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Even though Oklahoma City skirted the generally defined edge of the Dust Bowl and that the "event" is more an "Oklahoma" than an "Oklahoma City" topic, it would be wrong not to include it as part of Oklahoma City history. Even though its impact more directly hit western Oklahoma, particularly the northwest, the impact of the Dust Bowl was certainly felt in Oklahoma City and, in a broader sense, the general "label" which many in and out of Oklahoma City came to have if they are from Oklahoma -- was born -- "Okies." The National Weather Service lists the Dust Bowl as the 1st of Oklahoma's "Top Ten" weather events of the 20th Century:
1. Dust Bowl - Early and Mid 1930s. The Dust Bowl of the 1930s ranks also among the most significant events of the century nationally, by literally changing the face of the Great Plains. Extreme heat and drought, especially in 1934 and 1936, with the all-time record high of 113°F set at Oklahoma City in August 1936. "Black Sunday" was the near the height of the Dust Bowl, with accounts of giant clouds of dust descending on Hooker, Oklahoma on April 14, 1935. From Wikipedia comes this brief description:
The Dust Bowl, also known as the "Dirty Thirties", was a series of dust storms caused by a massive drought and decades of inappropriate farming techniques that began in 1930 and lasted until 1941. This ecological disaster caused a mass exodus from the Oklahoma Panhandle region and also the surrounding Great Plains. Around 300,000 to 400,000 Americans were displaced. Topsoil across millions of acres was blown away because the indigenous sod had been broken for wheat farming and the vast herds of buffalo were no longer fertilizing the rest of the native grasses.
It is well known that there was economic instability in agriculture during the 1920s, due to overproduction following World War I. National and international market forces during the war had caused farmers to push the agricultural frontier beyond its natural limits. Increasingly, marginal land that would now be considered unsuitable for use was developed to capture profits from the war. After the land had been stripped of its natural vegetation, the ecological balance of the plains was destroyed, leaving nothing to hold the soil when the rains dried up and the winds came in the 1930s.
With their crops ruined, lands barren and dry, and homes foreclosed for unpayable debts, thousands of farm families loaded their belongings into beat-up Fords and followed Route 66 to California. Many of the displaced were from Oklahoma, where 15% of the state's population left. The migrants were called "Okies," whether or not they were from Oklahoma. High end estimates for the number of displaced Americans are as high as 2.5 million, but the lower value of 300,000 to 400,000 [Oklahomans] is more probable based upon the 2.3 million population of Oklahoma at the time. [Emphasis supplied] John Steinbeck's classic novel, The Grapes of Wrath, tells part of the story. Whether living in or out of the state, Oklahomans wherever located have ever since been labled, "OKIES". Even though, today, many of us who live here wear that cheap-shot title as a badge of honor, it was not always so.
The Dust Bowl was not just an Oklahoma "event" - it covered the all of Great Plains states, generally, and Texas, New Mexico, and Colorado, as well. All of those migrating west, whether from the Dakotas, Nebraska, Oklahoma, wherever, became known as "Okies." See this Nebraska website.
This image from an article by Geoff Cunfer at eh.net/encyclopedia shows the most concentrated Dust Bowl area ... click on the pic for a larger view ...
 These images from an article by Article by Jana Hausburg at the Okc Metro Area website show some of the effects in the western part of Oklahoma County in the mid-1930s, of course, part of Oklahoma City today ... click on a pic below for a larger image ...
Sand Dunes In Far Western Part of OKC in 1936
Lake Overholser Looking North to US 66 In 1935 Notice the US 66 Bridge, NW 39th, at the Top
 The article says,
Although Oklahoma County was not in the region known as the Dust Bowl, dry conditions upriver produced low water levels and parched earth like this at Lake Overholser [above]. An article in the National Journal says that, "Then in the 1930s came a decade of bust--or dust--as soil loosened by erosion was whipped into giant swirling clouds: The Dust Bowl. 'On a single day, I heard, 50 million tons of soil were blown away,' John Gunther reported later. 'People sat in Oklahoma City, with the sky invisible for three days in a row, holding dust masks over their faces and wet towels to protect their mouths at night, while the farms blew by.' Okies headed in droves west on U.S. 66 to the green land of California, and Oklahoma's population sank to 2.3 million in 1940 and 2.2 million in 1950, not to reach its 1930 level again until 1970."
Images from the County Assessor's Photo Gallery show a few images of downtown during this time ...
On Broadway

