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              <text>    5.4  April 6th, 2021 OHP-2021-20 JoNell Jones OHP-2021-20 0:00-60:27   'Bristow Historical Society - Oral History Archive'     Bristow Historical Society, Inc.    JoNell Jones Tammy Levin MP3   1:|65(2)|117(4)|161(2)|222(8)|273(14)|325(2)|354(2)|392(7)|433(3)|488(2)|514(2)|565(2)|589(3)|628(16)|668(2)|698(5)|759(4)|789(7)|831(11)|864(3)|908(13)|943(7)|972(1)|1009(11)|1043(3)|1074(4)|1106(11)|1132(10)|1170(9)|1203(12)|1235(15)|1264(4)|1309(9)|1362(5)|1399(2)|1450(8)|1477(2)|1513(5)|1539(2)|1563(8)|1592(2)|1623(14)|1644(11)|1679(3)|1698(4)|1723(6)|1756(2)|1797(2)|1829(2)|1868(4)|1922(2)|1962(14)|1993(4)|2021(2)|2038(17)|2057(4)|2080(3)|2130(3)|2166(11)|2190(8)     0   https://bristoworalhistory.org/interviews/Jonell Jones.mp3  Other         audio          4 Introduction   TL: Okay, are you ready?    JJ: I guess so    TL: Okay. This is Tammy Levin with the Bristow Historical Society in Bristow, and this interview is part of the historical societies ongoing historical oral history project. The date is April 6th, 2021, I’m sitting here with—    JJ: JoNell Jones    TL: At Bristows train depot, who’s going to tell me a little bit about their history in the Bristow area. Now give me your full name.    JJ: JoNell Sears was my maiden name         Bristow Historical Society ; JoNell Jones ; JoNell Sears ; Tammy Levin                           56 Family   TL: Alright let’s begin. Okay, what was your full name at birth?    JJ: JoNell Jones    TL: Okay, and where was you born?    JJ: I was born in Tulsa but I was brought right back here    TL: Okay    JJ: I’ve been here all my life    TL: Okay, okay. And was you born—were you born in, at the home or in a hospital?    JJ: In the hospital    TL: In the hospital, do you remember which hospital?    JJ: Well it was Morningside then but it’s Hillcrest now         Eileen Lee Sears ; James Sears ; William Edgar                           220 Childhood   TL: Okay? Tell me about your life and what it was like at home when you was younger. Okay, can you tell me about some of your early memories of being younger here in Bristow?    JJ: In this office    TL: We’re gonna really work your memory today    JJ: One of my big memories is we lived out on Jefferson    TL: On Jefferson?    JJ: And it was still a dirt street    TL: Okay    JJ: And I was playing out in front of my house in the dirt and mother was not very happy about it because she just knew that some car was gonna come by and run me over       Bishops ; Glen Acres ; Roberts ; Treadle Sewing Machine                           871 Grandparents   TL: Okay? Do you remember hearing your grandparents describe their lives?    JJ: Not really, my daddies parents lived in Bristow, they came before statehood.    TL: Oh wow    JJ: And they came out on a covered wagon, of course that’s the only way they can get here    TL: Right    JJ: They had five boys    TL: Okay    JJ: I think, and then they lost two little girls at a young age    TL: Okay    JJ: But they lived over on the corner of second chestnut their whole life    TL: Second and chestnut, okay. Okay and their names?    JJ: Sears, Ira and Eula (ph)         Eula Sears ; Ira Sears ; Joe Lee ; Tana Lee                           1104 School   TL: That’s wonderful. Okay now we’re gonna go to your school memories    JJ: Okay    TL: Okay, where did you first attend school?    JJ: Washington school    TL: Washington school    JJ: First grade, we didn’t have kindergarten then.    TL: Oh really? Okay. Who was the first teacher that you had?    JJ: Her name was Christian    TL: Christian, okay.     JJ: Hazel, Hazel Christian    TL: Hazel Christian, okay.    JJ: Actually, she and my mother went to college together         Catherine Cane ; Donna Doke ; Hazel Christian ; Jean Sampson ; Washington Elementary                           1422 Church   TL: Okay, okay. Okay now we’re gonna go to church life. Did your family attend church when you were a child?    JJ: Yes    TL: Okay, and which church?    JJ: First Christian    TL: First Christian    JJ: Disciples of Christ    TL: Okay, and do you still attend that church?    JJ: Yes    TL: Okay. Can you describe the Sunday services when you were a child?    JJ: Pretty much like they are now, we had Sunday school early and I always went and then we had church service, you know had a choir.          First Christian Church                           1660 Medical Care   TL: What was medical care like when you were a child?    JJ: Doctor King made house calls    TL: Doctor King, I’ve heard that name a time or two    JJ: Yeah    TL: Okay, uh-huh.    JJ: They took care of me, he didn’t deliver me because mother went to Tulsa, but he took care of me all my life, and my mother and my dad and my grandparents.    TL: So why did your mom go to Tulsa? Was there a—?    JJ: I think her family had had hard deliveries    TL: Okay    JJ: So she just went in    TL: Just to be safe?    JJ: Mhm         Doctor King                           1747 Town Life   TL: Okay now we’re going to town life.     JJ: Okay    TL: Okay, what are your recollections of Bristow in your early childhood? How about main street? Any special stores that you really enjoyed?    JJ: I loved Anthonys and I loved Pennys    TL: Okay    JJ: And then Miss Stanford had a shop that—for children    TL: Okay    JJ: That was fun    TL: Okay, okay. So about those stores, was it just because you went shopping there a lot or was there—?         Anthonys ; Lions Cafe ; Miss Stanford ; Pennys ; Wade Hardware                           1927 Holiday Events   TL: Okay, what were the main holiday events held in town?    JJ: Halloween, Christmas, I don’t remember any others.    TL: How did they celebrate Halloween?    JJ: Well they just opened up main street and let everybody run up and down it    TL: Okay, did you dress up as a child to go trick-or-treating?    JJ: Oh yeah    TL: Yeah? What was your favourite costume?    JJ: Well I think I was a witch    TL: Yeah, yeah. And what about July 4th, did they celebrate July 4th?    JJ: Yes    TL: Yeah?    JJ: They did, had fireworks and—                                     1989 Early Adulthood      TL: Uh-huh, good. Okay, early adulthood. As a child, what did you want to be when you grew up?    JJ: I wanted to be a teacher but I never did that    TL: Yeah, why not?    JJ: I just did not like college and quit    TL: Where did you go to college at?    JJ: OSU    TL: OSU?     JJ: [Indecipherable]    TL: Okay, what was your first job?    JJ: Oh, I worked at a bakery         Bunny Baker ; Meta Hill                           2234 Travel   TL: Okay, now it’s asking about travel. How did you travel to Oklahoma City or Tulsa in the early?    JJ: Well usually by car, we always had a car    TL: Okay    JJ: During the war we used to trade a lot    TL: Did you, and when did you get married? What was the date?    JJ: July the 27th, 1961.    TL: 1961. Okay, when you took the train, what are your memories of this depot here?    JJ: It looks pretty much—I was trying to think, what was the ticket office in here?    TL: I’m assuming where it’s at now, but I don’t know.                                     2412 Segregation and Racism   TL: Right. Okay we’re gonna be talking about racism about the blacks and Indians here in town, okay? Was the town segregated?    JJ: Yes    TL: Yes, what are your memories of it? The segregation?    JJ: Segregation. I remember the Indians really more than the blacks    TL: Okay    JJ: And they would just sit on the sidewalks    TL: Okay, on main street?    JJ: On main street    TL: Okay    JJ: And the blacks had their own town, they didn’t really come into the main part of Bristow very much that I recall                                     2721 The Great Depression   TL: Okay, the great depression. Do you have any memories of the great depression?    JJ: Just that there wasn’t any money    TL: No money, yeah. Hard times. How did it affect your home life?    JJ: It really didn’t because my daddy worked in the post office and always had a job    TL: Okay, yeah.    JJ: But I had friends that were very, very poor. There just was nothing. They would love to have something to eat.    TL: Right. And so your dad didn’t lose his job during that time?    JJ: No                                     2784 Amphitheater   TL: Do you remember the work being done to construct the lake or the park?    JJ: I remember work in the park when they were building the amphitheatre.    TL: Do you? Okay, what do you remember of that?    JJ: I was trying to think who was president then. She came, the president’s wife came.     TL: Eleanor Roosevelt?    JJ: Was it Eleanor? It could’ve been    TL: She came and she dedicated that    JJ: Okay, she came and dedicated the amphitheatre    TL: Uh-huh, did you guys go out there?    JJ: Oh yeah    TL: Was it pretty exciting?    JJ: Yup         Eleanor Roosevelt                           3014 Politics   TL: Was your family politically involved?    JJ: Not really    TL: No, okay. Did any of your family members ever run for office?    JJ: Well I had a great uncle that did    TL: Yeah, here in Bristow?    JJ: Mhm    TL: Okay, and who was that?    JJ: Cal Foster    TL: Okay, and do you remember what office?    JJ: Probably county commissioner, I don’t really know    TL: Okay, okay. Did he win?    JJ: I think he did?                                     3076 WWII   TL: Okay, World War II. What are your memories of WWII?    JJ: Well, I had bunches of uncles in the army and the navy and the marines    TL: Uh-huh    JJ: I had one uncle killed in Italy    TL: Okay, and who was that?    JJ: Daddies youngest brother    TL: And his name?    JJ: Milton    TL: Milton?    JJ: Sears    TL: Milton Sears (ph), okay         Milton Sears ; The Bristow Record ; Tribune                           3251 Most Important Invention   TL: So what would you consider to be the most important invention during your lifetime?    JJ: Oh dear. I suppose one that affected most people is the television    TL: Okay, and why do you say that?    JJ: It’s just a better way to get the news. [Indecipherable]    TL: Right    JJ: I remember sitting in front of the little radio listening to it    TL: Right, while everyone gathered around it. How is the world different now than when you were a child?    JJ: So many ways. Travel, it’s so much easier now than it was then. But I miss, I really miss the slow pace of my childhood                                     3319 Biggest Problems that Face Our Nation   TL: As you see it, what are the biggest problems that face our nation and how do you think they could be solved?    JJ: I’m not smart enough to solve them, but I think the race problem is the biggest one we have. I don’t know why people can’t accept you for who you are. And then there’s so many more, there’s drugs and there’s all this stuff, but I really think race is the big one.     TL: And then I was just gonna ask you, how are your feelings about COVID? How do you think it’s changed how we are doing things?    JJ: I think they have overplayed it ;  I’ve always thought it was a political thing.     TL: Okay.     JJ: I don’t pay attention to it                                   3389 Closing Thoughts   TL: Yeah. Okay, your—Linda said that you kind of have some information about that grand piano back there, you kind of knew a little bit about the history about it?    JJ: Oh, I don’t really. I’ll tell you who probably could give you some is George Foster    TL: George Foster, okay.     JJ: Because that looks exactly like the piano that his grandmother had    TL: Okay, good deal    JJ: She had it in her house    TL: Okay. I think we’re good. Is there anything else that you would like to tell us about? About your life or?    JJ: I don’t really think         George Foster ; William Edgar                             In this 2021 interview, JoNell Jones shares her experience growing up in the Bristow area. She discusses family, town life, and travel.  Interviewer: Tammy Levin    Interviewee: JoNell Jones    Other Persons:    Date of Interview: April 6th, 2021    Location: Bristow, Creek County Oklahoma    Transcriber: Abby Thompson    Organization: Bristow Historical Society, Inc.    Original Cassette Tape Location: OHP-2021-20 00:00 -- 60:27     Abstract:    Preface: The following oral history testimony is the result of a cassette tape  interview and is part of the Bristow Historical Society, Inc.&amp;#039 ; s collection of  oral histories. The interview was transcribed and processed by the Bristow  Historical Society, Inc., with financial assistance from the Montfort Jones &amp;amp ;   Allie Brown Jones Foundation. Rights to the material are held exclusively by the  Bristow Historical Society, Inc.    The reader should bear in mind that he or she is reading a verbatim transcript  of spoken, rather than written prose. Insofar as possible, this transcript tries  to represent the spoken word. Thus, it should be read as a personal memoir and  not as either a researched monograph or edited account.    To the extent possible, the spelling of place names, foreign words, and personal  names have been verified, either by reference resources or directly by the  interviewee. In some cases, a footnote has been added to the transcript in order  to provide more information and/or to clarify a statement. Some uncertainties  will inevitably remain regarding some words and their spellings. In these  scenarios, a (ph) follows a word or name that is spelled phonetically. The  notation [indecipherable] is used when the transcriber has not been able to  comprehend the word or phrase being spoken. The notation [inaudible] is used  where there is more mumbling than words, or when interference on the tape has  made transcription impossible.    TL: Okay, are you ready?    JJ: I guess so    TL: Okay. This is Tammy Levin with the Bristow Historical Society in Bristow,  and this interview is part of the historical societies ongoing historical oral  history project. The date is April 6th, 2021, I&amp;#039 ; m sitting here with--    JJ: JoNell Jones    TL: At Bristows train depot, who&amp;#039 ; s going to tell me a little bit about their  history in the Bristow area. Now give me your full name.    JJ: JoNell Sears was my maiden name    TL: Okay    JJ: Jones    TL: Alright let&amp;#039 ; s begin. Okay, what was your full name at birth?    JJ: JoNell Jones    TL: Okay, and where was you born?    JJ: I was born in Tulsa but I was brought right back here    TL: Okay    JJ: I&amp;#039 ; ve been here all my life    TL: Okay, okay. And was you born--were you born in, at the home or in a hospital?    JJ: In the hospital    TL: In the hospital, do you remember which hospital?    JJ: Well it was Morningside then but it&amp;#039 ; s Hillcrest now    TL: Okay great. And your parents&amp;#039 ;  names?    JJ: James and Eileen Lee Sears (ph)    TL: Okay, so your maiden name was Sears?    JJ: Mhm    TL: And how do you spell that?    JJ: S. E. A. R. S.    TL: Okay great. And when were your parents married?    JJ: Let&amp;#039 ; s see here, about 27&amp;#039 ;  I think    TL: 27&amp;#039 ; , 1927?    JJ: 1927    TL: Okay, do you remember where they were married?    JJ: Here in Bristow    TL: Oh here in Bristow, okay. How many children did they have?    JJ: Me    TL: How many children did your parents have?    JJ: Me    TL: Just you? Oh goodness    JJ: Just me, I was enough    TL: Man, they stopped with perfection, right?    JJ: yeah, yeah.    TL: Yes. What did your father do?    JJ: He worked in the post office    TL: In the post office?    JJ: He was a mail carrier    TL: Okay    JJ: But he had hurt his back when he was an [Indecipherable] for years from the  time I was 11    TL: Okay    JJ: And he died when I was 22 so he was, it was pretty much bed fast that whole  period of time    TL: When he worked in the post office, did he work just in the post office or  was he a mail carrier?    JJ: Well he started out as a mail carrier    TL: Okay    JJ: But that&amp;#039 ; s where he hurt this back, and then he moved into the window    TL: Okay, okay. And what about your mother, what did she do?    JJ: She was a homemaker    TL: Okay    JJ: A then after daddy died, she had to go to work and she worked at the  Community bank as a secretary.    TL: Okay, okay good deal. Okay, and what&amp;#039 ; s your spouse&amp;#039 ; s name?    JJ: William Edgar    TL: Okay, and what was the date of your marriage?    JJ: July the 27th, 1961    TL: 1961 okay, and how many children did you have?    JJ: Okay, both of us together had four    TL: Okay    JJ: He had a little girl and I had a little girl, it was a match    TL: Ooh!    JJ: And then we had two    TL: Okay, okay. And their names?    JJ: Julia    TL: Julia?    JJ: Becky    TL: Becky    JJ: Laura    TL: Laura    JJ: And Bill    TL: And Bill, okay. Okay so what was--he had two you say?    JJ: He had one    TL: No he had one and you had one    JJ: Uh-huh    TL: Okay, okay. Okay can you--we&amp;#039 ; re going to go now to your early childhood.    JJ: Okay    TL: Okay? Tell me about your life and what it was like at home when you was  younger. Okay, can you tell me about some of your early memories of being  younger here in Bristow?    JJ: In this office    TL: We&amp;#039 ; re gonna really work your memory today    JJ: One of my big memories is we lived out on Jefferson    TL: On Jefferson?    JJ: And it was still a dirt street    TL: Okay    JJ: And I was playing out in front of my house in the dirt and mother was not  very happy about it because she just knew that some car was gonna come by and  run me over    TL: Oh, uh-huh. She was worried about that, yeah yeah.    JJ: And we just lived alone in a two-bedroom house and at that time it was right  on the edge of town    TL: Uh-huh    JJ: Daddy had built it for her when they got married    TL: Okay, is the house still there?    JJ: Yes    TL: Is it?    JJ: Yes    TL: Okay do you drive by it to look at it?    JJ: Occasionally    TL: Do ya?    JJ: Occasionally, yeah    TL: Uh-huh, does it still look the same?    JJ: No    TL: No, okay.    JJ: They&amp;#039 ; ve changed it    TL: Okay, what was the address of that house, do you--    JJ: 512    TL: 512 Jefferson?    