Category Archives: Oklahoma History
A Warm and Well Secured Walk Downtown when its Cold Outside
So what do you do if you work downtown and you need to stretch your legs a little bit but it is real cold outside?
Well if you can make it two blocks then you can walk quite a ways sheltered from the wind and the cold. And, as a bonus, if you take your camera and take pictures every now and then you will have your own security guy. You don’t get the same one the whole way, they just kind of daisy chain you from one to the other.
You enter the Philtower building, shown above. It was built by Waite Phillips (The same guy who lived in and then donated the Philbrook Museum to Tulsa before he and the Mrs. bugged out for California.) While there check out the ornate lobby shown below. There is a little room right off the lobby that has a display of the original drawings and such. Check it out. Also, if you have time check out the Philcade right across the street to the south. It is ultra ornate. There used to be 27 shops on the ground floor. Now its pretty much all office space.
From the Philtower you can go north through interconnecting doors all they way to the Midcontinent building. This is where your first security guy appears. He just kind of follows you around as you take pictures. The lobby is even more ornate the then Philtower. There is also stained glass depictions of downtown Tulsa and some paintings. One by Wilson Hurley (one of my favorites).
Go down the escalator, your new friend will go down with you. There is the below right display there. The Midcontinent building is actually one building cantilevered over another building with like a 1/16″ gap or so in between. Fascinating techhnically. Led to lawsuits that are still going on. Even more fascinating.
Let me ask you, don’t you think that the display is begging for a geocache? Something magnetic and hidden? Yeah, I do also. I have a feeling that my friends wouldn’t agree. Maybe later.
From there, head north through the tunnel. Your new friend doesn’t follow you. Hang a left at the parking garage and wind your way over to the BOK bank (not the tower, the one in the old Farmers Exchange building. You come out right by the vault. Even I knew not to take pictures of the vault.
On the way you pass some production studios and video conferencing centers and you pick another buddy. Nobody is going to mess with you on this walk, if you are afraid to walk downtown alone, you are on the right path.
My World – Cain’s Ballroom
Cain’s Ballroom is a Tulsa music icon. In the 1930’s and 40’s Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys broadcasted live their Texas Swing music from Cain’s Ballroom almost nightly. Wills and his band is long gone by lots of music is still played at the Ballroom. Read all the details here.
For other images from all over the world check out That’s My World.
Road Trip to Tahlequah – Cherokee Heritage Center
My Dad, Gramps, is in town visiting us for Thanksgiving. He is really into history and art type stuff so over the years we have taken him to the Gilcrease Museum, Philbrook, Woolaroc, the Oklahoma History Center and the Cowboy Hall of Fame in Oklahoma City, the Chisolm Trail museum in Duncan, and several other places that I have forgotten about. So yesterday we traveled down to Tahlequah to check out the Cherokee Heritage Center.
It is very cool, we enjoyed it very much, and I recommend it to anybody. They have a museum that had a temporary exhibit on some very intricate beadwork. The exhibit that blew me away was the display about the double dealing and thievery by white people prior to the Trail of Tears where the Cherokee, along with other tribes, were removed from their lands in the east to Indian Territory in what is now Oklahoma. It was a very brutal process.
AT-6 Crash Site
The family is down in Antlers, OK, queen city of Pushmataha County for the labor day weekend. We eat good. And of course, we do some geocaching. We didn’t find any this trip instead SuperPizzaBoy and I set one. It is where two British airplanes crashed during a training flight in World War II on a remote mountainside in Southeast Oklahoma.
One plane belly landed and the the other nosedived in so hard that the plane lifted a boulder into what the locals have always called “a natural tombstone.” That is quite a story but it doesn’t end there.
54 years later. 1997, in the small town of Rattan, OK, some elementary school children took an interest in the story and sought some more information on what happened. They wrote a letter t the Library of Congress. A staff member there took an interest in helping the kids. The kids decided that a monument was in order.
To make a long story short, three years later, on the 57th anniversary of the crash, a monument was dedicated to the four Brits who died on the mountain. The kids arranged to have a many relatives of those men to be there for the ceremony.
I think it is a great story. The kids did a lot but they couldn’t have done it without the support of their teachers and other adults who helped them.
SuperPizzaBoy and I hid a cache and submitted the request. It hasn’t been approved yet. It will be called “AT-6 Crash Site”.
If you want to go see it for yourself, the cache and the monument are at N 34 deg 22.120 minutes and W 095 deg 38.616 minutes.
Be careful. I wouldn’t go there after dark.