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Oklahoma City Bus Station

1941 establishments in Oklahoma2013 establishments in OklahomaBuildings and structures in Oklahoma CityGreyhound LinesTransport infrastructure completed in 1941
Transport infrastructure completed in 2013Transportation in Oklahoma City
Greyhound Station, Oklahoma City USA panoramio
Greyhound Station, Oklahoma City USA panoramio

The Oklahoma City Bus Station is an intercity bus station situated east of downtown Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. The station, managed by Greyhound Lines, also serves the Beeline Express. The current building was repurposed to a bus station in 2013. Oklahoma City has seen intercity bus transit since at least 1928, when a union bus terminal opened at on South Santa Fe Street. Later stations included an American Buslines station on Sheridan Avenue and a new union station which continued to serve Greyhound until 2013, when bus services moved to the present location on Reno Avenue.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Oklahoma City Bus Station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Oklahoma City Bus Station
East Reno Avenue, Oklahoma City

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Oklahoma City Bus StationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 35.463732 ° E -97.477301 °
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Address

Greyhound Bus Station

East Reno Avenue
73117 Oklahoma City
Oklahoma, United States
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Greyhound Station, Oklahoma City USA panoramio
Greyhound Station, Oklahoma City USA panoramio
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Douglass High School (Oklahoma City)

Frederick A. Douglass High School is a public high school in the city of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. The school is known for its role in serving African-American students in the state of Oklahoma and has produced a variety of academic researchers and civic leaders as well as military figures. Frederick Douglass Moon, the longest-serving principal at the school, went on to play a major role in the desegregation movement in the middle of the 20th century. Working from 1940 to 1961 at the High School, he went on to be elected to the Oklahoma City Board of Education in 1972 and served as its first African-American president in 1974. It is also known for its music program and the teacher, Zelia Breaux, who created the program that helped produce several notable musicians. The school began as a segregated school. It is named for Frederick Douglass. The school is located at 900 North Martin Luther King Avenue. The Trojans are the school's mascot. The new school building was built in 2006. The school song is "Rise up O Douglassites!". It serves 9th to 12th grades. The school colors are black and orange.According in US News in 2018, the school has about 405 students, 97 percent are minority, college readiness is about 7 percent, and slightly less than half of students are proficient in reading and math. About a quarter take Advanced Placement (AP) exams.Students from the school protested segregation and conducted sit-ins at segregated Oklahoma City businesses.