JJ: 512 east Jefferson    TL: East Jefferson, okay. 512 East Jefferson.    JJ: Isn&amp;#039 ; t that funny?    TL: That you still remember it, yeah. What about some of the neighborhood kids?  Do you remember any of the neighborhood kids?    JJ: There was one little boy that lived next door but he was really old, her  name was Ward (ph)    TL: Okay    JJ: There weren&amp;#039 ; t any kids out there    TL: Okay, okay. What about--this is kind of an odd question, but what kind of  bed did you sleep in?    JJ: I had a regular full size bed    TL: Oh okay, what about your favorite toy as a child?    JJ: Oh I had a little doll that was named Sabra (ph). But I think I still have her.    TL: Do you?    JJ: Yeah    TL: Wow, what kind of doll was she? Was she a porcelain?    JJ: Just a baby doll    TL: Was it a porcelain type doll, porcelain head, china head?    JJ: I&amp;#039 ; m sure it had a China or Porcelain head because it was way before plastic.    TL: Right, uh-huh. Was it a blond or a brunette?    JJ: It didn&amp;#039 ; t have--it didn&amp;#039 ; t have hair, it had just--    TL: It had the painted head?    JJ: Yeah    TL: Painted hair?    JJ: She was kind of blonde    TL: Blonde? Okay    JJ: Yeah    TL: Okay, okay what kind of role did your mother play in the home?    JJ: She was the homemaker    TL: Until she had to go to work    JJ: Yeah    TL: Okay    JJ: She didn&amp;#039 ; t go to work until my daddy couldn&amp;#039 ; t work anymore.    TL: How was the laundry done?    JJ: We had a black woman that came and did it    TL: Okay, mhm. Okay, what about the cooking? Did she do the cooking as well?    JJ: Mother did all the cooking    TL: Did she do the cooking?    JJ: She was a fantastic cook    TL: Was she? What was your favorite meal that she fixed?    JJ: Oh dear, fried chicken.    TL: Fried chicken, oh that sounds good! Did you have mashed potatoes and gravy  with that fried chicken?    JJ: Oh of course.    TL: That sounds wonderful, what kind of stove?    JJ: She had a [Indecipherable] which was a really big stove for that little house    TL: Uh-huh    JJ: She won it at a drawing at the movies    TL: Oh wow    JJ: Isn&amp;#039 ; t that fun?    TL: At the theater downtown?    JJ: At the Princes (ph)    TL: At the Princes    JJ: Yeah    TL: Did you hear that we just got some movie theater seats from the Princes  movie theater?    JJ: No    TL: Yup, I just--they were put out on the street curb and so I went and grabbed  them really quick, so how about that? So this lady that did your laundry, is  that all she did was for you? She just did the laundry for you or did she help  out some?    JJ: As far as I remember, I don&amp;#039 ; t think--mother was an immaculate housekeeper, I  doubt if she let anybody come in.    TL: Okay, and what were some of the normal daily meals that you had?    JJ: We had three meals a day, we had breakfast and lunch and dinner.    TL: Okay, okay.    JJ: Supper, not dinner.    TL: Yeah, that&amp;#039 ; s what I grew up with supper too. Are there any family recipes  from your childhood that you still make?    JJ: Oh yes    TL: Yeah? And what--can you tell me about some of them?    JJ: Well let&amp;#039 ; s see, I still make mothers chocolate pie    TL: Do you?    JJ: And she made a coconut cake that I still make occasionally    TL: Do ya? Do your kids still make some of those recipes?    JJ: No    TL: No?    JJ: They don&amp;#039 ; t cook, my children.    TL: Uh-huh, do they still ask for those two recipes?    JJ: No because they usually have them when they come    TL: Okay. Where did you shop for groceries?    JJ: What was her name? Shopped at Bishops, and we shopped at Roberts    TL: Okay, and were those neighborhood grocery stores?    JJ: They were on main street    TL: On main street, okay. Were there other neighborhood grocery stores though?    JJ: Yes, there was one or about two that was out on chestnut, I can&amp;#039 ; t even think  of the name of it.    TL: Okay    JJ: [Inaudible]    TL: And did you have any daily chores that you had to do when you were little?    JJ: Had to make my bed    TL: You had to make your bed, uh-huh.    JJ: And help with the dishes    TL: Okay, okay. And I&amp;#039 ; m guessing you probably didn&amp;#039 ; t have any livestock if you  lived in town    JJ: No we did    TL: Oh you did, did you?    JJ: My grandfather had a little farm just about four or five blocks from us east  over where Glen Acres (ph), or not Glen Acres. Anyway, we always had a cow and  chickens down there.    TL: Okay    JJ: A big garden    TL: Okay, and what did you grow in your garden?    JJ: Everything    TL: Did you have a favorite?    JJ: Green beans    TL: Green beans?    JJ: Yeah    TL: Did you help snap them?    JJ: Oh of course!    TL: Yeah? Did you eat more than you--?    JJ: No, I was not a very good eater    TL: Okay, okay uh-huh. Okay did you do your own butchering if you had cattle or did--?    JJ: They butchered hogs    TL: Okay    JJ: We never butchered cattle, but they butchered hogs.    TL: Okay, now did you use the cattle, the cow for the milk then?    JJ: Milk    TL: Milk? Okay. And how did you store your food?    JJ: How did we store?    TL: Uh-huh    JJ: We had a--I think we had an icebox when I was a real little girl and as soon  as we got a refrigerator, daddy bought one.    TL: Okay, so you had the old fashion icebox?    JJ: Yeah with the ice in the top of it    TL: So where did you get your ice from?    JJ: They delivered it, the ice company down on 1st street, or--down where  [Indecipherable] is now, about that area, there was a big ice plant.    TL: Okay. Okay this question is did your family employ household help? So yes    JJ: Some    TL: And did you have anyone else besides the lady that helped you with the laundry?    JJ: No    TL: No, just her okay. And it&amp;#039 ; s asking how much were they paid? I&amp;#039 ; m sure you  probably don&amp;#039 ; t--    JJ: I have no idea    TL: Yeah    JJ: I want to say a dollar a day    TL: Okay    JJ: But that&amp;#039 ; s strictly a guess    TL: That&amp;#039 ; s an--right, right. Okay and what kind of clothes did you wear?    JJ: Whatever mother made.    TL: Oh did she make your clothes?    JJ: Yeah    TJ: Okay    JJ: She was a really good seamstress    TJ: Yeah    JJ: She was a really good homemaker, I mean she--she did all that, yeah.    TL: Right, the sewing machine, I&amp;#039 ; m guessing a treadle sewing machine?    JJ: Mhm    TL: Uh-huh? Do you still have that or is that long gone?    JJ: No it&amp;#039 ; s long gone.    TL: Uh-huh, did you like to sew?    JJ: Not really    TL: No, that wasn&amp;#039 ; t your thing?    JJ: I did a lot of sewing when my girls were growing up    TL: Uh-huh    JJ: But I didn&amp;#039 ; t really like it    TL: Okay, did you have shoes to wear all year round    JJ: Yes    TL: Did you? Okay. And it&amp;#039 ; s asking who did you play with most of the time?    JJ: Oh I had, I had two or three real good friends that we played. They were not  neighbors but they were close, close enough to get to.    TL: Did you have cousins to play with?    JJ: I had cousins to play with but they didn&amp;#039 ; t live here    TL: Okay, okay. What were some of the common childhood games that you played?    JJ: Red rover, I&amp;#039 ; m sure we played Ring around the rosy when I was little bitty    TL: Right    JJ: Jacks    TL: Right, uh-uh. How about some of your favorite songs that you sang as a child?    JJ: I don&amp;#039 ; t even remember them    TL: Okay. It&amp;#039 ; s asking about your fathers&amp;#039 ;  work and that was we already discussed  that. What was his role in the house? Did he help in the garden?    JJ: He--I&amp;#039 ; m sure he did anything that needed to be done but he was a  [Indecipherable] for years.    TL: Okay    JJ: So--my memories of him are in bed pretty much    TL: So how did he get hurt on his job?    JJ: Slipped on the ice    TL: Oh, okay.    JJ: Went down to crippling arthritis.    TL: Oh okay, you said he died when he was 22?    JJ: I was 22    TL: 22    JJ: Daddy was 44    TL: Aw so he died very young    JJ: But when he died, he could use his right elbow and his right hand.    TL: [Indecipherable]. Okay how about do you remember the first time you heard a radio?    JJ: We always had a radio    TL: Did you?    JJ: Yup    TL: Okay, saw television?    JJ: I was in college. The people of Bristow bought my dad a television when they  first came out    TL: Uh-huh    JJ: Because he was bed fast and they put it in his room    TL: Aww    JJ: And we had a--it was one of the first televisions in town    TL: Wow, do you remember what show was playing the first time?    JJ: No, I was in college so I really didn&amp;#039 ; t pay much attention to it    TL: Okay, I bet he was very appreciative of that    JJ: Yeah he was, he was.    TL: That&amp;#039 ; s neat, how neat. Okay now we&amp;#039 ; re gonna go to your grandparents    JJ: Okay    TL: Okay? Do you remember hearing your grandparents describe their lives?    JJ: Not really, my daddies parents lived in Bristow, they came before statehood.    TL: Oh wow    JJ: And they came out on a covered wagon, of course that&amp;#039 ; s the only way they can  get here    TL: Right    JJ: They had five boys    TL: Okay    JJ: I think, and then they lost two little girls at a young age    TL: Okay    JJ: But they lived over on the corner of second chestnut their whole life    TL: Second and chestnut, okay. Okay and their names?    JJ: Sears, Ira and Eula (ph)    TL: Okay, okay. So they would&amp;#039 ; ve came here before statehood, or they wanted  to--probably one of the first settlers here then.    JJ: Yes, my oldest, my dads oldest brother was the first white child born in Bristow    TL: Oh okay, that&amp;#039 ; s interesting    JJ: Grandma talks about the Indians, they had a--they called them stomp grounds    TL: Uh-huh    JJ: It&amp;#039 ; s where they did their dances    TL: Right    JJ: And they walked down chestnut right by the house to the stomp grounds and  she said they just would go in in streams down there to their dances    TL: So did she say where the stomp dances were located?    JJ: Well south of town, I&amp;#039 ; m not sure where    TL: South of town, okay. That had to be a very interesting--    JJ: Yup, yup.    TL: Do you have memories of your grandparents, the Sears, then?    JJ: Oh yeah    TL: Okay    JJ: I was a big girl when they died    TL: Okay    JJ: Was in high school    TL: Oh okay, so you got to spend a lot of time with them then    JJ: Yeah I did    TL: Okay good, grandparents are pretty special    JJ: Yes    TL: Yes, very special.    JJ: My mother&amp;#039 ; s parents lived here too    TL: Okay and their names?    JJ: Lee (ph)    TL: Lee    JJ: Joe and Tana    TL: Okay    JJ: And they had moved at that time, but they lived in Tulsa    TL: Okay    JJ: So    TL: When did they move out of Bristow?    JJ: I guess after mother got out of high school in 27&amp;#039 ;     TL: Okay    JJ: Her older sister and her husband opened a big feed store in Tulsa    TL: Okay    JJ: And grandad went up, he had a little ice stock right there on the corner  from it    TL: Okay    JJ: But he was in the feed store with uncle Frank, so.    TL: Okay, okay [Inaudible]. Who was the oldest person in your family you can  remember from when you were a child? The oldest person that you can remember  from childhood.    JJ: My great grandmother Roberts was 92    TL: 92, okay. And who--from what side of the family?    JJ: My mother&amp;#039 ; s side    TL: Your mother&amp;#039 ; s side, okay.    JJ: My grandmother Foster was--I had two great grandparents--I had four  grandparents and two great grandparents alive while I was growing up and they  were all real well liked. I mean, nobody died young.    TL: That&amp;#039 ; s great, yeah!    JJ: Yeah    TL: And how old are you?    JJ: 91    TL: 91, and happy belated birthday! Happy birthday!    JJ: Thank you    TL: Yes! So what do you remember about them? They were pretty active?    JJ: Yes, granddad was the first fire chief in Bristow, granddad Sear    TL: Oh okay    JJ: And, yeah.    TL: You have a lot of history here in Bristow    JJ: Yeah, they came and settled and we stayed so--    TL: They must&amp;#039 ; ve liked it    JJ: Who didn&amp;#039 ; t?    TL: That&amp;#039 ; s wonderful. Okay now we&amp;#039 ; re gonna go to your school memories    JJ: Okay    TL: Okay, where did you first attend school?    JJ: Washington school    TL: Washington school    JJ: First grade, we didn&amp;#039 ; t have kindergarten then.    TL: Oh really? Okay. Who was the first teacher that you had?    JJ: Her name was Christian    TL: Christian, okay.    JJ: Hazel, Hazel Christian    TL: Hazel Christian, okay.    JJ: Actually, she and my mother went to college together    TL: Really? That&amp;#039 ; s neat. What hours were the school held?    JJ: I think 9 to 4    TL: 9 to 4, okay. So what age did you start school then if you didn&amp;#039 ; t go to kindergarten?    JJ: Six, which was first grade.    TL: Okay. Did you walk?    JJ: Yes    TL: Yeah, how long?    JJ: It was about five blocks    TL: Okay    JJ: I had two neighbor girls that were older than I was, and I walked with them.    TL: Okay, do you remember how many children attended your class? Was it a large class?    JJ: I think they were pretty large classes, I&amp;#039 ; d say 25, 30.    TL: And what year was this?    JJ: 1936    TL: 1936, okay. Do you remember what year you graduated? I&amp;#039 ; m sure you do.    JJ: 48&amp;#039 ;     TL: 1948, okay. Who was your best friend? Let&amp;#039 ; s start--okay, who was your best  friend in first grade, do you remember that?    JJ: Catherine Cane (ph)    TL: Catherine Cane, okay. And how about when you--    JJ: And Donna Doke (ph), [Indecipherable]    TL: Oh okay, okay.    JJ: Yeah, they were my best friends    TL: Okay, and did they remain your best friends throughout school?    JJ: Pretty much    TL: Aw that&amp;#039 ; s pretty special    JJ: They&amp;#039 ; re all gone now, but--    TL: Oh, right. And I&amp;#039 ; m assuming, you said you went to college so you completed?    JJ: No I didn&amp;#039 ; t complete it, I went two and a half years    TL: Okay, okay. What kind of building was the school in? Grade school    JJ: Actually they just tore it--    TL: Washington    JJ: Washington? Yeah, it was that very first build that they had, it was--it was  new, they had [Indecipherable]    TL: Yeah, I got to walk through it before they tore it down so--and then you  went to the high school here?    JJ: Mhm    TL: Yeah, and that was Bristow High School?    JJ: Mhm    TL: Okay, were you a member of any of the clubs or organizations in high school?    JJ: I was a member of everything    TL: Yeah? Like what?    JJ: Well I was in the band, I was a cheerleader, and I was president or vice  president of the senior class.    TL: Of the senior?    JJ: Mhm    TL: Okay, like choir? Was it the same as choir or was it--    JJ: I didn&amp;#039 ; t sing in choir, I don&amp;#039 ; t sing    TL: Okay, so what was that? What&amp;#039 ; s the singer class then?    JJ: Senior [Indecipherable], senior class    TL: Senior class, okay okay. Uh-huh, good.    JJ: I did everything, I liked it.    TL: Well good. Was the school building used for any other community purposes?    JJ: Not that I know of.    TL: What types of food did your mother pack in your lunch if she packed your lunch?    JJ: She didn&amp;#039 ; t pack my lunch, I went home for lunch    TL: Oh did you, okay. Was she home for lunch with you or--?    JJ: Most of the time    TL: Okay    JJ: My daddy was always there    TL: Okay, so did she have lunch ready for you or did you fix lunch together or  how did you spend your lunch?    JJ: She probably had gotten it ready before she went to work.    TL: Okay, and then did you eat lunch with your dad since he was home there?    JJ: Mhm    TL: Did you? Okay, so that&amp;#039 ; s nice. Okay what do you remember about your classroom?    JJ: Well blackboards and the musty smell that it had    TL: Okay, okay.    JJ: All the books that were in there    TL: Do you have any favorite teacher from grade school?    JJ: Not really    TL: No, how about high school?    JJ: Jean Sampson (ph) was my--he was the science teacher and he was my favorite teacher    TL: And why was he your favorite teacher? What about him?    JJ: I don&amp;#039 ; t know, he was just funny and he was--it was good, yeah.    [Background noise]    TL: Did you--    [Background noise]    TL: Did you have a favorite subject in high school?    JJ: Yeah, biology    TL: Did you, so you&amp;#039 ; re a science person?    JJ: No    TL: Oh no    JJ: I just like biology    TL: Okay, okay. Okay now we&amp;#039 ; re gonna go to church life. Did your family attend  church when you were a child?    JJ: Yes    TL: Okay, and which church?    JJ: First Christian    TL: First Christian    JJ: Disciples of Christ    TL: Okay, and do you still attend that church?    JJ: Yes    TL: Okay. Can you describe the Sunday services when you were a child?    JJ: Pretty much like they are now, we had Sunday school early and I always went  and then we had church service, you know had a choir.    TL: Okay, do you remember any songs? Anything special? Any favourite songs  during that time?    JJ: Not really    TL: Can you describe the holiday events at church?    JJ: Oh, it&amp;#039 ; s been--not really. We always had a church for the--when I was  growing up, we had a big youth group, we had a lot of kids. And we had church,  we did church Sunday once or twice a year, us youth group and, oh we had parties  and did all the things that you&amp;#039 ; d probably do    TL: Did your friends attend the same church?    JJ: No    TL: No    JJ: Well Donna did    TL: Donna, okay. Sometimes that makes it a little bit--what were your Christmas&amp;#039 ;   like as a child?    JJ: We always went to my grandmothers    TL: Which grandmother?    JJ: Grandmother Lee    TL: Okay, okay    JJ: And, oh they were big deals.    TL: Cousins there?    JJ: Cousins and aunts and uncles and--    TL: Uh-huh, did you usually go for Christmas eve or Christmas day?    JJ: Oh we went Christmas eve and spent the night and had a big Christmas breakfast    TL: Aw, special meals?    JJ: Yup    TL: Yup, all of that?    