On Main
 While that doesn't look good, the western parts of the state experienced what can only be described as surreal horror. One particular day, April 14, 1935, is known as "Black Sunday" throughout all of the central plains. Many believed the world was coming to an end. See www.ptsi.net and www.bookrags.com, for examples. At www.scholastic.com the day is described:
Cyclonic winds traveling at speeds up to 100 miles per hour rolled out of the Dakotas and traveled quickly across Nebraska, Kansas, eastern Colorado, Oklahoma, Texas, and New Mexico. Dirt clouds churned 20,000 feet into the air and created a thousand-mile-wide duster. Click on any image below for a closer look.











Leaving For Points West

 A Plague of Locusts. Unlike those recently extended compassion and welcome in the post-New Orleans Katrina exodus, Okies were not greeted with "open arms." In www.theroadwanderer.net, it is said,The plight of the Oakies became a part of the Route 66 story, the legend of the road. In 1934, Los Angeles police stationed themselves at the Arizona border in order to check the wave of dust bowlers. The police held all immigrants at the state line, allowing only a few across at a time and turning many back. This checkpoint didn’t last, however, and emigration on Route 66 continued through the 1930s. By 1939, the migration had reached epic proportions, and Californians reacted with fear and anger. One California grower put it in the following way: "This isn’t a migration—its and invasion! They’re worse than a plague of locusts!" An article at www.okhistory.org reads,
In 1937 California passed an "Anti-Okie Law" making it a misdemeanor to "bring or assist in bringing" any indigent person into that state. The law was later declared unconstitutional, but the bias remained. There are those who, like Will Rogers, believed that the migration of "Okies" to California raised the intellectual level of both states. The plight of Okies has been been well chronicled by many, including renowned photographer Dorthea Lange. From www.theroadwanderer.net:
One of the most haunting images to come out of the dark days of the dust bowl and great depression is this photograph by Dorthea Lange. She was commissioned by the Farm Security Administratrion to chronicle the plight of the displaced farmers during the dust bowl. Dorthea found this migrant mother on the road in 1936. The mother's eyes tell the viewer all he/she needs to know. The expression of fear and and hoplessness are reflected in her eyes as she appears to be looking down the road to a very uncertain future. This photograph became an American icon of the dust bowl days and brought an awareness of the struggles of the "Okies" by putting a human face on this tragedy. *** An estimated 210,000 emigrants came to California during the dust bowl, many of whom were forced to return home after failing to locate employment in the Golden State. Only approximately 16,000 remained. Click on any pic below for a larger view

