Saline Preservation Association works to save historic courthouse

Item

Format
newspaperArticle
Creator
Chavez, Will
Title
Saline Preservation Association works to save historic courthouse
Is Part Of
Cherokee Phoenix
Abstract
"We had a great meeting today. Approximately 65 plus (people) were in attendance," said SPA President Lisa Melchior. "(Former Cherokee Nation treasurer) Jay Hannah did a wonderful job speaking, as well as Heather Seifert, executive director of Preservation Oklahoma." Those in attendance at the meeting agreed to establish a membership drive. Some of the ideas collected from the community during the meeting, Melchior said, are to preserve the courthouse as it stands today, build an interpretive center and a nature trail and use the courthouse for weddings/reunions. Another idea suggested was to build a store that would include a bookshop. The Saline Courthouse is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The NRHP lists the courthouse's period of significance between 1875-1899 saying the building is "a handsome reminder of the well-organized and quite effective judicial system brought by the Cherokees from their homeland in the southeast and re-established in Indian Territory."
pages
11
Publication location
Tahlequah, Okla.
Temporal Coverage
1884
View related resources
Cherokee Nation
Identifier
I9U4AJ63