JJ: All of that    TL: Did Santa--    JJ: Santa came    TL: Yeah, good. Was there a special food that brought back memories or that was  always served?    JJ: We always had turkey, I think. It could&amp;#039 ; ve been chicken and I didn&amp;#039 ; t know it    TL: Right    JJ: We always had ham. For Christmas breakfast we always had ham    TL: Oh, okay mhm. And what about the Christmas tree? Was there anything special  about the Christmas tree or just--    JJ: No it just was loaded with stuff I&amp;#039 ; d made and stuff my cousins have made    TL: It was just spending time with family, right?    JJ: Yeah    TL: Yeah, good deal. Did your mother sing in the choir? Did you sing in the choir?    JJ: No    TL: No, what was your parents&amp;#039 ;  involvement in the church?    JJ: Let&amp;#039 ; s see, daddy taught a Sunday school class, mother taught a Sunday school  class. Daddy was an elder    TL: Okay    JJ: Back before women could be elders    TL: Right    JJ: I&amp;#039 ; m an elder now, I was the first woman elder in our church    TL: Really?    JJ: Yeah    TL: Congratulations, and when did that happen?    JJ: Oh let&amp;#039 ; s see ;  it was probably--it&amp;#039 ; s been a long time. Let&amp;#039 ; s see, probably in  the 60&amp;#039 ; s    TL: Oh okay    JJ: When they first started letting women be active in--and our church, our  disciples church was one of the first that did I think    TL: That&amp;#039 ; s neat. Okay what were weddings like in your church? Anything special?  Nothing? Okay. Okay now we&amp;#039 ; re going to medical care.    JJ: Okay    TL: What was medical care like when you were a child?    JJ: Doctor King made house calls    TL: Doctor King, I&amp;#039 ; ve heard that name a time or two    JJ: Yeah    TL: Okay, uh-huh.    JJ: They took care of me, he didn&amp;#039 ; t deliver me because mother went to Tulsa, but  he took care of me all my life, and my mother and my dad and my grandparents.    TL: So why did your mom go to Tulsa? Was there a--?    JJ: I think her family had had hard deliveries    TL: Okay    JJ: So she just went in    TL: Just to be safe?    JJ: Mhm    TL: Okay. It&amp;#039 ; s asking here, did women generally give birth here or at home and  most likely they did but your mom just wanted to be--    JJ: My aunty had lost a baby at home birth, so.    TL: Yeah, yeah. What were some of your mother&amp;#039 ; s home remedies?    JJ: She&amp;#039 ; d just called Doctor King    TL: Okay, were you ever hospitalized?    JJ: When I had my tonsils out    TL: Okay, and here in Bristow?    JJ: Yeah    TL: Yeah? Which hospital?    JJ: Well it was up on 8th street, the old one they tore down    TL: Okay, I&amp;#039 ; m not from Bristow so was that--?    JJ: Okay, it was the Sisler    TL: Sisler, that&amp;#039 ; s what I was thinking, okay. Do you have any special memories  of that time? Did you get lots of ice cream?    JJ: Yes, I remember a sore throat    TL: Sore throat    JJ: Yeah    TL: Nothing- okay now we&amp;#039 ; re going to town life.    JJ: Okay    TL: Okay, what are your recollections of Bristow in your early childhood? How  about main street? Any special stores that you really enjoyed?    JJ: I loved Anthonys and I loved Pennys    TL: Okay    JJ: And then Miss Stanford had a shop that--for children    TL: Okay    JJ: That was fun    TL: Okay, okay. So about those stores, was it just because you went shopping  there a lot or was there--?    JJ: Oh we didn&amp;#039 ; t shop very much, but when we shopped that&amp;#039 ; s where we went    TL: That&amp;#039 ; s where you went, okay. How did you travel when you went to Tulsa? Did  you travel by car ;  did you travel by train?    JJ: We travelled by car, but I travelled by train a lot. When I was having my  teeth straightened, I had to go to Tulsa every three weeks and I rode the train  up there and back every three weeks.    TL: And did you go by yourself or did you go with your mom?    JJ: No I went by myself, I was in high school    TL: Oh okay, so you were older, okay.    JJ: Actually there were about four of us going, so    TL: Oh, okay    JJ: We all went to the same orthodontist    TL: Okay, who were some of the biggest businesses in town?    JJ: Hm, Wade Hardware, there were a lot of businesses. Of course Anthonys and  Pennys, and Miss Stanford, [Indecipherable] I can&amp;#039 ; t remember.    TL: What kind of shops did your mother frequent a lot? The ones that you  mentioned earlier?    JJ: Mhm    TL: Okay. What about restaurants, did you eat out very often?    JJ: Not very often    TL: Okay    JJ: If we did, we ate--when I was in high school we ate at Lions Café    TL: Okay, okay.    JJ: I&amp;#039 ; m sure you&amp;#039 ; ve heard of that one    TL: I have, and I hear about an ice cream shop a lot too, but I&amp;#039 ; m not for sure  about the time period though, so. How did people dress? Like during, how about  high school days? Was there a particular--    JJ: Dress code?    TL: Yeah    JJ: We wore dresses    TL: Dresses, okay    JJ: And they had to be a certain length    TL: Okay, and what length was that?    JJ: They had to come at least below your knee    TL: Below your knee, okay. Did you have a favourite dress, or a skirt? Did you  like to wear skirts or dresses?    JJ: I wore both    TL: Both, okay. It&amp;#039 ; s asking did you mostly buy your clothes or did you make them?    JJ: Mother made most of my clothes    TL: Okay, what were the main holiday events held in town?    JJ: Halloween, Christmas, I don&amp;#039 ; t remember any others.    TL: How did they celebrate Halloween?    JJ: Well they just opened up main street and let everybody run up and down it    TL: Okay, did you dress up as a child to go trick-or-treating?    JJ: Oh yeah    TL: Yeah? What was your favourite costume?    JJ: Well I think I was a witch    TL: Yeah, yeah. And what about July 4th, did they celebrate July 4th?    JJ: Yes    TL: Yeah?    JJ: They did, had fireworks and--    TL: Did they do that out on at the lake or--?    JJ: They did it at the lake and then of course the country club they always had  a golf--as I got older, they always had a golf tournament that we played in.    TL: Okay    JJ: And usually a lunch    TL: Okay, what&amp;#039 ; s your favourite holiday to celebrate?    JJ: Christmas    TL: Christmas? Yeah.    JJ: That&amp;#039 ; s the day we all get together    TL: Uh-huh, good. Okay, early adulthood. As a child, what did you want to be  when you grew up?    JJ: I wanted to be a teacher but I never did that    TL: Yeah, why not?    JJ: I just did not like college and quit    TL: Where did you go to college at?    JJ: OSU    TL: OSU?    JJ: [Indecipherable]    TL: Okay, what was your first job?    JJ: Oh, I worked at a bakery    TL: At a bakery, oh that could be very dangerous    JJ: It was, but I was thin then    TL: Right, and which bakery?    JJ: I don&amp;#039 ; t even remember the name of it, these people came in and put a bakery in    TL: And that--was that here in Bristow?    JJ: Yeah, it was between 7th and 8th down in that area    TL: Oh goodness    JJ: And it was really nice bakery, they were here for several years    TL: Uh-huh    JJ: And I worked it a lot through high school    TL: Did you sample a lot?    JJ: Oh of course    TL: Oh what was your favourite?    JJ: They made the best donuts you ever ate, make you hungry    TL: Yeah, I love bakeries.    JJ: I do too    TL: Pastries are my downfall    JJ: You don&amp;#039 ; t look like you had a downfall    TL: Oh yes, what kind of jobs have you held in the past?    JJ: Well let&amp;#039 ; s see, I&amp;#039 ; ve worked in the bank, I worked at the gas company,  [Indecipherable] Natural    TL: Okay    JJ: I never worked much. As soon as I got married, I never worked after that.    TL: Yes, you worked very hard    JJ: I worked, I raised four kids.    TL: You worked very hard, yes.    JJ: I didn&amp;#039 ; t get paid for it. Well I did, ultimately.    TL: You did, yeah. Okay, you didn&amp;#039 ; t work in the military. When did you meet your  spouse? So Ed is your spouse    JJ: Mhm    TL: Okay, when did you meet him?    JJ: Met him in 1960    TL: Okay, and where?    JJ: I was working for Bill [Indecipherable], and he worked--he had an office  across the street.    TL: Okay, and where was that at?    JJ: By the post office    TL: Okay    JJ: On 6th street    TL: Okay, okay.    JJ: And we just happened to meet. Actually I went to him, he was--I had a really  bad back and I went over there to see if he could fix it.    TL: So he was a doctor here in town then?    JJ: Yeah    TL: Okay, so that&amp;#039 ; s where his practice was at?    JJ: Mhm    TL: Okay, okay. And what was your first impression?    JJ: How shy he was    TL: Aw, really?    JJ: Yeah    TL: Uh-huh    JJ: He was extremely shy until you knew him    TL: Okay, how long had he been practicing here in town then?    JJ: Not too long, maybe a year    TL: Okay, and where did he come from?    JJ: Oh he came from basically Seminole (ph)    TL: Okay    JJ: Well he first came from Arkansas, did we run out your tape?    TL: Nope, I just heard a squeaky noise. Seminole?    JJ: Mhm    TL: Okay, can you tell me about your engagement?    JJ: We weren&amp;#039 ; t really engaged very long, we just started dating then got married    TL: Okay, how long did you date then? Just a short time?    JJ: Probably three or four months    TL: Okay, okay. Can you tell me about your wedding?    JJ: Yes, it was in my mother&amp;#039 ; s living room that was just mother and my  step-father and me. And Bunny Baker.    TL: Bunny Baker, really?    JJ: I had worked with her downtown    TL: Okay, okay. How about that. So after you got married, did you live here in  Bristow then?    JJ: Mhm    TL: Okay, and did you work after you got married? Stayed home?    JJ: No, this doesn&amp;#039 ; t get head shakes, does it?    TL: Huh?    JJ: I said that doesn&amp;#039 ; t pick up headshakes, does it?    TL: No it doesn&amp;#039 ; t pick up headshakes, no. Where did you live after you got  married then?    JJ: Oh, we lived out on Meta Hill (ph) when we first got married, and then we  moved ;  we bought our house on sixth street.    TL: Okay    JJ: The corner of sixth and pecan, yeah.    TL: Okay    JJ: We outgrew our first house    TL: Did you?    JJ: Yeah    TL: Okay, now it&amp;#039 ; s asking about travel. How did you travel to Oklahoma City or  Tulsa in the early?    JJ: Well usually by car, we always had a car    TL: Okay    JJ: During the war we used to trade a lot    TL: Did you, and when did you get married? What was the date?    JJ: July the 27th, 1961.    TL: 1961. Okay, when you took the train, what are your memories of this depot here?    JJ: It looks pretty much--I was trying to think, what was the ticket office in here?    TL: I&amp;#039 ; m assuming where it&amp;#039 ; s at now, but I don&amp;#039 ; t know.    JJ: But I do know it had two waiting rooms    TL: Okay two waiting rooms, okay.    JJ: And there were lots of trains through town, there were about six a day    TL: Six a day, okay.    JJ: Maybe more. It looks pretty much like it does now.    TL: Okay, and now you were talking about the waiting rooms, can you tell me a  little bit about the waiting rooms?    JJ: They just had lots of chairs, they had a black--one for the blacks and one  for the whites.    TL: Okay now where was the black waiting room and the white waiting room?    JJ: The black one was over at the side    TL: Okay, back there?    JJ: Yeah    TL: Okay    JJ: I may be wrong on that, but that&amp;#039 ; s what I can recall    TL: Okay. And okay, looks like we&amp;#039 ; re going back. Okay we&amp;#039 ; re going to route 66  now, you remember route 66?    JJ: Oh yes    TL: Okay, do you remember route 66 being built? This would&amp;#039 ; ve been, this  would&amp;#039 ; ve been before--this would&amp;#039 ; ve been 1920 so, yeah.    JJ: No I don&amp;#039 ; t remember    TL: No, you wouldn&amp;#039 ; t remember, yeah. 1926, yeah so. But do you remember it,  people traveling it a lot?    JJ: Oh yeah    TL: I&amp;#039 ; m guessing so, yeah. Do you remember it being a big to do? Probably not  because that was just the way people travelled, yeah    JJ: That just normal, yeah.    TL: Yeah.    JJ: And we really didn&amp;#039 ; t travel an awful lot here, you know. People didn&amp;#039 ; t  travel like they do now    TL: Right. Okay we&amp;#039 ; re gonna be talking about racism about the blacks and Indians  here in town, okay? Was the town segregated?    JJ: Yes    TL: Yes, what are your memories of it? The segregation?    JJ: Segregation. I remember the Indians really more than the blacks    TL: Okay    JJ: And they would just sit on the sidewalks    TL: Okay, on main street?    JJ: On main street    TL: Okay    JJ: And the blacks had their own town, they didn&amp;#039 ; t really come into the main  part of Bristow very much that I recall    TL: And when you say they had their own town, where was that located at?    JJ: It was over on the east 9th and 10th    TL: Okay, over on east 9th and 10th which would be over--okay.    JJ: Yup    TL: And I think I know where that&amp;#039 ; s at, okay    JJ: It&amp;#039 ; s up east of us north    TL: Okay, okay.    JJ: We can go over there now, there&amp;#039 ; s a big media hall of some kind over where  that used to be    TL: Okay, so that&amp;#039 ; s kind of where they stayed in their own part of the town,  okay. And when you say that, that&amp;#039 ; s kind of like when you were a child or during  that time period, or what time period are you?    JJ: When I was a child    TL: Child, okay.    JJ: Segregation came in--see my brother&amp;#039 ; s 18 years younger than I am, and he was  in one of the first segregated classes in school. They segregated the third  grade I think    TL: Okay    JJ: But I was not--schools were segregated when I was in school    TL: So they just kind of kept--the black&amp;#039 ; s kind of kept to their own part    JJ: Yeah they had their own high school and they had their own grade school    TL: And then so the Indians just kind of, you say just kind of sit on the  sidewalks and stuff? And what did they do then?    JJ: That&amp;#039 ; s all I ever saw them do    TL: Okay, okay. Was there any kind of problems or anything?    JJ: Not that I was aware of. Of course mother made sure I wasn&amp;#039 ; t aware of a lot  of stuff    TL: Okay. Okay, do you remember the names of any black families in town during  your childhood?    JJ: No    TL: Okay, were you allowed to socialize with any of the black children?    JJ: Wasn&amp;#039 ; t done    TL: Okay, and I&amp;#039 ; m guessing none of them attended your school    JJ: No    TL: They had their own schools, okay. Did you ever swim at the Bristow pool?    JJ: Oh yeah    TL: Did ya?    JJ: Yeah    TL: Were there any black children allowed at the pool? No, okay. How were black  people employed?    JJ: I think mostly as maids and--    TL: Okay    JJ: Neighbour, and see I don&amp;#039 ; t really know because I do know that they  had--their school teachers were all educated like they had to be to teach    TL: Right, so did they have their own teachers then at their school? Okay. Do  you remember any freedmen in Bristow?    JJ: Any what?    TL: Freedmen?    JJ: No    TL: Okay. What are your memories of any racism in early Oklahoma?    JJ: You know when you grow up with them like that you don&amp;#039 ; t even know it&amp;#039 ; s  racism. I&amp;#039 ; m sure there was a lot of it, but my parents were very kind and very  gentle and they never, never said bad things.    TL: Right    JJ: I&amp;#039 ; m sure there were bad things said, but they didn&amp;#039 ; t say them.    TL: Right. Okay, how were the Indians treated in town?    JJ: I don&amp;#039 ; t know ;  I really don&amp;#039 ; t know. I know we had a lot.    TL: Right    JJ: As far as how they were treated, I don&amp;#039 ; t have any idea.    TL: Do you remember any of the Indian families in town?    JJ: No    TL: Do you remember how they were employed? Any of the jobs that they held in  town? Do you remember any of the Indian allotment holders?    JJ: No, I&amp;#039 ; m sure there were--I&amp;#039 ; m sure I did but I don&amp;#039 ; t remember them.    TL: Okay now we&amp;#039 ; re gonna go to the oil drilling here in town.    JJ: Oh okay.    TL: Okay, was your family involved in any of the early oil drilling here?    JJ: No    TL: Okay, the great depression. Do you have any memories of the great depression?    JJ: Just that there wasn&amp;#039 ; t any money    TL: No money, yeah. Hard times. How did it affect your home life?    JJ: It really didn&amp;#039 ; t because my daddy worked in the post office and always had a job    TL: Okay, yeah.    JJ: But I had friends that were very, very poor. There just was nothing. They  would love to have something to eat.    TL: Right. And so your dad didn&amp;#039 ; t lose his job during that time?    JJ: No    TL: Yeah. What did it do to your grocery supply? Did you guys have to cut back  at all?    JJ: Not that I know of. My little mother was miss frugality so you wouldn&amp;#039 ; t have  known it.    TL: Aw, yup. Okay, do you remember the work being done to construct the lake or  the park?    JJ: I remember work in the park when they were building the amphitheatre.    TL: Do you? Okay, what do you remember of that?    JJ: I was trying to think who was president then. She came, the president&amp;#039 ; s wife came.    TL: Eleanor Roosevelt?    JJ: Was it Eleanor? It could&amp;#039 ; ve been    TL: She came and she dedicated that    JJ: Okay, she came and dedicated the amphitheatre    TL: Uh-huh, did you guys go out there?    JJ: Oh yeah    TL: Was it pretty exciting?    JJ: Yup    TL: Uh-huh    JJ: Pretty crowded    TL: I bet, that had to be a pretty big--    JJ: It was a big deal    TL: --event for Bristow    JJ: Yeah it was a big deal    TL: How old would&amp;#039 ; ve you been?    JJ: Probably about 6 or 7    TL: Oh    JJ: I was in, well it was in 30&amp;#039 ; , I think it was 36&amp;#039 ;  [Indecipherable]    TL: Did she get a pretty--did she give a speech? Is that right?    