And there were many, many others ...
 Maybe we'll return the favor when western California drops off into the Pacific? No, we won't ... that's not what Okies would do!
A 22 minute NPR audio file of interviews of Okies in 1940 by Charles Todd is here. According to the NPR site, "1940, Charles Todd was hired by the Library of Congress to visit the federal camps where many of these migrants lived, to create an audio oral history of their stories, and to document the success of the camp program to the Roosevelt administration back in Washington. Todd carried a 50-pound Presto recorder from camp to camp that summer, interviewing the migrant workers."
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2 Downtown Obscurities
Now that the Skirvin is a done deal, what's next downtown? Doug Dawgz crystal balls don't work but this post explores a couple of obscure downtown buildings, one of which is pretty ancient (1926-27), one less so (1957), but both having similar original names ... The Petroleum Building and the Petroleum Club Building. One of them has the potential to become much more than it presently is. Quick Look. The Petroleum Building (above left) was built in 1926-27. Its 18 stories made it the tallest building downtown and so it remained until 1931 when the Ramsey Tower and 1st National Bank were completed. The 16 story Petroleum Club Building, above right, located immediately east of and flush against the 1964 expansion by Kerr-McGee of the Petroleum Building, opened in 1957. Built by Liberty Bank when Liberty was located in the present-day City Place Building, it was connected to Liberty by a skywalk, the 1st in the city. It provided parking, office space, and housed its namesake Petroleum Club. But, to most Oklahoma Citians, both buildings are probably obscure today – the Petroleum Building is now called the Dowell Center, looks different, and is largely unoccupied. The Petroleum Building is now, as far as I can tell, a "building with no name" and most people probably think of it as nothing more than a parking garage. It's exterior only shows its address, 120 Robert S. Kerr. This post explores the history of both "Petroleum" buildings.
The Petroleum Building. Construction began in 1926 and was done in 1927 during one of Oklahoma City's "boom" building periods. Once finished, it was the tallest structure in Oklahoma City at 18 stories. An Oklahoman article (8/21/1927) gushed over the new $750,000 home for those involved in the oil business, including its imported Italian and Vermont marble and terra cotta trim, and high speed (700 feet per minute) micro-leveling elevators, said to have been the 1st such elevators in the state. "If utility had been the only end desired, more than $75,000 could have been deducted from the $750,000 construction cost," the Oklahoman article said. A large (48 to 50 feet – reports vary) oil derrick illuminated by colored lights sat on top of the building, and, according to Edwards & Ottaways' Vanished Splendor (Abalache Book Shop Publishing Co. 1982), it could be seen for 15 miles.
The "tallest building" moniker didn't last long – in 1931, the Ramsey Tower and 1st National Bank were finished, each having 31 stories and relegating it to third place height-wise. Click the images below for a larger view.
Probably a 1931 postcard

