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Images tagged "tahlequah"

An image of the Cherokee County Courthouse in Tahlequah, Oklahoma.  The Tahlequah courthouse was built in 1962 for use as a hospital but was remodeled into its current configuration in 1978.  This image © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
A photo of the Cherokee County Courthouse in Tahlequah, Oklahoma.  The Tahlequah courthouse was built in 1962 for use as a hospital but was remodeled into its current configuration in 1978.  This photo © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
An image of the Cherokee County Courthouse in Tahlequah, Oklahoma.  The Tahlequah courthouse was built in 1962 for use as a hospital but was remodeled into its current configuration in 1978.  This image © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
A photo of the Cherokee County Courthouse in Tahlequah, Oklahoma.  The Tahlequah courthouse was built in 1962 for use as a hospital but was remodeled into its current configuration in 1978.  This photo © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
An image of the Cherokee County Courthouse in Tahlequah, Oklahoma.  The Tahlequah courthouse was built in 1962 for use as a hospital but was remodeled into its current configuration in 1978.  This image © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
A photo of the Cherokee County Courthouse in Tahlequah, Oklahoma.  The Tahlequah courthouse was built in 1962 for use as a hospital but was remodeled into its current configuration in 1978.  This photo © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
A photo of the Cherokee National Capitol in Tahlequah, Oklahoma.  Designed by C.W. Goodlander and completed in 1869, the brick Italianate structure served as the Cherokee capitol until Oklahoma statehood in 1907, at which point the structure became the Cherokee County Courthouse.  The building was turned back over to the Cherokee Nation in 1979 after the completion of the current Cherokee County Courthouse.  The Chickasaw National Capitol, which currently houses the judicial system for the Cherokee Nation, is a National Historic Landmark.  This photo © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
An image of the Cherokee National Capitol in Tahlequah, Oklahoma.  Designed by C.W. Goodlander and completed in 1869, the brick Italianate structure served as the Cherokee capitol until Oklahoma statehood in 1907, at which point the structure became the Cherokee County Courthouse.  The building was turned back over to the Cherokee Nation in 1979 after the completion of the current Cherokee County Courthouse.  The Chickasaw National Capitol, which currently houses the judicial system for the Cherokee Nation, is a National Historic Landmark.  This image © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
A photo of the Cherokee National Capitol in Tahlequah, Oklahoma.  Designed by C.W. Goodlander and completed in 1869, the brick Italianate structure served as the Cherokee capitol until Oklahoma statehood in 1907, at which point the structure became the Cherokee County Courthouse.  The building was turned back over to the Cherokee Nation in 1979 after the completion of the current Cherokee County Courthouse.  The Chickasaw National Capitol, which currently houses the judicial system for the Cherokee Nation, is a National Historic Landmark.  This photo © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
An image of the Cherokee National Capitol in Tahlequah, Oklahoma.  Designed by C.W. Goodlander and completed in 1869, the brick Italianate structure served as the Cherokee capitol until Oklahoma statehood in 1907, at which point the structure became the Cherokee County Courthouse.  The building was turned back over to the Cherokee Nation in 1979 after the completion of the current Cherokee County Courthouse.  The Chickasaw National Capitol, which currently houses the judicial system for the Cherokee Nation, is a National Historic Landmark.  This image © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
A photo of the Cherokee National Capitol in Tahlequah, Oklahoma.  Designed by C.W. Goodlander and completed in 1869, the brick Italianate structure served as the Cherokee capitol until Oklahoma statehood in 1907, at which point the structure became the Cherokee County Courthouse.  The building was turned back over to the Cherokee Nation in 1979 after the completion of the current Cherokee County Courthouse.  The Chickasaw National Capitol, which currently houses the judicial system for the Cherokee Nation, is a National Historic Landmark.  This photo © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
An image of the Cherokee National Capitol in Tahlequah, Oklahoma.  Designed by C.W. Goodlander and completed in 1869, the brick Italianate structure served as the Cherokee capitol until Oklahoma statehood in 1907, at which point the structure became the Cherokee County Courthouse.  The building was turned back over to the Cherokee Nation in 1979 after the completion of the current Cherokee County Courthouse.  The Chickasaw National Capitol, which currently houses the judicial system for the Cherokee Nation, is a National Historic Landmark.  This image © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