JJ: I&amp;#039 ; m sure she did but at that age I didn&amp;#039 ; t--    TL: Right    JJ: I thought, probably just thought it was boring    TL: Right, that&amp;#039 ; s pretty neat    JJ: More exciting    TL: Uh-huh. You probably just--you knew there was excitement, you know? Not for  sure what was going on but there was an excitement. So when they was building  the park and the amphitheatre, did your family go out there to kind of watch the  progress of it? Or not?    JJ: Not that I know of    TL: Okay. Did you attend events at the amphitheatre? Where they held the  different events out there? Did you, besides going to the dedication of it, what  events did you go to?    JJ: Well over the years I&amp;#039 ; ve gone to a lot. They&amp;#039 ; ve had band things and--    TL: They used to hold graduation?    JJ: Graduation    TL: For high school?    JJ: We&amp;#039 ; ve had graduations out there    TL: Okay    JJ: In fact, I was trying to think. I can&amp;#039 ; t even remember where ours was, it may  have been out there    TL: Really? Okay, that&amp;#039 ; s neat. What was the lake used for, besides people going  out there for picnics, picnics and--    JJ: Fishing and--    TL: Fishing, okay. Anything else, or no? Did they ever allow boats or--    JJ: You can put little boats out there    TL: Okay    JJ: With little trolley (ph) motors or--    TL: Okay    JJ: Actually, they had a boat house and they had boats you could rent    TL: Oh    JJ: But you had to paddle, we used that a lot in high school    TL: Okay    JJ: We&amp;#039 ; d go out and spend the afternoon with--on the lake just paddling around    TL: And what about swimming? Did they allow or have they ever allowed? I&amp;#039 ; ve  never seen--    JJ: Not on the lake, they&amp;#039 ; ve never, never allowed swimming in the lake    TL: Okay I was gonna say I don&amp;#039 ; t think I&amp;#039 ; ve ever--we&amp;#039 ; ve been here about 20 years  and I don&amp;#039 ; t think I&amp;#039 ; ve ever seen someone--    JJ: But they&amp;#039 ; ve always had a nice pool here so we didn&amp;#039 ; t need to swim in the lake    TL: Okay, okay. How about ice skating?    JJ: Yes, I can remember times they ice skated out there    TL: Oh    JJ: But I was little    TL: Uh-huh    JJ: I didn&amp;#039 ; t have any ice skates but I did skate around with my slick shoes, yeah    TL: Right, yeah. Has it ever been a very, like, a lot of people going out there or--?    JJ: Yeah there used to be a lot of people go out, I don&amp;#039 ; t know what they do  anymore but--    TL: Yeah, I see a lot of walkers out there    JJ: Lots of walkers    TL: Yeah, I love it out there    JJ: Yeah it&amp;#039 ; s so pretty and it&amp;#039 ; s peaceful    TL: That&amp;#039 ; s what I like about it    JJ: Well maintained and--    TL: It&amp;#039 ; s very peaceful and just, I love it out there. Okay politics    JJ: Okay    TL: Was your family politically involved?    JJ: Not really    TL: No, okay. Did any of your family members ever run for office?    JJ: Well I had a great uncle that did    TL: Yeah, here in Bristow?    JJ: Mhm    TL: Okay, and who was that?    JJ: Cal Foster    TL: Okay, and do you remember what office?    JJ: Probably county commissioner, I don&amp;#039 ; t really know    TL: Okay, okay. Did he win?    JJ: I think he did?    TL: Did he?    JJ: Yeah    TL: Okay, that&amp;#039 ; s good. Did women commonly vote during your childhood?    JJ: I don&amp;#039 ; t know    TL: Do you remember your--    JJ: I think mother voted, yeah I&amp;#039 ; m sure she did    TL: Good for her, good for her. How was voting done during your childhood?    JJ: I think pretty much like it is right now    TL: Okay    JJ: Here in Bristow. No, we didn&amp;#039 ; t have any machines, we just marked ballets    TL: Right, right. Have you always voted?    JJ: Yes    TL: Good for you. Okay, World War II. What are your memories of WWII?    JJ: Well, I had bunches of uncles in the army and the navy and the marines    TL: Uh-huh    JJ: I had one uncle killed in Italy    TL: Okay, and who was that?    JJ: Daddies youngest brother    TL: And his name?    JJ: Milton    TL: Milton?    JJ: Sears    TL: Milton Sears (ph), okay.    JJ: And actually I think he has a [Indecipherable] out at the cemetery    TL: Okay, that would be very hard for the family    JJ: I remember ration cards    TL: Right    JJ: And we had three gallons of gas a week, and that&amp;#039 ; s why we rode the train a lot    TL: Right, yes.    JJ: They were hard times    TL: Hard times, yeah. Yeah.    JJ: I remember reading the obituaries and holding your breath that nobody that  you knew was gonna be on the list    TL: Right, now did Milton have a family, I mean a wife?    JJ: He had a wife, he was--he was only I think 19 when he died so, he was real young    TL: But still hard for the family    JJ: Oh yeah, Carmen never got over that.    TL: I can&amp;#039 ; t even imagine    JJ: Oh I can&amp;#039 ; t either, I can&amp;#039 ; t either.    TL: So what branch was he in? You said the navy?    JJ: No he was in the army    TL: In the army, okay.    JJ: He was a first lieutenant ;  he was--he was killed on [Indecipherable]    TL: For 19, he--oh, so how did they get the, how did the family get the news  that he had--    JJ: With a telegram    TL: Telegram    JJ: They finally brought his body home    TL: Did they? Okay, okay.    JJ: He&amp;#039 ; s buried out at Magnolia    TL: Oh okay. What newspapers did you read here in Bristow during that time?    JJ: Oh, Bristow had two papers. They had the Record and the Citizen (ph)    TL: Okay    JJ: Tulsa had two papers, Tribune and the World    TL: Okay    JJ: We would get our Oklahoma City papers part of the time    TL: Oh okay. Yeah, looking at those papers during that time, just that&amp;#039 ; s all  front page every day, every day reading about the news.    JJ: I really miss the newspapers    TL: So what would you consider to be the most important invention during your lifetime?    JJ: Oh dear. I suppose one that affected most people is the television    TL: Okay, and why do you say that?    JJ: It&amp;#039 ; s just a better way to get the news. [Indecipherable]    TL: Right    JJ: I remember sitting in front of the little radio listening to it    TL: Right, while everyone gathered around it. How is the world different now  than when you were a child?    JJ: So many ways. Travel, it&amp;#039 ; s so much easier now than it was then. But I miss,  I really miss the slow pace of my childhood    TL: Yes    JJ: Seems like we stopped longer and enjoyed it    TL: Took time to enjoy things    JJ: Yup    TL: As you see it, what are the biggest problems that face our nation and how do  you think they could be solved?    JJ: I&amp;#039 ; m not smart enough to solve them, but I think the race problem is the  biggest one we have. I don&amp;#039 ; t know why people can&amp;#039 ; t accept you for who you are.  And then there&amp;#039 ; s so many more, there&amp;#039 ; s drugs and there&amp;#039 ; s all this stuff, but I  really think race is the big one.    TL: And then I was just gonna ask you, how are your feelings about COVID? How do  you think it&amp;#039 ; s changed how we are doing things?    JJ: I think they have overplayed it ;  I&amp;#039 ; ve always thought it was a political thing.    TL: Okay.    JJ: I don&amp;#039 ; t pay attention to it    TL: Yeah. Okay, your--Linda said that you kind of have some information about  that grand piano back there, you kind of knew a little bit about the history  about it?    JJ: Oh, I don&amp;#039 ; t really. I&amp;#039 ; ll tell you who probably could give you some is George Foster    TL: George Foster, okay.    JJ: Because that looks exactly like the piano that his grandmother had    TL: Okay, good deal    JJ: She had it in her house    TL: Okay. I think we&amp;#039 ; re good. Is there anything else that you would like to tell  us about? About your life or?    JJ: I don&amp;#039 ; t really think    TL: Are you sure?    JJ: I know the elections day is for a new hospital and I remember why they built  this one    TL: Yeah? Do you?    JJ: Oh yeah    TL: What can you tell us about it?    JJ: Oh well I remember how excited Ed was    TL: Uh-huh    JJ: Because he had a new hospital to work at    TL: Yeah, where did he have his practice? You say it was across from the post office?    JJ: Oh    TL: The first, his first, okay    JJ: His--out where the health department is now.    TL: Oh    JJ: On first street, that was his office    TL: Oh, okay.    JJ: He and doctor McAlester shared a building    TL: Okay, okay. And how long did he practice?    JJ: Probably 40 years out there. He retired the day he turned forty--65 he retired    TL: Good for him    JJ: Yeah    TL: Good for him    JJ: And we had 20 years before he died    TL: Uh-huh, right. Good.    JJ: And we made the most of it    TL: Good. Did he do surgeries or--    JJ: Mhm    TL: Did he? What kind of surgeries? Just everything?    JJ: He did almost anything. He actually was a trade surgeon ;  he was train out in  colleges but he didn&amp;#039 ; t wanna do a gynaecology practice    TL: Uh-huh    JJ: Because he would have had to go to the city and he didn&amp;#039 ; t want to go to the city    TL: Uh-huh, did he have a special, a favourite surgery that he liked to do or?    JJ: He just liked surgery, he liked to do surgery    TL: Uh-huh, did--    JJ: The nurses all said he was the best surgeon out there    TL: Wow, did he like doing--making house calls?    JJ: Oh he made house calls    TL: Uh-huh    JJ: He didn&amp;#039 ; t like them in the middle of the night    TL: Of course not, yeah    JJ: And he delivered babies, he delivered babies--one of the nurses out there  called him in and said &amp;quot ; I&amp;#039 ; m having a baby and you&amp;#039 ; re gonna deliver it&amp;quot ;     TL: Did he keep tabs of how many babies he delivered? No?    JJ: Said he wished he had    TL: Uh-huh, yeah.    JJ: He liked delivering babies, but he didn&amp;#039 ; t want to do it all the time    TL: Right, would he walk down the street or &amp;quot ; I delivered that one&amp;quot ;  or &amp;quot ; I  remember--&amp;quot ; ? Did he recall memories to you of patients? No?    JJ: We didn&amp;#039 ; t discuss patients much. Well I didn&amp;#039 ; t work out there unless I--he  was absolutely desperate. He didn&amp;#039 ; t think I needed to be involved in his  practice and I didn&amp;#039 ; t want to be    TL: Smart man    JJ: Yeah, well anyway. We had a good life and we raised four kids and they&amp;#039 ; re  all successful so.    TL: Good deal.    JJ: Yeah, when you look at your kids and you think &amp;quot ; they turned out good! And we  thought in high school you were [Indecipherable].TL: Exactly, and you wonder  many days and many nights    JJ: Are you gonna survive this? Am I gonna survive this?    TL: That&amp;#039 ; s right, that&amp;#039 ; s right. Yes, yeah.    JJ: Anyway    TL: Well this has been very pleasurable, thank you for doing this with us    JJ: Okay    TL: So yeah, okay well this concludes this interview    JJ: Good    TL: Thank you    JJ: Thank you    TL: Uh-huh. Can I--let&amp;#039 ; s see         audio   0 https://bristoworalhistory.org/ohms/viewer.php?cachefile=OHP-2021-20_Jones,_JoNell.xml OHP-2021-20_Jones,_JoNell.xml      </text>
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              <text>    5.4  March 31, 2021 OHP-2021-22 Leola Roebuck OHP-2021-22 0:00 - 26:26         Bristow Historical Society, Inc.    Leola Roebuck Debbie Blansett MP3   1:|65(4)|114(2)|153(9)|206(2)|239(3)|272(7)|307(2)|343(2)|392(2)|441(2)|487(9)|540(2)|575(3)|632(2)|676(4)|715(3)|754(5)|798(3)|848(3)|889(3)|922(2)|974(5)|1020(4)|1066(8)|1108(5)|1137(6)     0   https://bristoworalhistory.org/interviews/Leola Roebuck.wav  Other         audio          0 Introduction   DB: Alright let’s give this a try, I’ve got to read this. This is Debbie Blansett with the Bristow Historical Society in Bristow, Oklahoma and this interview is part of the historical societies ongoing oral history project. The date is March 31st, 2021 and I am here with Leola Roebuck in her home and, say your name.    KR: Kenneth    DB: Kenneth Roebuck, her son. And—    MR: Michelle Roebuck         Bristow Historical Society ; Bristow, Oklahoma ; Debbie Blansett ; Kenneth Roebuck ; Leola Roebuck ; Michelle Roebuck                           45 Moving to Bristow   DB: Okay, does she remember—do you remember when you came to Bristow?    KR: What year did you come to Bristow mom?    LR: What?    KR: What year did you move to Bristow?    DB: Do you remember?    KR: You know, from Boley. From Arkansas, you moved to Oklahoma from Arkansas, what year did you move to Bristow?    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: You don’t remember what year?         Boley, Oklahoma                           135 Farm   KR: Did you work outside the house?    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: [Indecipherable]     DB: Oh did you have a big garden?    LR: Yeah, I made a big garden    DB: Did you grow tomatoes?    LR: Tomatoes, yeah anything you could plant in a garden    DB: Anything you could plant, you’d put in your garden    LR: Uh-huh    DB: And you just—did you make your own bread?    LR: Did I make my own what?                                     250 Babysitting   KR: And then when we moved here, you sued to babysit kids while we were in school, other kids.    DB: You took care of other babies when your kids went to school?    LR: Uh-huh    DB: Uh-huh, for a long time?    LR: Mhm    DB: What did they call you?    KR: What did the kids call you?    LR: What?    KR: What did the kids call you? The kids you kept when—    DB: When you were babysitting, what did they call you? Did they call you Miss Leola? Did they call you grandma?                                     357 Family   DB: And Melvin is your grandson? Melvin? He wanted us to come talk to you.    KR: Melvin, Melvin. Melvin.    LR: Who?    KR: Melvin, Melvin wanted her to do this interview. Melvin, Mary Allen’s boy the daughter’s boy.    LR: Oh    DB: He said “You have to talk to my grandma”. You sure have a pretty hair thing on    KR: [Indecipherable]    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: Huh?    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: Yeah your brother do stay with you         Mary Allen ; Melvin                           489 Church   DB: Did you go to church?    LR: Yeah I go to church    DB: What church do you go to?    LR: I go to Duffys Chapel    KR: Duffy Chapel    DB: I do know Duffys Chapel    LR: My church    DB: That’s your church?    LR: Uh-huh         Duffys Chapel ; Myrtle Alexander ; Reverend Parker                           588 Food    DB: I know they could make peach cobbler ;  they were known for their peach cobbler. Can you make peach cobbler? Do you like peach cobbler?    KR: Do you like peach cobbler momma?    LR: Huh?    KR: Do you like peach cobbler?    LR: Yeah    DB: Oh yeah    KR: Her specialty is peach dumplings    DB: Oh, peach dumplings    KR: With the cinnamon in them    DB: mm, It’s probably been a while since she’s got to make some.     KR: Mhm, tell them about your homemade cake and the homemade ice and that white icing with that sweet milk, sugar, and butter, and vanilla flavouring. You remember that?         Boley, Oklahoma ; Oklaha                           802 Moving   KR: You gonna tell her about Oklaha, what y’all used to do in Oklaha?    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: Huh?    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: Oklaha, the town    LR: Oh yeah, down in Oklaha, we stayed all around that little place    DB: She what?    MR: She stayed all around that little place    DB: Oh alright    KR: Oklaha, Boley City, all of it    DB: Right [Indecipherable]    LR: Muskogee         Aunt Bea ; Boley City ; Muskogee ; Oklaha ; Uncle Buddy                           952 Sewing   DB: What did you like to do in Bristow? Did you go to the grocery store in Bristow?    LR: Yeah, [Indecipherable]    DB: Made quilts    LR: Curtains    DB: Curtains    LR: Childrens clothes    KR: Childrens clothes    DB: Childrens clothes. So you had a sewing machine?    KR: She done it by hand    LR: I did it by hand    DB: You did it by hand?    KR: Everything by hand    DB: You didn’t have a sewing machine?                                     1106 Lye Soap   KR: Tell her--hey, tell Mrs. Blansett how you used to make the lye soap    LR: What?    KR: Tell Mrs. Blansett—    DB: How you made soap    KR: Soap    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: The soap, the lye soap. You know the soap    LR: Yeah    KR: Tell her how you used to make that         lye soap                           1229 School   KR: Tell her about you used to have to walk five miles to school, tell her about your school day.    LR: More than five minutes [Indecipherable]    KR: More than five—I know    DB: More what?    KR: More than five minutes, I know. You told me you used to walk about five miles in the snow and stuff. Tell them about how y’all used to go to school while—    DB: Did you have to walk to school? Did you walk to school?    LR: [Indecipherable]    DB: And no bus?    LR: Momma couldn't keep me out of the field    KR: Huh?    LR: Momma couldn’t keep me out of the field                                     1446 Conclusion   DB: Alright, well miss Leola I’m so glad you talked to me today, I’m glad Kenneth and Michelle were here to help me understand    KR: She said—    LR: What?    KR: She said thank you    DB: Thank you    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: She said thank you    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: No she isn’t talking about [Indecipherable], she’s talking about she wants to thank you for letting her have her interview with you, talking with you today                                       In this 2021 interview, Leola Roebuck shares her experience living in Bristow. She talks about her farm, babysitting, sewing, and cooking.  Interviewer: Debbie Blansett    Interviewee: Leola Roebuck    Other Persons: Kenneth Roebuck, Michelle Roebuck    Date of Interview: March 31st, 2021    Location: Bristow, Creek County Oklahoma    Transcriber: Abby Thompson    Organization: Bristow Historical Society, Inc.    Original Cassette Tape Location: OHP-2021-22 at 00:00 to 26:26     Abstract:    Preface: The following oral history testimony is the result of a cassette tape  interview and is part of the Bristow Historical Society, Inc.