A photo within the 8/29/87 Oklahoman article by Bob Blackburn: "City's Architecture Still Has Character" (Sorry about the grainy image – I'll replace it when I find one better)
 Whether the Petroleum Building couldn't match its new next-door neighbors' competition, or because of the effects of the 1929 Wall Street crash and the Great Depression, or for some other reason, a federal court mortgage foreclosure was filed in March 1933 which resulted in an ownership change in 1934. 1934 also appears to have been the year that the oil derrick was dismantled for safety reasons.
Cravens Corporation became the owner in 1946, the same year it acquired the Perrine Building (now Robinson Renaissance). On July 2, 1947, a three-alarm fire in a vacant hotel/apartment building licked the building, but it escaped injury. Click the pic below for a larger image.
Credit Daily Oklahoman July 3, 1947, Front Page
 Another anecdotal Oklahoman story: A business executive jumped from the building and leaped to his death in 1949 as shoppers watched. See the Oklahoman archives, 2/17/1949, front page.
What's the deal with this building – is it snake-bit or something?
After the Cravens Corporation acquired the property, the Oklahoman's renditions about the building's ownership appear to be inconsistent. A November 26, 1952, article said that controlling interest in the property was acquired from Cravens by principals in the Kerr-McGee Corporation (e.g., Sen. Robert S. Kerr, Dean A. McGee and others) in 1952, but a September 5, 1971, article says that Republic Supply Company purchased it in 1952 and that Kerr-McGee got it in 1962. If you really want to figure out the "blur", go to the County Courthouse and check out the County Clerk's deed records and that should tell the tale. I'm presently satisfied to accept the blur as non-consequential.
In any event, in 1964, Kerr-McGee completely remodeled the property – stripped it to its core, doubled the east/west depth, and added 2 stories to make it 20 stories tall – and renamed the new building as the Kermac Building, the new headquarters of Kerr-McGee.
I don't have a decent picture contemporaneous with the $4 million 1964 remodeling, but it should look much the same as those shown under "The Building Today," below, since the exterior hasn't changed since that time. A 4/19/1964 article in the Oklahoman describes the changes:
"A building was knocked out that separated the Republic Building [ed note: aka Petroleum Building] from the Petroleum Club Building to the east, and a new structure was erected.
Exterior differences were reconciled with a new front of gray-tinted glass in aluminum frames, and interiors of the Republic building were refurbished to mold with the new design for a single structure integrating the old with the new. * * *
Walls and columns of the lobby are ceramic tile and opalescent granite. Vinyl wall covering, anodized aluminum and stainless steel provide harmonizing patterns in the color scheme.
A major portion of the ceiling is white acoustical plaster. The floor is slate at entrances and precast terrazzo tile in the main lobby." Kerr-McGee's 1964 remodeling/expansion of the building was apparently a work of art at the time – but, not known then were the effects of asbestos, a large factor leading to the building's present emptiness, and it was during the 1964 remodeling that asbestos was added to the building.
A March 1, 1964, Oklahoman article boldly declared, "Capital City Has A New Downtown!", citing this structure as an example. "Downtown Oklahoma City is being renewed – slowly but definitely – without waiting for Urban Renewal." As well, this came at the time of the announcement of the 24 story Regency Tower at NW 5th and Hudson – and even then speculation existed that a downtown supermarket or lesser grocery store would be needed which, of course, has still not occurred these 33 years later! Other developments were cited – the 12 story Holiday Inn on West Main, remodeling of the Biltmore by Sheraton-Oklahoma, and of the Huckins and Skirvin. The 10 story Southwestern Bell building at NW 6th and Robinson (now owned by the Department of Environmental Quality) and the new Federal Courthouse had also occurred.
