User:Eurodog/sandbox332

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Ada Lois Sipuel Fisher

Biship Travis Bruce Sipuel

Fisher's parents, Rev Travis Bruce Sipuel (1877–1946) and Martha Belle Sipuel, were survivors of the 1921

Pentecostal).[1] Sipuel rented a house in the Greenwood District on North Greenwood and leased a building for the North Greenwood COGIC. The building was located at 700 N. Greenwood (presently OSU Tulsa
), on the North end of the thriving Black Wall Street. Sipuel helped to grow the church to 40 people during his time there.

1922 → 700 N. Greenwood → Pastor M.W. Warren r. 520 N. Greenwood Avenue.

Black Dispatch


Bibliography

Notes

  1. ^ Fisher, 1996, p. 10.

References linked to notes


  • Holt, Melba Ruth (interviewer); Fisher, Bruce Travis (interviewee) (September 17, 2007). Oklahoma Voices: Bruce Fisher (oral history audio, with transcript, recorded at the
    OCLC 317313589
    .


  • Black Women in America An Historical Encyclopedia

Volumes 1 and 2, edited by Darlene Clark Hine Copyright 1993, Carlson Publishing Inc., Brooklyn, New York






  • TimesMachine
    ).








→ 9th ed., 1915
→ 10th ed., 1916
→ 11th ed., 1917
→ 12th ed., 1918
→ 13th ed., 1919
→ 14th ed., 1920
→ 15th ed., 1921



"Dunjee, Roscoe" – via Internet Archive {{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
"Dunjee, Roscoe" – via Google Books (limited view){{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)


  • Burke, Robert Gene ("Bobbie Gene") (born 1948);
    OCLC 39534297
    .








Photos

Re: East Central Teachers Association, Oklahoma

  • Photo by Sally Brittingham Wallace → "Oliver Jacobs Reading a Newspaper Titled The Black Dispatch". Headline: "East Central Teachers Deny Jim Crow Vote". (1940) – via
    Portal to Texas History
  • Photo by Sally Brittingham Wallace → "Oliver Jacobs Reading on Bunkhouse Porch at the Lambshead Ranch" – via
    Portal to Texas History