&amp;#039 ; s collection of  oral histories. The interview was transcribed and processed by the Bristow  Historical Society, Inc., with financial assistance from the Montfort Jones &amp;amp ;   Allie Brown Jones Foundation. Rights to the material are held exclusively by the  Bristow Historical Society, Inc.    The reader should bear in mind that he or she is reading a verbatim transcript  of spoken, rather than written prose. Insofar as possible, this transcript tries  to represent the spoken word. Thus, it should be read as a personal memoir and  not as either a researched monograph or edited account.    To the extent possible, the spelling of place names, foreign words, and personal  names have been verified, either by reference resources or directly by the  interviewee. In some cases, a footnote has been added to the transcript in order  to provide more information and/or to clarify a statement. Some uncertainties  will inevitably remain regarding some words and their spellings. In these  scenarios, a (ph) follows a word or name that is spelled phonetically. The  notation [indecipherable] is used when the transcriber has not been able to  comprehend the word or phrase being spoken. The notation [inaudible] is used  where there is more mumbling than words, or when interference on the tape has  made transcription impossible.    DB: Alright let&amp;#039 ; s give this a try, I&amp;#039 ; ve got to read this. This is Debbie  Blansett with the Bristow Historical Society in Bristow, Oklahoma and this  interview is part of the historical societies ongoing oral history project. The  date is March 31st, 2021 and I am here with Leola Roebuck in her home and, say  your name.    KR: Kenneth    DB: Kenneth Roebuck, her son. And--    MR: Michelle Roebuck    DB: Her daughter-in law who is going to tell me a little bit about their history  in the Bristow area. Okay, does she remember--do you remember when you came to Bristow?    KR: What year did you come to Bristow mom?    LR: What?    KR: What year did you move to Bristow?    DB: Do you remember?    KR: You know, from Boley. From Arkansas, you moved to Oklahoma from Arkansas,  what year did you move to Bristow?    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: You don&amp;#039 ; t remember what year?    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: Okay what year was it?    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: Huh?    DB: She doesn&amp;#039 ; t know    LR: I don&amp;#039 ; t remember    KR: [Indecipherable]    DB: 1920 maybe?    KR: That&amp;#039 ; s when she was born    DB: No that&amp;#039 ; s when she was born    KR: Uh-huh.    DB: Did you live in the country?    LR: Uh-huh    DB: Uh-huh, did you have a lot of kids?    LR: Lot of kids    KR: A lot of kids    DB: Did you have a lot of babies?    LR: I had a couple    KR: You had--no you ain&amp;#039 ; t had, but you had ten kids, remember?    DB: Ten kids?    KR: Yeah    LR: Uh-huh    KR: Yeah she had ten of them    DB: Ten, what did you--did you, were you just momma all the time? Did you work  outside the house?    LR: What?    KR: Did you work outside the house?    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: [Indecipherable]    DB: Oh did you have a big garden?    LR: Yeah, I made a big garden    DB: Did you grow tomatoes?    LR: Tomatoes, yeah anything you could plant in a garden    DB: Anything you could plant, you&amp;#039 ; d put in your garden    LR: Uh-huh    DB: And you just--did you make your own bread?    LR: Did I make my own what?    KR: Your bread, you know you made biscuits every morning.    DB: Biscuits every morning?    KR: Mom made biscuits, yeah.    DB: Did you have chickens? No chickens?    KR: Yeah she had chickens, tell them about the--tell them about where y&amp;#039 ; all used  to do your hogs. Put them in the sweat house and salt them down and all of that.  You remember when you had to farm when you stayed on the farm?    LR: Nuh-uh    KR: When you stayed on the farm    LR: Oh yeah    KR: You raised hogs and chickens and stuff    DB: And you have to butcher them? That was pretty hard work    LR: Yeah    DB: Did you--    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: No she isn&amp;#039 ; t talking about [Indecipherable] she&amp;#039 ; s talking about how you  raised the animals on the farm    DB: Uh-huh, and you had pigs?    KR: Pigs, you had hogs and stuff    DB: hogs    LR: Yeah I had hogs and chickens    KR: Chickens    DB: Chickens    LR: Guineas    KR: Guineas    LR: Turkeys    KR: Turkeys    DB: Wow, that&amp;#039 ; s a farm    KR: Y&amp;#039 ; all had a set of mules too, didn&amp;#039 ; t we?    LR: Uh-huh    DB: You had a set of what?    KR: Mules    DB: Oh, some mules.    KR: That&amp;#039 ; s how they done all their farms    LR: Yeah I [Indecipherable]    KR: And then when we moved here, you used to babysit kids while we were in  school, other kids.    DB: You took care of other babies when your kids went to school?    LR: Uh-huh    DB: Uh-huh, for a long time?    LR: Mhm    DB: What did they call you?    KR: What did the kids call you?    LR: What?    KR: What did the kids call you? The kids you kept when--    DB: When you were babysitting, what did they call you? Did they call you Miss  Leola? Did they call you grandma?    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: She&amp;#039 ; s wanting to know what did the kids call you? Did they call you grandma?  I bet most of them called you Aunt Leola    DB: Aunt Leola, how many did you keep?    LR: How many did I keep?    KR: Kids at one time, how many kids did you keep at one time? You know you  babysat, how many kids did you babysit? That&amp;#039 ; s what she&amp;#039 ; s asking you    LR: About four or five    DB: Four or five, you are brave. What about this guy? Is he a pretty good guy?    LR: Yeah, he&amp;#039 ; s pretty good    KR: What?    MR: She said yes, he&amp;#039 ; s pretty good    DB: Does he take god care of you?    LR: Awful good    DB: Awful good    KR: Yeah, but she&amp;#039 ; s out here--    DB: Michelle takes good care of you too?    LR: Michelle    KR: Michelle, Michelle my wife, your daughter-in-law Michelle    LR: Oh yeah, uh-huh    DB: And Melvin is your grandson? Melvin? He wanted us to come talk to you.    KR: Melvin, Melvin. Melvin.    LR: Who?    KR: Melvin, Melvin wanted her to do this interview. Melvin, Mary Allen&amp;#039 ; s boy the  daughter&amp;#039 ; s boy.    LR: Oh    DB: He said &amp;quot ; You have to talk to my grandma&amp;quot ; . You sure have a pretty hair thing on    KR: [Indecipherable]    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: Huh?    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: Yeah your brother do stay with you    MR: She says she favours Buddy    KR: Yeah her brother    DB: You sure are a pretty lady    KR: Thank you, she said you&amp;#039 ; re pretty    LR: Huh?    KR: She said you&amp;#039 ; re a pretty lady. She said you&amp;#039 ; re a pretty lady    LR: Yeah    KR: You act surprised she ain&amp;#039 ; t said that, I know [Indecipherable]    LR: [Indecipherable] My oldest daughter [Indecipherable]    DB: Her oldest daughter maybe?    KR: Yeah she passed, Melvin&amp;#039 ; s mom, she would&amp;#039 ; ve been--see we wrote down all her brothers.    DB: Okay, okay, okay. [Indecipherable]    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: No, them are papers she&amp;#039 ; s gotta fill out to put you in the magazine    DB: How old are you?    LR: Huh?    DB: How old are you?    LR: 101    DB: 101, did they give you 101 spankings?    LR: No, I didn&amp;#039 ; t get spankings    DB: No spankings for you    LR: I didn&amp;#039 ; t want spankings    DB: Don&amp;#039 ; t want any    LR: [Inaudible]    KR: Huh?    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: No    DB: Did you go to church?    LR: Yeah I go to church    DB: What church do you go to?    LR: I go to Duffys Chapel    KR: Duffy Chapel    DB: I do know Duffys Chapel    LR: My church    DB: That&amp;#039 ; s your church?    LR: Uh-huh    KR: Yeah she was treasurer up there for 38 years    DB: Now isn&amp;#039 ; t that where--    KR: [Indecipherable], we&amp;#039 ; re having Reverend Parker do it now    DB: Okay, and--    KR: New Life, they changed it to New Life    DB: Myrtle, Myrtle Alexander, that was her church, I mean she kept kids at our  church but that was always her home church    KR: Yeah, yeah, yeah.    DB: Odell&amp;#039 ; s and Clydals momma    KR: Yeah before they moved to the Methodist, yeah.    DB: Do you remember Myrtle Alexander? Do you remember Myrtle?    KR: She probably don&amp;#039 ; t    DB: No    KR: You remember Mrs. Alexander? You remember--    MR: Mrs. Alexander    KR: You remember Mrs. Cross    LR: Who?    KR: Mrs. Cross    LR: What?    KR: Mrs. Cross, that would&amp;#039 ; ve been Myrtles mother. You remember Mrs. Cross, right?    LR: Yeah    KR: Okay now she wants to know, did you know her girl, daughter.    LR: Yeah    KR: Mrs. Myrtle    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: No Mrs. Alexander    LR: [Indecipherable]    DB: Duffys Chapel, I haven&amp;#039 ; t heard that in a long time.    LR: I remember [Indecipherable]    KR: Yeah she knows, she [Indecipherable]    DB: I&amp;#039 ; ve got all this stuff    KR: She used to go to church there    LR: No more    DB: Did you sing in the--    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: [Indecipherable]    DB: I know they could make peach cobbler ;  they were known for their peach  cobbler. Can you make peach cobbler? Do you like peach cobbler?    KR: Do you like peach cobbler momma?    LR: Huh?    KR: Do you like peach cobbler?    LR: Yeah    DB: Oh yeah    KR: Her specialty is peach dumplings    DB: Oh, peach dumplings    KR: With the cinnamon in them    DB: mm, It&amp;#039 ; s probably been a while since she&amp;#039 ; s got to make some.    KR: Mhm, tell them about your homemade cake and the homemade ice and that white  icing with that sweet milk, sugar, and butter, and vanilla flavouring. You  remember that?    LR: Yeah, [Indecipherable]    KR: [Indecipherable]    DB: It best is, sounds like a birthday cake    KR: Yeah she&amp;#039 ; s the best    LR: Yeah    DB: It sounds good    KR: That&amp;#039 ; s good eating    DB: That&amp;#039 ; s good eating right there.    KR: Hey, hey, hey, tell them about how you like the black eyed peas and cornbread    LR: I love black eyed peas and cornbread    DB: That&amp;#039 ; s what we have at our house    KR: [Indecipherable]    LR: Yeah I love black eyed peas and cornbread    DB: And cornbread, black eyed peas, what do you like in your black eyed peas?    LR: Yeah    KR: She said what you like to put in them, what kind of meat you season them with    LR: With bacon    KR: Bacon    DB: Bacon    LR: Uh-huh    KR: And what else we put in that?    LR: Salt meat    KR: Salt meat, and what else? Ham [Indecipherable], remember?    DB: Ooh, I&amp;#039 ; ve got some of those in my freezer    KR: We keep ham [Indecipherable]    DB: I need to go pull one out and make some of those, I think my husband would  like that    LR: Yeah    DB: He likes cornbread    KR: Yeah she loves cornbread    DB: Hard to cook it in a big skillet    LR: Yeah    KR: She&amp;#039 ; s--    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: What?    LR: At home    DB: At home?    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: She likes that, she eats cornbread, pulled pork, buttered milk    DB: Oh. I don&amp;#039 ; t know what else she would feel like telling me about    KR: Hey, tell them about--we moved to Bristow from Boley, right?    LR: What?    KR: From Boley, Boley Oklahoma? You know you stayed--    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: Did you stay down Boley and Oklaha    LR: Yeah    KR: Tell them about them towns    LR: [Indecipherable]    DB: Good what?    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: Yeah but she wants to know about the time when you lived in Oklaha and moved  to Boley. Remember?    DB: Well she was saying something straight out of the oven    KR: Yeah about how they used to cook the biscuits    DB: Ohh come straight out in the oven    KR: Yeah    LR: So good    DB: So good    LT: Yeah, really good    DB: I&amp;#039 ; ve got her talking about food now    KR: Yeah    LR: The what?    KR: The food, the food you like    DB: My grandma always made angel food cake, she liked to make angel food cake  for our birthday.    LR: Yeah    DB: Yeah    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: You gonna tell her about Oklaha, what y&amp;#039 ; all used to do in Oklaha?    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: Huh?    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: Oklaha, the town    LR: Oh yeah, down in Oklaha, we stayed all around that little place    DB: She what?    MR: She stayed all around that little place    DB: Oh alright    KR: Oklaha, Boley City, all of it    DB: Right [Indecipherable]    LR: Muskogee    KR: Muskogee and all them    DB: Just moved from house to house?    LR: Yeah we moved from house to house    DB: Yeah    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: Stayed all night [Indecipherable]    DB: Uh-huh, with all those kids?    LR: Huh?    DB: With all your kids? Moved around with all those kids?    LR: Yeah I think I had one or two    MR: She said one or two    DB: Oh    KR: [Indecipherable] which one? Aunt Bea (ph) or Uncle Buddy(ph)?    DB: Maybe both of them    KR: Yeah, but [Indecipherable]    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: Yeah he left--    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: You only lost four of your siblings    DB: She still has brothers and sisters living?    KR: No, she&amp;#039 ; s the only one    DB: She&amp;#039 ; s the last one?    KR: She&amp;#039 ; s the only one, she&amp;#039 ; s talking about her kids.    DB: Oh    KR: Let me see that, lick your tongue out, you&amp;#039 ; ve got something on--    LR: Oh    DB: It&amp;#039 ; s--    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: I got it, okay    DB: He got it    KR: Okay, just tell them about something what you&amp;#039 ; ve done during life. Your  life, I mean--    DB: Hundred and one years, that&amp;#039 ; s a long time. Did you have a birthday party?    LR: Oh yeah    KR: A small one    DB: A little [Indecipherable]?    KR: The [Indecipherable]    DB: This COVID thing is bad    LR: Yeah    DB: Did you all get your shots and everything?    KR: Yes    DB: I have too. Well you look nice and snug, you look good and wrapped up,  you&amp;#039 ; re not cold.    KR: She stays cold, she don&amp;#039 ; t like cold, that blood thing. Tell them a little  more about your life mama.    MR: What&amp;#039 ; d you used to do    LR: Huh?    MR: What did you used to do?    DB: What did you like to do in Bristow? Did you go to the grocery store in Bristow?    LR: Yeah, [Indecipherable]    DB: Made quilts    LR: Curtains    DB: Curtains    LR: Childrens clothes    KR: Childrens clothes    DB: Childrens clothes. So you had a sewing machine?    KR: She done it by hand    LR: I did it by hand    DB: You did it by hand?    KR: Everything by hand    DB: You didn&amp;#039 ; t have a sewing machine?    MR: How&amp;#039 ; d you sew it? Did you sew it with your hands?    LR: What?    MR: Your clothes and quilts?    LR: Yeah I did it at home, [Indecipherable]    DB: Uh-huh. Where did you get your material for your quilts? Where did the  material come from?    LR: The material    MT: [Indecipherable]. Did you get your material from old clothes and stuff?    DB: Feed sacks? Flower sacks? Did you have a frame for your quilts? Did you have  a quilting frame?    LR: Uh-huh    DB: Was it big?    LR: Uh-huh    DB: Yeah, that&amp;#039 ; s what my grandmother used, one of those. And she did hers by hand    LR: Yeah    DB: Oh there&amp;#039 ; s one of your quilts, Kenneth has one of your quilts    KR: Pizza man, look here mom, mom. Mom, ain&amp;#039 ; t this yours?    DB: Did you make that?    LR: Make what?    DB: Did you make this quilt?    LR: Yeah    DB: That&amp;#039 ; s beautiful    LR: Made out of scraps    DB: Made out of scraps    LR: Uh-huh    DB: Where&amp;#039 ; d you get the scraps?    LR: [Indecipherable]    MR: From where? Where&amp;#039 ; d you get your scraps from? Old clothes?    LR: Yeah I did    KR: Where did--how did you make your quilts? What&amp;#039 ; d you make the quilt--what  material did you make the quilt out of?    LR: The what?    KR: The quilt, where&amp;#039 ; d you get the material to make the quilts?    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: I said where did you get the material to make the quilts    LR: At the store    KR: At the stores--    DB: At the stores    KR: Some of it at the general store, lot of it was old jeans and she&amp;#039 ; d cut that  into pieces and she done everything by hand. Tell them, hey, tell Mrs. Blansett  how you used to make the lye soap    LR: What?    KR: Tell Mrs. Blansett--    DB: How you made soap    KR: Soap    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: The soap, the lye soap. You know the soap    LR: Yeah    KR: Tell her how you used to make that    LR: Well, you put so many cans of lye    DB: So many cans of lye    LR: So much grease    KR: So much grease    LR: Water    KR: Water    DB: Water    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: [Indecipherable], ok. And then you [Indecipherable] right?    DB: And you cook it?    LR: Huh?    DB: You cooked it?    LR: You had to cook it [Indecipherable]    KR: In my storage house, I&amp;#039 ; ve got a piece she made    DB: In a big pot?    LR: Yeah    DB: Did it get you clean?    LR: Sometimes    DB: Sometimes. Did you use it for your clothes? Did you use it to wash?    KR: The soap    LR: [Indecipherable] and mop    DB: And mop. So you worked pretty hard    LR: Huh?    DB: You worked pretty hard.    KR: You worked pretty hard when you were growing up. You worked hard, did you  work hard?    LR: Uh-huh    DB: Oh yes    KR: I still got a piece of her lye soap    DB: Oh my. Did you--when did you get electricity?    