But, of course, Kerr-McGee continued to prosper and, in 1973, its fine Kerr-McGee Center opened. In 1971, the Kermac Building aka Republic Building was sold to Midland Mortgage Company and it became the Midland Center (to this date, the name shown on the County Assessor's rolls as the building name, despite its current ownership). In 1980, Prudential Realty Group, part of Prudential Insurance Company of America, acquired the property. A 3/19/1992 Oklahoman article quoted Barbara Simpkins, then the building's manager, as saying, in 1986, "the building was so full of tenants that we were literally renting janitorial closet space." Prudential had plans to remodel the building, including asbestos removal, but in 1988 that company decided to dispose of such assets nationwide, and the planned remodeling (including asbestos removal) did not occur.
In 1988, it sold the property to B&P Midland Center, Ltd., a Dallas investment firm. A 6/2/1988 Oklahoman article described the transaction and noted that, "Present occupancy is about 50 percent." From that 50%, it went down from there. A March 19, 1992, Oklahoman article announced that, as of June 1, the top (19 of 20) floors of the building would be "mothballed" because of the asbestos issues associated with remodeling for tenants, among other issues (e.g., heating/air conditioning was controlled by one control from the 3rd floor up!). Remodeling would also require the installation of a sprinkler system, which would require asbestos removal, which would require millions of dollars.
And, so it has remained as we fast forward to 2007. In 1995, the property was acquired by Dowell Properties, LLC, (the developer and owner "Midtown Plaza" on Walker and the "Dowell Center Parking" on Harvey east of the Federal Courthouse) and it became known as the Dowell Center, and things haven't changed ... yet.
But, is there light at the end of the tunnel? A January 16, 2007, "For Public Comment" article at the Okc's Planning Commission website notes that, "Dowell Properties, LLC has applied for a cleanup loan from the City of Oklahoma City's Brownfields Cleanup Revolving Loan Fund (BCRLF) for abatement of asbestos in the 20-story Dowell Center * * *. Asbestos abatement is required prior to the owner's intended renovation of the building's interior. * * * The City of Oklahoma City is accepting public comments on the ABCA through February 15, 2007."
An analysis is included in the 11 page document, and it notes that, "The overall project includes the complete interior renovation of the basement, east half of the first floor, floor 3 and floors 12 through 20, completely renovating these floors into new office, commercial retail, and mechanical equipment space. Abatement of the elevator shaft and elevator equipment room is also included in the project."
Will this happen? We'll just have to wait and see. If it does happen, will Rick Dowell's company revitalize this project into a building that our city will be proud of, once again? We'll just have to wait and see. Doug Dawg is skeptical ... the Dowell Parking Garage on Harvey is certainly nothing to write home about nor is the Midtown Plaza (that said, the development is certainly better than the nothing that was there before), but Doug Dawg would like to be proven wrong! I'll certainly be among the many to congratulate Rick Dowell for leading the Petroleum Building/aka Dowell Center into the 21st Century with a revitalized building which occupies all of its 20 floors into an attractive and good place for prospective tenants to be, now and in the future. Free parking at the Dowell Parking Garage on Harvey (many blocks away) as a tenant-inducement ain't gonna cut it, though, and the parking space at the next-door neighbor "Petroleum Club" building is already spoken for. Tenants paying all their utility expenses on top of their per square foot lease contracts for their rented premises ain't, either, as I see it. As I said, we'll just have to wait and see. Doug Dawg is presently pessimistically optimistic!
The Building Today. For now, have a look at the Dowell Center at 134 Robert S. Kerr. Some don't seem to like this building's looks, but I'm not one of them. In my opinion, it's a nice piece of Oklahoma City's diversity and, but for the asbestos, Kerr-McGee did a nice job in changing the original Petroleum Building into this ... click on any image for a larger view.
Looking Southeast From Robinson