A photo of the Cherokee National Capitol in Tahlequah, Oklahoma.  Designed by C.W. Goodlander and completed in 1869, the brick Italianate structure served as the Cherokee capitol until Oklahoma statehood in 1907, at which point the structure became the Cherokee County Courthouse.  The building was turned back over to the Cherokee Nation in 1979 after the completion of the current Cherokee County Courthouse.  The Chickasaw National Capitol, which currently houses the judicial system for the Cherokee Nation, is a National Historic Landmark.  This photo © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
An image of the Cherokee National Capitol in Tahlequah, Oklahoma.  Designed by C.W. Goodlander and completed in 1869, the brick Italianate structure served as the Cherokee capitol until Oklahoma statehood in 1907, at which point the structure became the Cherokee County Courthouse.  The building was turned back over to the Cherokee Nation in 1979 after the completion of the current Cherokee County Courthouse.  The Chickasaw National Capitol, which currently houses the judicial system for the Cherokee Nation, is a National Historic Landmark.  This image © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
A photo of the Cherokee National Capitol in Tahlequah, Oklahoma.  Designed by C.W. Goodlander and completed in 1869, the brick Italianate structure served as the Cherokee capitol until Oklahoma statehood in 1907, at which point the structure became the Cherokee County Courthouse.  The building was turned back over to the Cherokee Nation in 1979 after the completion of the current Cherokee County Courthouse.  The Chickasaw National Capitol, which currently houses the judicial system for the Cherokee Nation, is a National Historic Landmark.  This photo © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
An image of the Cherokee National Capitol in Tahlequah, Oklahoma.  Designed by C.W. Goodlander and completed in 1869, the brick Italianate structure served as the Cherokee capitol until Oklahoma statehood in 1907, at which point the structure became the Cherokee County Courthouse.  The building was turned back over to the Cherokee Nation in 1979 after the completion of the current Cherokee County Courthouse.  The Chickasaw National Capitol, which currently houses the judicial system for the Cherokee Nation, is a National Historic Landmark.  This image © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
A photo of the Cherokee National Capitol in Tahlequah, Oklahoma.  Designed by C.W. Goodlander and completed in 1869, the brick Italianate structure served as the Cherokee capitol until Oklahoma statehood in 1907, at which point the structure became the Cherokee County Courthouse.  The building was turned back over to the Cherokee Nation in 1979 after the completion of the current Cherokee County Courthouse.  The Chickasaw National Capitol, which currently houses the judicial system for the Cherokee Nation, is a National Historic Landmark.  This photo © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
An image of the Cherokee National Capitol in Tahlequah, Oklahoma.  Designed by C.W. Goodlander and completed in 1869, the brick Italianate structure served as the Cherokee capitol until Oklahoma statehood in 1907, at which point the structure became the Cherokee County Courthouse.  The building was turned back over to the Cherokee Nation in 1979 after the completion of the current Cherokee County Courthouse.  The Chickasaw National Capitol, which currently houses the judicial system for the Cherokee Nation, is a National Historic Landmark.  This image © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
A photo of the Cherokee National Capitol in Tahlequah, Oklahoma.  In the foreground is a memorial, erected in 1913, honoring the Confederate dead.  Designed by C.W. Goodlander and completed in 1869, the brick Italianate structure served as the Cherokee capitol until Oklahoma statehood in 1907, at which point the structure became the Cherokee County Courthouse.  The building was turned back over to the Cherokee Nation in 1979 after the completion of the current Cherokee County Courthouse.  The Chickasaw National Capitol, which currently houses the judicial system for the Cherokee Nation, is a National Historic Landmark.  This photo © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
An image of the Cherokee National Capitol in Tahlequah, Oklahoma.  In the foreground is a memorial, erected in 1913, honoring the Confederate dead.  Designed by C.W. Goodlander and completed in 1869, the brick Italianate structure served as the Cherokee capitol until Oklahoma statehood in 1907, at which point the structure became the Cherokee County Courthouse.  The building was turned back over to the Cherokee Nation in 1979 after the completion of the current Cherokee County Courthouse.  The Chickasaw National Capitol, which currently houses the judicial system for the Cherokee Nation, is a National Historic Landmark.  This image © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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