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: Huh?    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: No when did you--when did y&amp;#039 ; all have lights? How old was you when y&amp;#039 ; all had  electricity in your house?    DB: When you got lights in the house?    KR: You remember how old you were?    DB: Much later    KR: Huh? About how old were you? Tell her about you used to have to walk five  miles to school, tell her about your school day.    LR: More than five minutes [Indecipherable]    KR: More than five--I know    DB: More what?    KR: More than five minutes, I know. You told me you used to walk about five  miles in the snow and stuff. Tell them about how y&amp;#039 ; all used to go to school while--    DB: Did you have to walk to school? Did you walk to school?    LR: [Indecipherable]    DB: And no bus?    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: Huh?    LR: Momma couldn&amp;#039 ; t keep me out of the field    DB: Momma something    KR: Yeah your momma couldn&amp;#039 ; t keep out of the field    DB: Oh, did you have a horse?    LR: Yeah, I had a horse and I had a plow    DB: Horse and a plow, did you have a buggy?    LR: Yeah, I had a buggy    KR: Did you have a buggy to ride in? Did the horse pull a buggy?    LR: Yeah I--    KR: A wagon or a buggy, did you have a wagon or a buggy?    LR: Yeah, a wagon    DB: A wagon    KR: Wagon    LR: And a buggy too    KR: And a buggy too    DB: And a buggy too    LR: Momma gave me a buggy too    KR: Your momma did    DB: Momma used the buggy    LR: Bouncing up and down the road    KR: Bouncing up and down the road    DB: Yes. Was it hard to plow?    LR: I had a plow    DB: You had a plow, was it hard?    LR: No    DB: No? Not with the horse?    LR: Working the peas    KR: Working the peas    DB: Working the peas, you had a lot of peas?    LR: We had a lot of [Indecipherable]    DB: Were they black eyed peas?    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: [Indecipherable]    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: Raise and eat [indecipherable] trade and sell off the farm too    DB: Oh, they would sell their things?    KR: They would sell, you know, what they didn&amp;#039 ; t keep they would sell. They  raised enough to make money off of. That&amp;#039 ; s what she used to tell us all the  time. When I was a kid, [Indecipherable] used to make the whole yard a garden    DB: Make the whole yard a garden    KR: Yeah    LR: Huh?    DB: He said the whole yard was a garden    LR: Who?    KR: The field, you know like the field?    LR: Yeah    KR: The whole field, y&amp;#039 ; all would plow the whole field up wouldn&amp;#039 ; t you?    LR: Oh yeah [Indecipherable]    KR: She would help her sister    DB: Did you go to school?    LR: I did if could    DB: How long did you go to school?    LR: I did go to school    KR: Yeah she said how long did you go    LR: [Indecipherable] I&amp;#039 ; d go to school    KR: It would change when you wasn&amp;#039 ; t working you would go, but you went up the  the 8th grade, 7th grade    DB: To 8th grade    KR: I think she took the 8th grade    LR: Don&amp;#039 ; t tell that boy about [Indecipherable]    KR: I Won&amp;#039 ; t tell him    DB: What did she said    KR: Don&amp;#039 ; t tell that boy about [Indecipherable]. Hey, what year--you went up to  the 8th grade, didn&amp;#039 ; t you? Your 8th grade, [Indecipherable] in 8th grade?    LR: Yeah    KR: Yeah    DB: Did you make good grades?    LR: Yeah    DB: Yes, did you like to read?    LR: I like to read    KR: She loves reading the bible, well used to    LR: Everything I went to do, I got it    KR: Everything she went to do she got it    DB: Alright, well miss Leola I&amp;#039 ; m so glad you talked to me today, I&amp;#039 ; m glad  Kenneth and Michelle were here to help me understand    KR: She said--    LR: What?    KR: She said thank you    DB: Thank you    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: She said thank you    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: No she isn&amp;#039 ; t talking about [Indecipherable], she&amp;#039 ; s talking about she wants  to thank you for letting her have her interview with you, talking with you today    DB: Thank you for letting me talk to you. Will you let me take your picture?    KR: She wants--    LR: [Indecipherable]    KR: Mom she wants to take a picture now, you gonna let her take a picture of you?    DB: Yes    LR: Huh?    KR: You gonna let her take a picture? She wants to take a picture    DB: You&amp;#039 ; re so pretty    KR: Let&amp;#039 ; s fix your little bonnet up here a little bit    LR: [Indecipherable] It&amp;#039 ; s not no bonnet    KR: Okay I know it ain&amp;#039 ; t a bonnet but I just said that, okay.    DB: Oh, she looks so pretty. You want to hand me my purse over there? They keep  you looking mighty fine.    KR: Say thank you    MR: She said you look good, you gonna smile?    KR: Smile so she can take a picture. Look at the phone, she&amp;#039 ; s gonna take a  picture of you    DB: I get the camera first, alrighty. One, two, wait let me try this one. One,  two, three    KR: Cheese    DB: I think that&amp;#039 ; s wonderful, 101 years&amp;#039 ;  old    KR: Yes    DB: Miss Leola    MR: Her mommas gonna go down to the corner, she said    DB: Now she&amp;#039 ; s laughing    MR: She said her mommas gonna go down to the corner and catch a man    DB: I think they&amp;#039 ; re not gonna let you do that. You&amp;#039 ; re gonna go catch a man?    KR: [Indecipherable]    LR: [Indecipherable]         audio   0 https://bristoworalhistory.org/ohms/viewer.php?cachefile=OHP-2021-22_Leola_Roebuck.xml OHP-2021-22_Leola_Roebuck.xml      </text>
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          <description>This field adds keywords to the Omeka Oral History item type. Keywords are&#13;
included in the OHMS XML, this field in Omeka will allow for full data migration&#13;
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              <text>home life, farming, Duffy Chapel</text>
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              <text>    5.4  November 12, 2020 OHP-2020-09 Carole Ellis OHP-2020-09 00:00 - 64:15         Bristow Historical Society, Inc.    Carole Ellis Georgia Smith MP3   1:|60(7)|92(1)|114(3)|154(15)|166(13)|183(15)|202(11)|220(3)|241(8)|263(12)|291(1)|318(7)|333(2)|358(7)|377(8)|409(1)|420(9)|441(1)|467(6)|477(9)|507(2)|527(3)|542(5)|568(2)|591(5)|603(4)|621(7)|641(3)|677(3)|704(8)|718(13)|728(6)|746(7)|754(11)|768(4)|782(1)|791(15)|813(11)|832(11)|842(6)|853(9)|862(14)|874(2)|880(3)|893(1)|906(3)|914(10)|925(2)|943(6)|955(16)|969(1)|982(6)|995(6)|1011(11)|1036(5)|1065(2)|1079(9)|1094(6)|1105(1)|1116(6)|1131(6)|1142(15)|1156(1)|1169(13)     0   https://bristoworalhistory.org/interviews/Carole Greer Ellis.mp3  Other         audio          0 Introduction   GS: This is Georgia Smith with the Bristow Historical Society in Bristow Oklahoma, and this interview is part of the Historical Societies ongoing oral history project. The date is November the 12th, 2020 and I am sitting here with Carol Ellis at the museum depot who is going to tell me a little bit about her history in the Bristow area. Now, could you give me your full name Carol?    CE: Hi Georgia    GS: Hey    CE: My full name for the Bristow area is Carol Greer Ellis.    GS: Okay, what was your name at birth?    CE: Carol Lynn Greer         Baltimore, Maryland ; Bristow Historical Society ; Carol Greer Ellis ; Carol Lynn Greer ; Georgia Smith                           77 Family History   GS: Okay, right in the war almost, at the end of the war. What were your parents’ names, and we’ll start with your mother first and her maiden name?    CE: My mother was from Baltimore, Dorothy Elizabeth Rigel (ph), my father from Bristow, Merle Leroy Greer.     GS: Where were your parents married?    CE: I have no idea, my father was in the navy and he was stationed in Maryland at the time when he met my mother, and they were married in Baltimore.    GS: Okay, you know when they were married?    CE: About a year or so before I was born.    GS: Okay, 43’ or 44’    CE: Yes         Dorothy Elizabeth Rigel ; Edward Wyatt ; Gale Lease Lawson ; Jerry Ellis ; Merle Leroy Greer                  https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/25270948/edward-j-wyatt Edward Wyatt      220 Childhood   GS: Alright. Tell me about what your life was like at home when you were a young child.    CE: Well, when I was a young child, I still have some childhood friends that are still here, Sherry Hill (ph), Slyman lived across the street, Claudia Parish—Parish family lived across the street, we lived near the football field. We played a lot on the football field after football games, we walked to Edison elementary school, growing up here my life was in nature a lot, you know, we walked around the town, went to the schools here, had close friends and their parents were friends with my parents. We were all involved in the churches and the schools and the swimming pool in the summer, and riding horses in fields, being out in nature. And art, always doing art of some kind.    GS: Sounds like a delightful childhood. What kind of house did you grow up in?         Billy Newton ; Claudia Parish ; Edison Elementary ; Peggy Newton ; Safeway ; Sherry Hill ; Silver plunge ; Washington Elementary ; Winky Dink ; Zorro                           705 Grandparents   GS: All the time, yeah. Okay we’re gonna switch to your grandparent’s now    CE: Okay    GS: Do you remember hearing your grandparents describe their lives before—let me back up, what were your grandparent’s names?    CE: I was a very fortunate child that I knew both sets of my grandparents and my great grandparents    GS: That is, I don’t get many of those on the interviews    CE: So my fathers parents were Earnest Greer (ph) and Willa Wyatt Greer (ph), and my—they, daddies father was from Mounds and of course my grandmother was born here in Creek county. My mother’s parents were Dorothy Elizabeth Troxel (ph), she was born in Maryland, and Thomas Charleston Brigle (ph), my mother’s father, and he also was born in Maryland.         Creek County ; Dorothy Elizabeth Troxel ; Earnest Greer ; Mounds, Oklahoma ; Thomas Charleston Brigle ; Willa Wyatt Greer                           917 School   GS: Where did you first attend school? We’re gonna jump now to.    CE: I first attended school here in Bristow and I went to Catholic kindergarten. The catholic school had a kindergarten    GS: Yes    CE: And I went to kindergarten there.    GS: Okay    CE: Then Edison elementary, Washington elementary, Bristow Junior high school, Bristow high school graduated.    GS: What year did you graduate?         Bristow High School ; Bristow Junior High School ; Edison Elementary ; Gladys Holcombe ; Mrs. Foster ; New York City ; Oklahoma State University ; Peadee Smith ; University of Oklahoma ; Washington Elementary                           1234 Church Life   GS: I'm sure you did, I'm sure. Okay we're gonna switch to church life. You mentioned that you all went to churches ;  did you attend a certain church as a child?    CE: We went to First Baptist Church    GS: And is it the same building that is now at sixth and chestnut?    CE: Yes, it is.    GS: Can you describe any of the services?    CE: I think the services as a young kid you can't remember    GS: No         First Baptist Church ; Harvets Jewelry Store                           1374 Medical Care   GS: Yes, the turbulent sixties. What was medical care like when you were a child?    CE: My mother was diligent about taking us to the doctor to get, you know, a vaccinations or whenever we needed to go then my mother was always very medically inclined.    GS: Do you remember any of the doctors or your family doctor?    CE: Sure, my family doctor was Dr. C. T. Kent    GS: Okay    CE: And I remember his whole family, yes I remember him very well. I also remember, yeah I remember him very well and his family.    GS: Did they make house calls or did you need to go to the office?    CE: I also remember Doctor King, my great grandmother Wyatt's doctor    GS: Yes    CE: Dr. King made house calls    GS: Okay       Dr. C. T. Kent ; Dr. King ; Kay James ; Laban ; Saint Francis Hospital ; Siscler                           1633 Businesses   GS: My goodness. Do you remember any of the businesses downtown? You've mentioned some grocery stores, there were several, do you remember any others?    CE: Okay, I'll start on the west side. Beginning at Edison elementary school, there was a MedalGold (ph) place that was in where Oscars lunch place used to be    GS: At ninth and main    CE: Bushes Cafe, where Mrs. Bushkin (ph) made great homemade everything, there was a locker where people who butchered their cattle or brought their chicken frosted--chickens and their cows.    GS: Just south of the last--Bushes    CE: Bushes    GS: Just south of Bushes         American National Bank ; Bushes Cafe ; Dairy Queen ; Ford Hardware Store ; Hamburger King ; Harvest Jewelry ; Harvets Jewelry ; Ice House ; Kemp Drug ; MedalGold ; Mrs. Bushkin ; Oscars ; Patens ; Princes Theater ; Redbird ; Shamus ; Silvers ; Stanford Clothing Shop ; Strongs ; Tropes Service Station ; Walmer ; Woolworth                           1800 Jobs and Art   GS: Okay, that's pretty good. As a child, what did you want to be when you grew up?    CE: I only knew what I liked to do, I didn't have an idea of like &amp;quot ; I want to be this&amp;quot ; . I know I loved to do art all the time, and I loved to write and I loved to be outside. In high school I thought about being a teacher, but I was really loving writing and debating and being in plays, they had--the speech teacher had to really rope me into debating. But once I did learn to do it, I liked it and I loved plays, doing theater. And dance, oh yeah I forgot that part. When we were in the first and second grade, Wanda Newton had a dance studio in her house.    GS: I did not know that.         National Academy ; New York City ; Oklahoma City ; Oklahoma State University ; The Natural Wire Draw ; Wanda Newton                           2118 Oklahoma City Bombing   GS: Now I know that you've used your artistic talents in the memorial of the Oklahoma City Bombing, how did the Oklahoma City Bombing of the Murrah building affect you personally?    CE: I think that's two different questions so I'm gonna start the art part first    GS: Okay    CE: You know ;  art is very underrated in the study of--in the curriculum of schools. There's fine art and there's commercial art. Commercial art is whenever you can just get assignments for clients and it's a business and you make money and you have techniques and you can do what they want, like building a kitchen cabinet. Fine art you never know what your future's gonna be. You never know that it's gonna be based on money or how you're gonna survive. You train yourself fin the basics of drawing and painting and anatomy and ceramics and sculpture and art history, and you nurture yourself and you become the kind of artist you're going to become, you don't have a name for it at the time. I gravitated to like a journalistic fine artist because I grew up in a lot of life here in Oklahoma and went to a lot of things in life. I loved to draw live events, I love to paint what I--live things, or if I remember something from something that's happened in my life, it might stay with me so long that I need to express it artistically somehow. So when the Oklahoma City bombing happened--       American Library Association ; Chris Watt ; FAA ; John Lennon ; Murrah Building ; Oklahoma City Bombing ; Oklahoma City Project ; Oklahoma Department of Libraries ; Parsons ; Woody Guthrie                           2886 Oklahoma Hall of Fame Ceremony   CE: It did--    GS: And I beg your pardon because I don't remember if it was a television thing, but tell me about that when you had the beautiful dress.    CE: Oh the dress, the blue dress. Okay, well first every year at the anniversary of the bombing, I'm very aware of it so I will always do something just like the initiative for bringing it to you guys at the 20th anniversary was because of that normally when I do that. That time of year is I'm always getting back involved with it. Well after I'd been working on the project a year, after--    GS: And I need to make a correction, that was the 25th anniversary    CE: Okay, that's right    GS: I said 20th but it was the 25th    CE: It was, so--thanks for catching that Georgia. After I'd been working on the project for a year, I had all this drawing and work and [Indecipherable] and stuff and I said, alright, I was talking to a friend I said &amp;quot ; I have all this work for you, I'm not sure what to do with it&amp;quot ;  and they said &amp;quot ; Do you know anybody who has--is in television?&amp;quot ;  well actually because of the first Bristow all school reunion, I had met this man named Jimmy Baker who had graduated from Bristow High School right out here on near the bricks at the historical society, and I had met him and helped him find brick for his family, and we got into a conversation and he was a producer for ABC from Los Angela's back here in Bristow to do the All School reunion, so I remembered him because he asked me to keep in touch with him. So I called him up and said &amp;quot ; I have this material that I've written and drawn about the Oklahoma City Bombing, what do you suggest? Someone said if you know someone in television, talk to them about it&amp;quot ;  so I talked to him about it, and he said &amp;quot ; Send me everything&amp;quot ; , so I sent him--sent it to him a lot of it. And he called me shortly thereafter and said &amp;quot ; Can you speak in front of an audience?&amp;quot ;  and I said yes and he said &amp;quot ; Can you memorize your poem?&amp;quot ;  And I said yes--         Fashion Institute ; Jimmy Baker ; New York ; Oklahoma Hall of Fame Ceremony ; Trace Kelly                           3213 Politics   GS: You did ;  alright we're going to switch now. I don't think--I think I know the answer to this one, but we're gonna throw it out there anyway. Were your parents involved in politics?    