Looking Northeast From Robinson

Looking Northeast From Robinson – A Closer View

Looking East Along Couch Drive

Looking Northwest Along Couch Drive
 The Petroleum Club Building. The 16 story Petroleum Club was built by Liberty National Bank and opened at 120 Robert S. Kerr on September 1, 1957, the public announcement occurring in a splashy Oklahoman ad on March 20, 1956. A March 11, 1956, story in the Oklahoman informs that the building was named for its prominent new tenant, the newly formed Oklahoma City Petroleum Club which would occupy the 15th floor. By November 1956, it was decided to double its size to two floors, adding the 14th. The original tenant of the 16th floor was Magnolia Petroleum Company. A combination parking garage and office space building, stories said that it would accommodate 500 cars which would be moved into the building by a mechanical elevating parking system.
Originally, Liberty planned to ask the City for permission to connect the new building to its parent Liberty National Bank (now the City Place Building) with a tunnel underneath Couch Drive but that apparently got changed since a 14th floor skywalk (the 1st in the city) connecting to the 15th floor of the Liberty Bank building was constructed, instead. The lower level would also be used for automated drive-through tellers for Liberty's banking customers. A September 1, 1957, Oklahoman article described the car elevator system: "The new garage will utilize the Bowser elevator system for parking cars, eliminating the use of turning ramps between floors. Moving either sideways, diagonally or straight up and down, the elevator deposits a car in a parking stall on any floor with a minimum of driving."
When the Liberty Bank Tower opened in 1971, the building lost its name and its principal tenant, the Petroleum Club, to the new Liberty downtown tower, then the tallest building in the state. Although Liberty Bank no longer exits, the swank Petroleum Club does, occupying the 34th, 35th, and 36th floors of the currently named Chase Tower.
Several years back, early 1990s if memory serves, when I officed in City Place, the skywalk led to the offices of the Sonic Corporation. Of course, it later moved to the 101 Park Avenue Building and then to its current building in Bricktown.
Today, both City Place and the former Petroleum Club Building are owned by Globe Life and Accident Insurance Company, and my understanding is that Globe Life is the principal tenant in the former Petroleum Club Building, but I'm not certain of that.
I tried hard to find some good juicy stories about the building in the Oklahoman's archives, but I came up pretty empty-handed.
It occurred to me to think that the end-of-the-Prohibition period would be a good place to look into since Cannonball Joe was in full swing in the 1st quarter of 1959 and the Petroleum Club opened in 1957. Might there be a juicy liquor "raid" during that time?
Background: Back in the days before Prohibition's end, Tulsa Democratic Governor candidate J. Howard Edmonson had pledged in his "prairie fire campaign" to repeal Prohibition, then the law of Oklahoma by Constitutional provision. He was elected by a landslide, and, at the age of 33, he became Oklahoma's youngest governor. He made good on his pledge. He appointed Joe aka "Cannonball Joe" Cannon as the commissioner of public safety and via a series of crackdown on bootleggers, posh private clubs and those not so posh, public and private facilities and just people driving their cars on the street, the desirability of having, and enforcing, Prohibition as the law of our state was brought keenly into the public's consciousness. (Much later, Joe Cannon would become a district court judge in Oklahoma County.)
In Edmonson's gubernatorial campaign, a November 19, 1958, Oklahoman article called "Edmondson War On Rum Vowed," the article quoted Edmondson as saying, "I don't believe in a policy that the poor man can't drink but the rich man can."
Oklahoma City Police Chief Bergman went along with the Governor's program quite readily. A January 29, 1959, Oklahoman article bears the headline, "Bergman Tells City's Drinking Spots To Stop," and quotes the Chief as saying, "I know they are serving whisky in at least a half a dozen private clubs in Oklahoma City and they are violating the law." "Hmmmm," I thought ... "the Petroleum Club?"
Given Joe Cannon's splashy raids, I thought I might find the results of one or more raids on places like the Petroleum Club and/or Beacon Club. But, I came up empty.
The pressure which was being brought to bear was noted by Bill James, then the owner of the Skirvin and Skirvin Tower. In a February 8, 1959, Oklahoman article with the headline, "Liquor Campaign Cuts Conventions," James was quoted as saying that he was closing his exclusive Tower club immediately. The article quotes James, "I have a $10,000 monthly payroll in that club. I can't continue to operate the club and comply with the policies of the department of public safety."
Repeal of the constitutional Prohibition was set for a vote of the people on Tuesday, April 7, 1959, it having cleared the Legislature for such a vote to occur. On the Sunday before the election, an April 5, 1959, Oklahoman article describes Cannon's last-minute effort to give the public pause for thought! Ninety-nine (that's 99) highway patrolmen made a check of 3,253 vehicles and netted 128 arrests and padlocked 5 Tulsa area night spots which were apparently violating the law. "I hope this is the end of it," Cannon said when the 10-hour raiding ended at 6 a.m. He added, however, that if repeal of the state's liquor prohibition laws fails at the polls in Tuesday's special election, "We'll do everything to continue enforcing the law – including raiding."
Prohibition was repealed on April 7, 1959. But, that didn't mean that it was legal to sell or dispense liquor since many prohibitive state statutes and city ordinances were still on the books. Following the election, an April 18, 1959, Oklahoman article called, "Raiders Visit Private Clubs, Find No Rum," reported that 3 assistant county attorneys and others conducted raids on 16 Oklahoma City clubs, including the prestigious Petroleum and Beacon Clubs, but the article quotes an assistant district attorney as saying, "We did not find a single violation." No fun, there! Recall that it was not until 1984 that county-option liquor by the drink became legal in Oklahoma.
In October 1959, the Petroleum Club was one of five Oklahoma City clubs told by the Oklahoma City licence review board that they had to give up their federal liquor tax stamp or lose their city club permit – possession of a federal liquor tax stamp was considered prima facie evidence of intent to violate the state's liquor laws. The clubs complied. The federal requirement that a club have a federal tax stamp only applied if the booze was sold for profit as opposed to merely having a liquor "pool", at cost, for its members. But, once again, no fun was found in this story!
The only interesting article I found had to do with an employee dispute. An October 20, 1957, Oklahoman article, "19 Club Employees Jailed In Pay Fuss," indicates that 19 Petroleum Club employees were arrested on complaints of disturbing the peace in an apparent pay dispute with the club's manager, Jim O'Halleran. "He fired everybody in the place except his secretary and the chef. We didn't want to leave until we paid and he refused to pay us or even discuss it," and employee said. After a "paddy wagon" took them to the city jail, the employees were released on their own bond at the behest of their attorney, Carroll Samara. I don't know the outcome of this very serious event!
According to the County Assessor records, the present facility includes 104,536 square feet of parking and 79,368 square feet of office space. Remember that there is absolutely no connection between this building and the Dowell Center other than the facts that they adjoin each other and coincidentally have similar historical names.
With that modest historical background, here are the pics of "The Building With No Name," 120 Robert S. Kerr, formerly known as The Petroleum Club Building. Click any pic for a larger view.
Looking Southwest from Robert S. Kerr

