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A: Main, news
February 5, 2025
February is Black History Month
By ALMA HARPER GARDENIA ART FEDERATED CLUB

February annually honors Black History Month. We celebrate the achievements and history of African Americans and their contributions to our society and the world.

This specific month was chosen to coincide with the birthdays of two prominent figures in African American history, Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass. Lincoln’s birthday is Feb. 12 and Douglass’s birthday is on Feb.14 In 1915 Carter G. Woodson, co-founded the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History. In 1926, the group declared the second week in February as “Negro History Week” to recognize the contributions of African Americans in U.S. History.

In 1976 Black History Week became Black History Month by President Gerald Ford when he extended the recognition. He urged Americans to “seize the opportunity to honor the too-often neglected accomplishments of Black Americans in every area of endeavor throughout our history.”

In the black community Black History month was met with enthusiastic response. Many Black clubs were formed, schools and churches held Black History events.

Today, Black History Month is celebrated during February and beyond. The Wall Street Journal describes it as “a time when culture and contributions of African Americans take center stage” in a variety of cultural institutions including theaters, libraries and museums.

Every year the ASALH (Association for the Study of African American Life and History) selects a new theme for Black History Month. The 2025 theme is: African Americans and Labor.

African Americans and Labor

African Americans and Labor focuses on the various ways that work and working of all kinds – free and unfree, skilled and unskilled, vocational and involuntary – intersect with the experiences of Black people.

This theme highlights Black people and their work whether in the cotton fields as enslaved Africans, traditional agricultural, factories, educations, entrepreneurship in Black communities, ete.

The theme focuses on the impact of work on the experience of Black people from the past to the present.

Ironheads punch ticket to the Big House with gritty 48-42 win over Chandler
A: Main, sports
Ironheads punch ticket to the Big House with gritty 48-42 win over Chandler
By Rodney Haltom sports EDITOR 
March 11, 2026
The Eufaula Ironheads are headed back to the state tournament after grinding out a hard-fought 48-42 victory over Chandler, securing their place at the OSSAA State Tournament at the Big House in Oklah...
A: Main, news
Deadline to change party affiliation approaches
March 11, 2026
Oklahomans who want to change their party affiliation must submit their change no later than March 31, McIntosh County Election Board Secretary Kim Limbaugh said today. Voters may change their party a...
A: Main, news
Former OSBI investigator sentenced for multiple counts of sexual abuse of a minor
March 11, 2026
MUSKOGEE – The United States Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Oklahoma announced that Jordan Francis Toyne, age 37, of Broken Arrow, Oklahoma, was sentenced to 109 months in prison for ea...
Communities built through faith and determination
A: Main, news
Communities built through faith and determination
By STAFF WRITER 
March 11, 2026
On a cool Saturday morning, Feb. 28, in the closing days of Black History Month, the steeple of Mt. Olive Star Baptist Church in Checotah rose above a quiet gathering devoted to remembrance, faith and...
Community says goodbye to pillar, leader and friend Gary Lee Nichols
A: Main, news
Community says goodbye to pillar, leader and friend Gary Lee Nichols
By Shauna Belyeu General Manager 
March 11, 2026
There are men who build businesses. And there are men who build communities. Gary Lee Nichols did both. For more than five decades, Gary wasn’t just the owner of grocery stores; he was a steady presen...
An All American 18th Annual Chili Cook-Off Success
A: Main, news
An All American 18th Annual Chili Cook-Off Success
By LaDonna Rhodes Staff Writer 
March 11, 2026
The 18th Annual Checotah Chili Cook-Off hosted by the Heartland Heritage Museum & Gallery was a culinary showdown of steaming hot chili along with American patriotism for fun-filled evening of food an...
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Tahlequah resident sentenced for illegal possession of firearm and ammunition
March 11, 2026
MUSKOGEE – The United States Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Oklahoma announced that Bradley Eugene Davis, a/k/a Bradley Eugene Mefford, age 31, of Tahlequah, Oklahoma, was sentenced to ...
Oversight work and deadlines
commentary
Oversight work and deadlines
By REPRESENTATIVE NEIL HAYS (405) 557-7302 
March 11, 2026
This week has been especially active at the Capitol as oversight c ommit tees work through one of the most imp ortant stages of the legislative session. At this point in the process, all remaining Hou...
The ‘prose’ and cons of paragraphs
commentary
The ‘prose’ and cons of paragraphs
March 11, 2026
I miss the days of true creative writing – you know, when you could write a real paragraph and your readers could keep up with the story. You didn’t have to throw in a bunch of pictures or short and s...
Morel to love
news
Morel to love
March 11, 2026
The House Tourism Committee this week passed House Bill 3263 to establish the morel mushroom as Oklahoma’s state mushroom. Considered a delicacy because of cultivation difficulties, several thousand O...
news
Wild Onion Dinner
March 11, 2026
The Eufaula-Canadian Tribal Town will be hosting the annual Wild Onion Dinner on Saturday, March 14, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Eufaula Indian Community Nutrition Center, 800 Birkes Rd., Eufaula. The co...
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