CE: You know, that's a loaded question right now. My parents both voted, they were both registered republicans though my mother would vote more independently than my father. But we were up in, you know, it's better to ask that question about civics I think. You grew up to be a citizen of your community, citizen of your country. You could have great arguments with someone on the other side of the fence, and you didn't mud sling.    GS: You still respected them    CE: You did, and you actually learned that way.    GS: Yeah    CE: Because you learned to absorbed someone's else's point of view or see their side of things without becoming defensive and stonewalling yourself.         Korean War ; Martin Marietta ; Princeton ; World War II                           3408 Lifetime Changes and Closing Thoughts   GS: We're gonna switch to lifetime changes. Looking back over all the years, what would you consider to be the most important inventions? Doesn't have to be just one, it can be several during your lifetime.    CE: I remember my grandmother Greer (ph) who lived a good hundred was asked this question, and she said seeing the rover land on mars.    GS: Oh my goodness    CE: Or if it was mars, or the moon, one of them. Whichever. I would have to say that too, man landing on the moon, television, let's see, oh forty-five records.    (Laughing)    GS: Those were wonderful. How is the world different now than when you were a child?    CE: It's a much more defensive world, a more splintered world. I find that quite sad even in this local community. I think this last election has really shown that to each group, and this whole--the last four years, but it was building up to that I think. I think when you believe your own beliefs so strongly that you become angry at other people, I think it builds walls, and there's something about having fences not walls. Fences that you can see through or land that you can see through. You don't have to go along with someone else, but you can be like that--civil to one another.         COVID ; Gilcrease Museum                             In this 2020 interview, Carole Ellis talks about her experience growing up in Bristow. She discusses the different businesses located throughout the community and her passion for art.  Interviewer: Georgia Smith    Interviewee: Carole Ellis    Other Persons:    Date of Interview: November 12, 2020    Location: Bristow, Creek County Oklahoma    Transcriber: Abby Thompson    Organization: Bristow Historical Society, Inc.    Original Cassette Tape Location: OHP-2020-09 at 00:00 to 64:15     Abstract:    Preface: The following oral history testimony is the result of a cassette tape  interview and is part of the Bristow Historical Society, Inc.&amp;#039 ; s collection of  oral histories. The interview was transcribed and processed by the Bristow  Historical Society, Inc., with financial assistance from the Montfort Jones &amp;amp ;   Allie Brown Jones Foundation. Rights to the material are held exclusively by the  Bristow Historical Society, Inc.    The reader should bear in mind that he or she is reading a verbatim transcript  of spoken, rather than written prose. Insofar as possible, this transcript tries  to represent the spoken word. Thus, it should be read as a personal memoir and  not as either a researched monograph or edited account.    To the extent possible, the spelling of place names, foreign words, and personal  names have been verified, either by reference resources or directly by the  interviewee. In some cases, a footnote has been added to the transcript in order  to provide more information and/or to clarify a statement. Some uncertainties  will inevitably remain regarding some words and their spellings. In these  scenarios, a (ph) follows a word or name that is spelled phonetically. The  notation [indecipherable] is used when the transcriber has not been able to  comprehend the word or phrase being spoken. The notation [inaudible] is used  where there is more mumbling than words, or when interference on the tape has  made transcription impossible.    GS: This is Georgia Smith with the Bristow Historical Society in Bristow  Oklahoma, and this interview is part of the Historical Societies ongoing oral  history project. The date is November the 12th, 2020 and I am sitting here with  Carole Ellis at the museum depot who is going to tell me a little bit about her  history in the Bristow area. Now, could you give me your full name Carole?    CE: Hi Georgia    GS: Hey    CE: My full name for the Bristow area is Carole Greer Ellis.    GS: Okay, what was your name at birth?    CE: Carole Lynn Greer    GS: Okay, and where were you born?    CE: I was born in Baltimore, Maryland    GS: Were you born in a hospital?    CE: Yes, I was    GS: Okay, and what was the date of your birth?    CE: February 26, 1945.    GS: Okay, right in the war almost, at the end of the war. What were your  parents&amp;#039 ;  names, and we&amp;#039 ; ll start with your mother first and her maiden name?    CE: My mother was from Baltimore, Dorothy Elizabeth Rigel (ph), my father from  Bristow, Merle Leroy Greer.    GS: Where were your parents married?    CE: I have no idea, my father was in the navy and he was stationed in Maryland  at the time when he met my mother, and they were married in Baltimore.    GS: Okay, you know when they were married?    CE: About a year or so before I was born.    GS: Okay, 43&amp;#039 ;  or 44&amp;#039 ;     CE: Yes    GS: Okay, what brought them to Oklahoma? Probably that he was from here.    CE: My father&amp;#039 ; s family was here from before statehood, his mother was born in a  sod house in creek county and her dad, Edward Wyatt, created one of the first  rural schools in creek county.    GS: Oh awesome! I find out so much I didn&amp;#039 ; t know. How many children did your  parents have?    CE: Two    GS: Okay and what were their names, or are their names?    CE: Well myself and my sister Gale Lease Lawson (ph)    GS: What did your father do for a living?    CE: My father worked for the post office.    GS: Okay, most of his life?    CE: Yes, he did, he retired from the post office and so did his father.    GS: Oh, what did your mother do?    CE: My mother was a dental assistant, and did dental education in Bristow schools    GS: I remember your mother and the kids would always come home and say &amp;quot ; The  tooth lady came to see us today&amp;quot ;     CE: That&amp;#039 ; s right, and of course she was involved in starting the historical society.    GS: Yes, yes she was. What is your-- are you married?    CE: No    GS: Okay, have you been married?    CE: Yes, I have    GS: What was your spouse&amp;#039 ; s name?    CE: Jerry    GS: Jerry--    CE: Ellis    GS: Ellis, okay. And what date was that, that you got married?    CE: Oh gosh, it&amp;#039 ; s been so long ago. I don&amp;#039 ; t really remember.    GS: Okay, did you divorce?    CE: Yes, we did    GS: Or was he-- Okay. Did you have any children?    CE: No    GS: Alright. Tell me about what your life was like at home when you were a young child.    CE: Well, when I was a young child, I still have some childhood friends that are  still here, Sherry Hill (ph), Sly man lived across the street, Claudia  Parish--Parish family lived across the street, we lived near the football field.  We played a lot on the football field after football games, we walked to Edison  elementary school, growing up here my life was in nature a lot, you know, we  walked around the town, went to the schools here, had close friends and their  parents were friends with my parents. We were all involved in the churches and  the schools and the swimming pool in the summer, and riding horses in fields,  being out in nature. And art, always doing art of some kind.    GS: Sounds like a delightful childhood. What kind of house did you grow up in?    CE: First we were in something called veterans apartments, which I think were  near the football field where I think people were returning from the war. Now my  father was in World War II, and the Korean conflict he was called back, I  remember that time because my mom was really sad and he left us before we were  home. And then they started building a new housing edition on South Cedar  street, and we watched a house being built there and moved there.    GS: Okay, what are some of your favorite toys as a child?    CE: My crayons    GS: I knew you were gonna say that. Carole is quite the artist. What kind of  role did your mother play in the home?    CE: Well mother was--she baked a lot of things, she made the house look  beautiful, but she was also a working woman.    GS: And how was your laundry done?    CE: In a washing machine, but I do remember going over to my grandmother Greer&amp;#039 ; s  house and seeing a big sink in the basement and there was an old washing machine  that had a wringer, you know those wringer things    GS: Yes, but yours did not have a wringer    CE: No it didn&amp;#039 ; t    GS: Okay, what kind of cooking stove?    CE: Gas    GS: Gas cooking stove. What were some of your normal daily meals?    CE: Cheerios in the morning, lunch at the elementary schools where the cooks  made the best food whether there was Edison Elementary or when we moved across  town to Washington Elementary, and those wonderful cinnamon rolls that they  cooked in the morning and you smelled them in the school while you were doing  your morning classes. And then while it&amp;#039 ; s close to thanksgiving time now so we  would&amp;#039 ; ve gone to my grandmother&amp;#039 ; s house and there would&amp;#039 ; ve been a big turkey and  lots of homemade dressing and pies cooling on the back porch and homemade rolls,  lots of them because the family was big. My father had five brothers and sisters  and everyone came to grandmother&amp;#039 ; s house with my cousins. And the big dining  room table was laid out and then the kids tables were in the kitchen and in the  summer time, homemade ice cream, and the freezers in the--the ice cream makers  in the back yard where the kids sat on a palate while the adults churned the ice cream    GS: Did they sit on top of the ice cream freezer?    CE: Yes, you sat on top of the quilt of the ice cream--on top of the ice cream freezer.    GS: Do you have any of the family recipes from your childhood that you still make?    CE: No I don&amp;#039 ; t, but my grandmother made incredible mashed potatoes, which I  tried to do myself with lots of butter. You have to have lots of butter in  mashed potatoes    GS: Oh yeah, that makes them much better. Where did you--where did your family  shop for groceries?    CE: Well, at the time I grew up main street had a lot of stores, among it were  some small grocery stores on main street itself. And so I remember going to that  store. Also at that time, grocery stores delivered sometimes. It&amp;#039 ; s funny now  with the pandemic that we&amp;#039 ; re actually reverting back to the older ways of having  groceries delivered to your house.    GS: This is true    CE: I think--I think Safeway was here then.    GS: What were your daily chores?    CE: Summer, mowing the lawn. Laundry when my mother was working and washing and  drying the dishes, and washing the car in the summertime with my sister.    GS: Oh, I always thought that was fun. Did your family ever employ any household help?    CE: No.    GS: What type of clothes did you wear?    CE: My mother was always very good about keeping us up with the latest things,  so it was nice.    GS: So probably store bought clothes    CE: Yes    GS: And you already told me who some of your childhood friends were, what about  some of your childhood games that you played?    CE: Well the Newton&amp;#039 ; s were big friends too, Peggy and Billy Newton. Games,  monopoly, I wasn&amp;#039 ; t a big game person, I was more of being an outdoor person    GS: Well maybe outdoor games    CE: Well, hide-and-seek in the summertime till it got dark then the neighborhood  kids had to go inside, swimming of course in the summertime learning how to  swim, and walking, going to day camp, day camp was just--first day camp for  Bristow schools was started when I was growing up and we all went to day camp.    GS: Was that at the--was the swimming pool called the Silver Plunge back then?    CE: It was, and the day camp was in what were the--the city has the buildings  now but those buildings--    GS: Were the camp    CE: Where they used to have the county fair and county buildings.    GS: What was your daily life like? Just to--a day in the life of Carol Ellis  when you were a child, Carol Greer?    CE: Well of course on Saturday when we got TV finally, you would watch some of  your favorite shows like Zorro or go over to the neighbor&amp;#039 ; s house and watch  Winky Dink, which had a Wink--Sherrin had a Winky Dink set which was something  you bought from the TV people and you put this little screen up on your TV and  Winky Dink would have adventures and you would have a little pencil that you  would draw little bridges or--    GS: Oh how fun    CE: You would interact with the story    GS: And that was right up your ally.    CE: Well that was fun    GS: Yes, I&amp;#039 ; m sure you enjoyed that. Okay you just mentioned television, do you  remember the first television you got?    CE: I do, because it was a family decision. We had to decide whether we wanted  to spend money on getting bicycles or television.    GS: And television won out    CE: It did    GS: Did you have radio before that?    CE: Yes    GS: And did you all listen to it in the evenings much?    CE: All the time    GS: All the time, yeah. Okay we&amp;#039 ; re gonna switch to your grandparent&amp;#039 ; s now    CE: Okay    GS: Do you remember hearing your grandparents describe their lives before--let  me back up, what were your grandparent&amp;#039 ; s names?    CE: I was a very fortunate child that I knew both sets of my grandparents and my  great grandparents    GS: That is, I don&amp;#039 ; t get many of those on the interviews    CE: So my fathers parents were Earnest Greer (ph) and Willa Wyatt Greer (ph),  and my--they, daddies father was from Mounds and of course my grandmother was  born here in Creek county. My mother&amp;#039 ; s parents were Dorothy Elizabeth Troxel  (ph), she was born in Maryland, and Thomas Charleston Brigle (ph), my mother&amp;#039 ; s  father, and he also was born in Maryland.    GS: Okay    CE: Then my--I knew my great grandparents Brigle and my great grandparents  Giden, all in Maryland. And then I knew my great grandmother Wyatt (ph) who was  my grandmother Greers mom, and her sisters and all her sisters, she had three,  lived to be older than 95 years old.    GS: Wow    CE: And my grandmother lived to be 100, and all of them had their wits about them    GS: That is wonderful    CE: That&amp;#039 ; s true.    GS: Do you remember who the oldest person in your family was when you were a child?    CE: My great grandmothers    GS: And--    CE: Great--grandfather.    GS: Okay, do you remember anything specifically them saying about life or anything?    CE: I remember what they did    GS: Ok    CE: My great grandmother Giden and they had this wonderful two story house and  they held us outside of Maryland and whenever we would visit in the summer  times, the house number one was quiet. The only sound in the house was the  ticking of the clock in the living room    GS: Wow, mhm.    CE: And the--there was a water pump on the back porch and a beautiful stream  near the side of the house and she raised beautiful lilac bushes and flowers and  she had banty chickens, so when we would visit for vacation time, she would  cook--she was a great cook, and the thing I remember most was she would make  pancakes after the dinner after we arrived and then she would put chicken gravy  on the pancakes in the morning.    GS: Oh my goodness    CE: And that was very delicious. And my great grandfather Giden had lost his arm  shooting off fireworks    GS: Ohh    CE: Just below the elbow, but he never let it interfere with how active he was  in driving the car, or whatever he did. And he had a really wonderful  personality, he would sit down on this old screen covered porch with us as  grandchildren and we&amp;#039 ; d sit in these wonderful wicker rocking chairs and watch  the trains go by.    GS: What delightful memories I love those.    CE: All my grandmothers were good cooks.    GS: Ah, I think most grandmothers back then were good cooks    CE: They were very good cooks    GS: Where did you first attend school? We&amp;#039 ; re gonna jump now to.    CE: I first attended school here in Bristow and I went to Catholic kindergarten.  The catholic school had a kindergarten    GS: Yes    CE: And I went to kindergarten there.    GS: Okay    CE: Then Edison elementary, Washington elementary, Bristow Junior high school,  Bristow high school graduated.    GS: What year did you graduate?    CE: 1963&amp;#039 ;  then Oklahoma State University, graduated in English, started my  masters in English and OSU, stopped that when I decided I didn&amp;#039 ; t think I knew  enough to write a dissertation, and then I started working in the libraries in  Oklahoma City, then I went to the university of Oklahoma and got my masters in  Library Science. Completed that, then went to work at the state department of  the libraries in Oklahoma City, and did public relations, and then I went to New  York city and worked in Publishing and public relations and at that time, that&amp;#039 ; s  when I got involved in the art schools in New York City, even though as a child  I&amp;#039 ; d always done art and when actually I was here in Bristow, growing up there  was an art teacher named Peadee Smith (ph) and Peedea gave art lessons in her  house and a lot of us kids took art lessons with her. And then Gladys Holcombe  (ph) was the art teacher in elementary school at Washington, and so she was very  influential both Gladys and Peadee.    GS: Did they, back then, switch like 6 months at Washington and 6 months at Edison?    CE: Oh no    GS: Like they do today?    CE: Not at all, m-m. No you went there all the time, it was a neighborhood school.    