Looking West Along Couch Drive

Looking Northwest From Couch Drive

Looking Up From Couch – The 14th & 15h Floors Were The Original Petroleum Club
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The events leading to this grand day have already been stated. Skirvin History, Skirvin Preview, and The Day Before. But, Monday, February 26, 2007, at Noon, is the day and time itself that downtown became itself, again! This post is largely eye candy and lots of it! The Oklahoman's Steve Lackmeyer's articles tell the story much more completely than this post does – see A Grand Reopening of the Skirvin and City, Investors, Chain Write Happy Ending For Landmark Hotel. 
Click on any pics below for a much larger view.
At about 11:45 a.m., as I walked south on Broadway approaching Park Avenue, this "window" caught my eye ... this is Avis Scaramucci's "Painted Door" gift shop which faces on Broadway. Some "inside" pics of the store are toward the end of this post

A window further south reflects the 100 Park Avenue Building – but, if you look really really closely, you can make out a red grand piano through the glass. This is the Red Piano Lounge which is shown more closely in just a bit.

After reaching Park Avenue, I was greeted by ladies & gents like these dressed in period attire suitable for the "original" hotel opening in 1911. These are students at the Classen School of Advanced Studies.


Of course, Steve Lackmeyer was there to record it all for posterity. In his regular columns in The Oklahoman and by the great book which he co-authored, OKC: 2nd Time Around, Steve is a great contributor to Oklahoma City history himself. The man needs a coat though – it was cold outside!

Mayors were everywhere! Here are former mayors Ron Norick, Andy Coats, and Patience Latting.

Music was provided by the Northeast Academy Viking Singers, here singing God Bless America.

Jane Jayroe (1967 Miss America and former director of the Oklahoma Department of Tourism and Recreation) guided the formal outside ceremony through its steps ...

... and Cheyenne-Arapaho artist Gordon Yellowman, assisted by his daughter, Cricket, blessed the event with incense and Native American chants ... after which, Ms. Jayroe pronounced, "We are blessed," as we surely were!

Mayor Mick Cornett described how the deal finally got done ...

... and former Mayor Kirk Humphreys reflected on how it had gotten started after years of frustration.

City Council Member Willa Johnson, a former Skirvin elevator operator, added some spice – and, this being her birthday, she got a fabulous birthday present, as did we all!

Bill Otto, President of Marcus Hotels and Resorts, a partner and operator of the Skirvin Hilton, extolled his enthusiasm for this project, as did Steve Marcus, Chairman of the Marcus Corporation. One of Steve Lackmeyer's articles says, "Marcus thinks the only challenge left for Oklahoma City is to 'tell its story'. 'You've got a great story to tell,' Marcus said. 'It's a story about the city's attitude toward development of its downtown, central city, and the things that you're doing. The spirt of the people here is just fabulous.'" Bill Otto is shown below.

Bill Skirvin's granddaughter, Betty Ellis, traveled to Oklahoma City from Maryland for the festivities – not letting a wrenched knee keep her away. "Nothing could stop me from coming!"

After her remarks, the Northeast Academy Viking Singers sang Oh Happy Day as the members of the Skirvin and James' families led the way into the hotel and the rest of the happy company followed, where we would all go gaga, oohing and ahhing!

Let the oohing and ahhing begin!




A hall leading to Broadway shows some of the memories of times gone by ...



The Front Desk contains elements of the original (the panels, I think, but probably not the lamp)!


It's time to ooh and ahh some more ...


OK, OK! Let's eat! As you approach the Park Avenue Grill, you get this ...

... and this small bar (the pretty lady on the left served me a Monte Cristo sandwich the next day (Tuesday) and a heck of a great Bloody Mary! I couldn't eat but half of the sandwich ... it was great!

As I discovered on Tuesday when a friend and I went for lunch, it's best to make reservations if you're wanting to dine in the Park Avenue Grill!



Walking back toward the lobby, it's time for more oohing and ahhing!



Even taking a "break" gives you one!

Next, the Red Piano Lounge ...






On leaving, I stopped in for a quick look at what the Painted Door had to offer ... London, Paris, Rome, Oklahoma City? Well, why not!


Events continued all afternoon and into the night. I didn't realize it at the time, but as I took this night picture, I later learned that the whole day's activities were open to the public.

I learned on Tuesday that, in the evening, guests were offered this cool Grand Reopening souvenir ... a clock ... but Doug Dawg got lucky on Tuesday at lunch and got one, too!

That's it, and Let the Romance Begin!
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