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===Museums=== The Seminole National Museum opened in 1974, after about ten years of planning by the Seminole community in Oklahoma. It is housed in a native stone building that initially served as the Wewoka Community Center, after it was built by the Works Progress Administration (WPA) in 1934. It operates as a non-profit organization, and does not charge an admission fee to visitors. The building has expanded from the original {{convert|1800|sqft|m2}} to {{convert|4000|sqft|m2}} and includes display space, a research library, an arts and crafts center, an art gallery, a small office and a gift shop. The museum offers educational courses both on site and on the road (both in Oklahoma and in other parts of the United States. The museum estimates that it has had over half a million visitors from every state in the U.S. and over 100 other countries, since its opening.<ref>[https://www.seminolenationmuseum.org/museum-info/museum-building/ "Museum Building". Seminole National Museum.] Accessed October 20, 2016.</ref> Vance Trimble, a Pulitzer Prize winning news reporter, editor and author, donated an extensive collection of research materials he used in writing his book, ''Alice & J. F. B.'', a biography of Seminole chiefs Alice Brown Davis and John F. Brown. Trimble had turned down a request for these materials from the University of Oklahoma Western History Collection because the subjects of the book were central to the history of the Seminoles and the city of Wewoka.<ref>[https://www.seminolenationmuseum.org/blog/archive/m.blog/42/society-receives-trimble-archives "Society Receives Trimble Archives." Seminole National Museum. July 30, 2007.] Accessed October 20, 2016.</ref>
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