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2007 Coweta Fall Festival

Starting date:
Ending date:

Always call # confirm
Event# 918-486-2513

Event Details

35th year! Family Fun, Carnival Rides, Games, Arts & Crafts/Vendor booths, Food Booths, main stage entertainment, & much more!

2007 Coweta Fall Festival

Address : Downtown Coweta Tahlequah OK
Phone : 918-486-2513   (Always call and confirm events.)
Fax : 918-279-0829

Email Address : cowetachamber@juno.com

Web:
Admission Fee : Free

Festivals

Attractions and Upcoming Events

Memorial to the Confederate Dead

Erected in 1913 by the Colonial William Penn Adair Chapter of the Daughters of the Confederacy.

Tahlequah, OK Memorials

The First Telephone

Here in September, 1885, the first telephone in Oklahoma was connected for service. It was the first telephone in the Mississippi Valley west of St. Louis. The company was organized by a group of Cherokees, namely, D.W. Lipe, L.B. Bell, R.M. Wolfe, J.S. Stapler, J.B. Stapler, and E.D. Hicks.

Tahlequah, OK Markers

Murrell Home

The Murrell Home was built in the new Cherokee Nation about 1845 by George M. Murrell. Murrell was a native Virginain who married Minerva Ross in 1834. Minerva was a member of a wealthy mixed-blood Cherokee/Scottish family, and the niece of Chief John Ross.

Tahlequah, OK Museums

Monument to John Ross

John Ross 1790-1866

Principal Chief of the Cherokee, 1828 - 1866

Born October 3, 1790 in Turkeytown, Alabama, the son of a one-quarter Cherokee maiden and a Scotsman, John Ross was elected as the first Principal Chief of the Cherokee Indians in 1828

Tahlequah, OK Monuments

Cherokee National Prison

This sandstone building was erected in 1874 and originally had three stories. The third story was removed in 1925

Tahlequah, OK Historic Buildings

Things to do near Tahlequah, OK