodies seem raring to get out and find things to see and do these days.  Fortunately, Oklahoma has plenty to offer, from fishing holes and family-friendly festivals to public artworks and plentiful museums.  Mile for mile, the Sooner State offers the nation s most diverse terrain, which visitors and residents alike can explore through more than 30 wildly divergent state parks, plus six national park sites, four national scenic byways and countless other breathtaking spots. 

What we know about President Biden s visit to Tulsa

A white mob killed hundreds of Black people in Tulsa 100 years ago Survivors still demand justice

A white mob killed hundreds of Black people in Tulsa 100 years ago. Survivors still demand justice Alex Woodward © Provided by The Independent Within two days, it was reduced to rubble. Tulsa’s Greenwood was a place of possibility and prosperity for Black Americans following decades of enslavement, racist violence and legalised discrimination in a Jim Crow-era marked by public lynchings and the beginnings of mass incarceration emerging from slavery. An oil boom saw Tulsa’s population grow in the early 1900s. By 1921, in Tulsa’s northern neighbourhoods, a thriving community of 10,000 people energised 35 blocks dotted with red-brick buildings and marquees for clubs and movie theatres, with newspapers, upscale restaurants, hotels and churches, nearly all owned and operated by Black residents.

© 2024 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.