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Seneca Indian School

1872 establishments in Indian Territory1980 disestablishments in OklahomaBoarding schools in OklahomaDefunct boarding schoolsDefunct schools in Oklahoma
Educational institutions disestablished in 1980Educational institutions established in 1872Native American boarding schoolsNative American history of OklahomaPublic schools in OklahomaSchools in Ottawa County, OklahomaSenecaShawnee historyWyandot
Photograph probably made by Charles R. Scott, an employee of the Seneca Training School, for Superintendent Horace B.... NARA 251696
Photograph probably made by Charles R. Scott, an employee of the Seneca Training School, for Superintendent Horace B.... NARA 251696

The Seneca Indian School was a Native American boarding school located in Wyandotte, Oklahoma. Initially founded for Seneca, Shawnee, and Wyandotte children, in later years it had many Cherokee students. The school operated from 1872 to 1980.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Seneca Indian School (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Seneca Indian School
Turtle Drive,

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N 36.80167 ° E -94.72556 °
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Seneca Indian School

Turtle Drive

Oklahoma, United States
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Photograph probably made by Charles R. Scott, an employee of the Seneca Training School, for Superintendent Horace B.... NARA 251696
Photograph probably made by Charles R. Scott, an employee of the Seneca Training School, for Superintendent Horace B.... NARA 251696
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John Patrick McNaughton Barn
John Patrick McNaughton Barn

The John Patrick McNaughton Barn, also known as the McNaughton Barn or the Max Mirage View Farm Barn, is a 3½ story wooden barn located in Ottawa County near Miami, Oklahoma. Built on a rising hill in 1893 as a multi-purpose barn, the McNaughton Barn is still in use today at the Ankenman Ranch, a working cattle ranch. The barn stands on a limestone foundation dug from the hill itself. The structure covers approximately 9600 ft² (842 m2), laid out in a symmetrical, 80 ft by 120 ft (24.3 m by 36.5 m) rectangle with a long, low Dutch hip roof. There is a single gabled dormer on the south side. A cupola can be seen in early photographs of the barn, but it was lost or removed sometime after 1906. The first floor has two aisles of stalls, with dirt floors as part of the barn's foundation. One aisle holds 16 stalls for large draft horses, and the other contains 10 stalls for smaller horses and stallions. Each stall has a small window, a grain bin, and a hay trough. The hay trough is fed by a chute from the hay racks on the second floor. The livestock entrances, on the south and east sides of brace posts, are sheltered under the barn's roof. The ground floor has four large grain storage areas, floor scales, three tack rooms, an office, a repair and storage area, and a chute from the grain storage areas on the second floor. The second floor, accessed by a wide staircase, holds the grain storage area and hay racks. In earlier times, sleeping quarters for visitors were located on the second floor. A portion of the third floor, accessed by a narrow set of stairs, is open to the second floor, to allow the second floor hay to cure. A pulley system with trap doors to the first floor was used to raise grain to this floor, which was then poured into one of the three grain columns for distribution to the livestock and other storage areas. Over a century of hard work and Oklahoma weather, the barn gradually fell into disrepair. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1991 as an "outstanding local example of a massive prairie barn." The Ankenman Ranch began restoration of the McNaughton Barn in 2001, and completed the effort in 2002.