History
History
of the Bacone House
Home of the Center for Tribal Studies
One of the first groups of Cherokee Indians to make the journey over the Trail of Tears to Indian Territory was led by Reverend Jesse Bushyhead and an assistant, Reverend Evan Jones. They ended their journey four miles northwest of Westville in 1839 and erected a church, which still stands today. They also established a school for the Cherokee which flourished.
In 1869, Reverend John B. Jones, son of Evan Jones, moved the school to Tahlequah to what is now known as the Bacone House. The house was built in 1867 by the Baptist Home Mission Society and for the next eleven years the house was used as a mission home and women's dormitory. In 1880, Almon C. Bacone founded the first Indian University in the United States, and it was located in this house. Reverend Bacone had moved to Indian Territory to teach at the Cherokee Male Seminary in Tahlequah. Frustrated in his efforts to teach religion at the Male Seminary, Bacone opened the privately-funded Christian school, Indian University, which attracted students from all over Indian Territory. The school opened in February with three students, but by the end of 1880, there were fifty-six enrolled. Indian University offered a wide range of courses from the primary grades through a four-year baccalaureate degree. Five years later Indian University was relocated to Muskogee and later renamed Bacone College.

In 1958, Mrs. Lillian Cunningham purchased the Wyly House for use as an apartment complex for NSU students. The house remained in her possession until 1979 when James Holderbee purchased it. A century-and-a-half after the first Indians used the house for a school, Dr. Garold D. Holstine, former president of Bacone College, founded Indian University, Inc., a group of citizens who realized the importance of saving a landmark. Simultaneously, President W. Roger Webb and Dr. Don Betz, Vice President of University Relations, began discussing the idea of establishing a center for the heritage of Native Americans.


In November of 1982, the historic structure was transferred to the Oklahoma Historical Society who officially deeded the building to Northeastern State University in December of 1987. The Center for Tribal Studies was founded shortly thereafter.
Restoration began under
the supervision of Physical Plant Director, Bob Patrick, Jr. The budget for
the restoration was just over $30,000. The physical plant provided the labor,
and the budget covered the cost of materials. The house had been empty for about
10 years and was mainly inhabited by pigeons and bats. "Before" photos,
taken before restoration began, are displayed throughout the house. The house
was restored within six months. The only thing original left on the building
were the bricks and a few of the glass windows which cast the same shadows as
they did over a hundred years ago. The house was restored to be as much like
the original as possible with new additions of bathrooms, porches, and gingerbread
trim.