GS: Okay    CE: You know ;  this was a small town. You walked to school, wherever you lived on  which side of town doesn&amp;#039 ; t matter whether you went to Edison or Washington, and  you walked to school. And it was not kindergarten, but first grade through sixth grade.    GS: Were you a member of any clubs or organizations or sports?    CE: Yes    GS: In high school?    CE: In high school. Pep club, speech and debate, future teachers of America,  Latin club because we studied Latin, two years of Latin, and I was involved in everything.    GS: That&amp;#039 ; s wonderful, that&amp;#039 ; s what kids need to do. Was the high school used for  any other community purpose back then that you remember?    CE: No    GS: Did you take a sack lunch or did you eat in the cafeteria?    CE: There was no cafeteria in the high school    GS: Okay    CE: And there was no cafeteria in the junior high school    GS: Just the elementary?    CE: Just the elementary schools, so junior high I remember I&amp;#039 ; m not sure quite  what we did there. We&amp;#039 ; d walk home, I mean it was nothing to walk home, or we  would take our lunches, they had lunch rooms where you--people who brought their  lunch ate their lunch. And then whenever we were in high school we came down  town and went to the cafes.    GS: Do you remember anything in particular about the classroom, or were teachers  strict back then? Easy going?    CE: We had incredible, incredibly educated teachers. If you look in our  yearbook, over half our teachers had master&amp;#039 ; s degrees at the time in their field    GS: That&amp;#039 ; s wonderful    CE: We had a library in all the schools with librarians. There was natural light  in the classroom, the windows opened and stairways, you go up and down beautiful  marble staircases in high school. Our teachers had command of what they taught  and were legendary. I mean my father had teachers I had and my sister had those  same teachers. Those teachers were here for twenty, thirty, forty years. You  know, educating all of us. I remember Mrs. Fosters English classes, legendary,  loving learning how to diagram census and having to watch Shakespeare on TV as  part of our assignment for a week once those programs happened, and I really  missed having art classes after elementary school, they didn&amp;#039 ; t think art was important.    GS: They didn&amp;#039 ; t offer it as an elective back then?    CE: Nothing, nothing at all.    GS: That&amp;#039 ; s a shame.    CE: So I started writing more and yeah I longed for it, I missed it a lot.    GS: I&amp;#039 ; m sure you did, I&amp;#039 ; m sure. Okay we&amp;#039 ; re gonna switch to church life. You  mentioned that you all went to the churches ;  did you attend a certain church as  a child?    CE: We went to the First Baptist church    GS: And is it the same building that is now at sixth and chestnut?    CE: Yes, it is    GS: Can you describe any of the services?    CE: I think the services as a young kid you don&amp;#039 ; t remember    GS: No    CE: I think you remember, I remember the beautiful stained glass windows, having  little pencils in the pews so I would draw pictures on the bulletins, I remember  the wonderful choir music from the youth choirs and the adult choirs, I remember  the wonderful dinners in the church basement, I remember the Sunday school  teachers who might have you over to their house, who would be especially  nurturing, I remember wonderful socials in the summer where you&amp;#039 ; d have delicious  cakes that everybody made and homemade ice cream. So that&amp;#039 ; s what I remember  about churches.    GS: Were your parents involved in the church?    CE: Yup, my parents were involved in everything    GS: Did your mom sing in the choir?    CE: No    GS: Okay, or your dad?    CE: No    GS: Okay, what were the weddings like back then?    CE: Well everyone went to Harvests (ph) Jewelry Store to register what kind of  china and silverware pottery they wanted    GS: Uh-huh    CE: There were big wedding dressed and bridesmaids and grooms and--I think much  too much was made of getting married after women got out of school or college,  although at the same time they were beginning to gear us as women for  professions, that wasn&amp;#039 ; t the overall message of the society at the time. That&amp;#039 ; s  when it was really beginning to change.    GS: Yes, the turbulent sixties. What was medical care like when you were a child?    CE: My mother was diligent about taking us to the doctor to get, you know, a  vaccinations or whenever we needed to go then my mother was always very  medically inclined.    GS: Do you remember any of the doctors or your family doctor?    CE: Sure, my family doctor was Dr. C. T. Kent    GS: Okay    CE: And I remember his whole family, yes I remember him very well. I also  remember, yeah I remember him very well and his family.    GS: Did they make house calls or did you need to go to the office?    CE: I also remember Doctor King, my great grandmother Wyatt&amp;#039 ; s doctor    GS: Yes    CE: Dr. King made house calls    GS: Okay    CE: And Dr. King made all kinds of house calls in the country and everything. In  fact, I remember one time, I think it was [Indecipherable] someone would set,  you know Doctor King was that kind of country doctor that you went out to see  the patients no matter what, no matter what kind of weather or what--and he  would always use one of the water towers as a guide to getting him back home.    GS: Oh my goodness    CE: You know the water towers weren&amp;#039 ; t always here    GS: No    CE: I don&amp;#039 ; t know the history of them, but they weren&amp;#039 ; t always    GS: No    CE: But I remember that story. Another great thing about living in a small town  or any place were you are for a while, even if you leave then come back, which I  did and gone for a long time, you learn stories that tied other stories ten  years ago, twenty years ago, and it&amp;#039 ; s always an interweaving of the stories that  we tell, which is really the great thing about having oral history    GS: It is a wonderful thing about it, and I can see that in these interviews  interweaving and looping, I love it. Did we have a hospital in Bristow back then?    CE: I remember the old hospital which was behind where the homestead clinic is  today, was on 8th street, the Siscler (ph), I think it was Siscler I think that  was the name of it. I remember Kay James was born there cause my mom went to be  with Laban (ph), my mother and Laban were good friends, I remember going to the  doctor there and sitting in the waiting room there, and then of course the new  hospital was born. And the new doctors building was built, which is  where--Doctor Kent&amp;#039 ; s office is where the creek county health department is now.    GS: Okay. Do you ever remember being hospitalized as a child?    CE: When I was a senior in high school, that summer I started getting terrible  pains in my belly, and then I would just double over almost, and they  couldn&amp;#039 ; t--doctor Kent couldn&amp;#039 ; t find out what it was so my mother took me to  Doctor King, the old doctor that my great grandmother had, and he was in an  office upstairs on main street. I remember walking up the old stairs and he  started thumping on my belly &amp;#039 ; cause older doctors would thump on your body and  they would look at your fingernails, they would examine your body carefully. And  he would make an X where I said &amp;#039 ; ouch&amp;#039 ;  or something, and then he connected them.  He did this with an old fountain pen.    GS: Wow    CE: And then about a week later, Saint Francis hospital had just been built, and  he told my mom, my parents that he was sending me to a young surgeon and the  young surgeon decided I needed to have surgery and they did surgery when I  was--a week after I was football queen    GS: Ohh    CE: In high school. And at the time you were there almost two weeks    GS: Oh my goodness, did they find out what it was?    CE: Yes, appendicitis and a few other things    GS: Well it&amp;#039 ; s wonderful they got it before that appendix burst    CE: It is    GS: My goodness. Do you remember any of the businesses downtown? You&amp;#039 ; ve  mentioned some grocery store, there were several, do you remember any others?    CE: Okay, I&amp;#039 ; ll start on the west side. Beginning at Edison elementary school,  there was a MedalGold (ph) place that was in where Oscars lunch place used to be    GS: At ninth and main    CE: Bushes Café, where Mrs. Bushkin (ph) made great homemade everything, there  was a locker where people who butchered their cattle or brought their chicken  frosted--chickens and their cows    GS: Just south of the last--Bushes    CE: Bushes    GS: Just south of Busches    CE: No, no. Yeah, south. Then there was Strongs, and then there was the Stanford  Clothing shop, and then let&amp;#039 ; s see, there was a Ford Hardware store on the  corner, and then there was--and then I remember Woolworth (ph), ton of fun,  Patens (ph) next to Woolworth, more fun for kids since it had toys and  everything in there    GS: Between seventh and eighth street    CE: Right, and then the banks. American National bank, and then the small  grocery store was kind of between sixth and seventh, between right up here near  sixth street    GS: Sixth and seventh then probably    CE: And then Shamus&amp;#039 ; s    GS: Yes    CE: And let&amp;#039 ; s see, oh Redbird, the shoe store    GS: Yes, yes    CE: I mean that was between sixth and--    GS: I think    CE: Fifth    GS: Fifth, yes    CE: Okay ;  no, sixth and seventh    GS: Okay    CE: Yeah, okay. And then let&amp;#039 ; s see, Tropes Service Station (ph) which was out on  the highway, so--Oh Harvest (ph) Jewelry was on the west side, Silvers was on  the east side, Kemps drug store on the east side, the movie theaters on the east  side, the Princes Theater and the Walmer (ph), The Hamburger King at the end of  the corner    GS: Did you ever eat there?    CE: No, that was an adult place.    GS: Oh okay    CE: We ate at the Dairy Queen that first came near the railroad tracks and you  got your first ice cream cone with the chocolate on top    GS: Oh yes    CE: Oh and then there was the Ice House    GS: Yes    CE: Across the railroad tracks, so that&amp;#039 ; s what I remember    GS: Okay, that&amp;#039 ; s pretty good. As a child, what did you want to be when you grew up?    CE: I only knew what I liked to do, I didn&amp;#039 ; t have an idea of like &amp;quot ; I want to be  this&amp;quot ; . I know I loved to do art all the time, and I loved to write and I loved  to be outside. In high school I thought about being a teacher, but I was really  loving writing and debating and being in plays, they had--the speech teacher had  to really rope me into debating. But once I did learn to do it, I liked it and I  love plays, doing theater. And dance, oh yeah I forgot that part. When we were  in the first and second grade, Wanda Newton had a dance studio in her house    GS: I did not know that    CE: With a bar and the mirrors and everything, so all--a lot, every little girl  in my group of girls, we took ballet in town for several years. And we continued  to dance our whole lives with Wanda, kind of like Jennifer is now. When we got  older in high school, the future teachers we would put on dance skits and Wanda  would choreograph them and we would have male dance partners. So we were dancing  all that time too.    GS: Oh that&amp;#039 ; s wonderful. How did you decide, well let me back up. What did after  you became an adult, what were some of the jobs that you had?    CE: When I was at Oklahoma State University when I was studying my masters, I  was a teaching assistant, I taught freshman English for several years there. And  then I went to Oklahoma City and I got a job being a public relations officer  for the state department of [Indecipherable]    GS: Now you&amp;#039 ; ve mentioned your love of art, how did you interweave art into your lifestyle?    CE: Well at different times it came out. I think I didn&amp;#039 ; t really realize how  missing it was in my life until I went to New York city after I left the  department of libraries in Oklahoma City, I went to live in New York City and  worked for a publishing company, children&amp;#039 ; s book publishing on 5th avenue.    GS: Okay    CE: I see it&amp;#039 ; s red    GS: It&amp;#039 ; s still doing good    CE: Okay, and so I was taking care of my neighbors plants and I came upon this  book called The Natural Way to Draw, and it&amp;#039 ; s a classic still that&amp;#039 ; s used by the  art students and I began drawing again [Indecipherable] things in that book, and  then I met this artist in Central Park from Spain, a painter from Spain, and  he--I really loved his paintings, the first time I was really in an artist&amp;#039 ; s  studio, all these beautiful paintings he was doing and everything, and I wanted  him to teach me how to paint. Also when I was studying here with Pete, when the  first time I ever touched oil paint or paint I loved it, loved how it smelled,  loved mixing it up, I loved everything ;  brushes. So in New York, he said &amp;quot ; I&amp;#039 ; m  not gonna teach you how to paint until you have to learn the basics, the  language of drawing, you have to go study anatomy and life drawing. If you can  do that for a year, then you can come back and we&amp;#039 ; ll start painting&amp;quot ; . So I went  off to the National Academy and started studying anatomy and life drawing and it  was very hard because I was in my 30s and my drawings looked like I was 5 years  old. But after I was there, then I&amp;#039 ; m like &amp;quot ; How am I gonna remember these big  long names and skeleton and these people are drawing these beautiful figures and  what am I doing?&amp;quot ; . But after about a month, I started getting this very strong  feeling that I was longing to know this, and then the final day of that summer  class, we went and I said &amp;quot ; You just got to do your best at your drawing&amp;quot ;  and all  of a sudden, this figure popped up on my page and I&amp;#039 ; m like--and then another one  and then another one and I&amp;#039 ; m like &amp;quot ; Where did this come from? Did I make this?&amp;quot ;   and that&amp;#039 ; s when I got this real strong sense that art was something that I  missed in my life a long time and I had studied English, my native language, for  over twenty years and that I needed to study art for at least ten years to get  myself a basic vocabulary of art and that&amp;#039 ; s when I really got the strong sense  of truly being an artist and what it meant to feel that.    GS: Now I know that you&amp;#039 ; ve used your artistic talents in the memorial of the  Oklahoma City bombing, how did the Oklahoma City Bombing of the Mura building  affect you personally?    CE: I think that&amp;#039 ; s two different questions so I&amp;#039 ; m gonna start the art part first    GS: Okay    CE: You know ;  art is very underrated in the study of--in the curriculum of  schools. There&amp;#039 ; s fine art and there&amp;#039 ; s commercial art. Commercial art is whenever  you can just get assignments for clients and it&amp;#039 ; s a business and you make money  and you have techniques and you can do what they want, like building a kitchen  cabinet. Fine art you never know what your future&amp;#039 ; s gonna be. You never know  that it&amp;#039 ; s gonna be based on money or how you&amp;#039 ; re gonna survive. You train  yourself in the basics of drawing and painting and anatomy and ceramics and  sculpture and art history, and you nurture yourself and you become the kind of  artist you&amp;#039 ; re going to become, you don&amp;#039 ; t have a name for it at the time. I  gravitated to like a journalistic fine artist because I grew up in a lot of life  here in Oklahoma and went to a lot of things in life. I loved to draw live  events, I love to paint what I--live things, or if I remember something from  something that&amp;#039 ; s happened in my life, it might stay with me so long that I need  to express it artistically somehow. So when the Oklahoma City bombing happened--    GS: And what year was that?    CE: The Oklahoma City Bombing happened on April 19th, 1995. I was in New York  City at the time, I&amp;#039 ; d been living in New York since 1974.    GS: What took you to Oklahoma City?    CE: Not Oklahoma City    GS: Or not Oklahoma City, New York City, sorry.    CE: Well I had been living in Oklahoma City before I went to New York City    GS: Okay    CE: What took me to New York city, my life took me and youthfulness took me.  There&amp;#039 ; s no rhyme or reason, my life needed to change and I&amp;#039 ; d been on this  national public relations committee, I&amp;#039 ; d been a very young judge, I had put  together public relations campaign for the Oklahoma Department of Libraries, and  it won a national award, and part of winning a national award from the American  Library Association was ten judges who&amp;#039 ; d won those awards for that year were  brought to New York City in the summer for one week to judge all the public  relations efforts of the American Library Association.    GS: And you fell in love with it.    CE: And not that way, no.    GS: No? No?    CE: That was a very nurturing experience, but something about the city itself  drew me there in a time in my life when I needed a change in my life and that&amp;#039 ; s  what I did.    GS: Very good! Okay so you were in Oklahoma--I keep saying that, you were in New  York City when the Murrah building was bombed    CE: Yes, I was and a friend of mine, I&amp;#039 ; d gone to my local diner where I had  breakfast in the mornings, and someone at the counter mentioned to me &amp;quot ; Carole, a  bomb went off in Oklahoma City at a federal building, what happened?&amp;quot ; . Well I  didn&amp;#039 ; t listen to television all the time or the news either. When I was in New  York city, studying art and being part of the life, that was a lot of what I  did. And so I said &amp;quot ; I don&amp;#039 ; t know&amp;quot ; . So when I got home, I said &amp;quot ; Well maybe the  FAA&amp;quot ; , that&amp;#039 ; s the only federal building I knew of, I remembered and then I went  home and a friend of mine called me, a friend of mine who&amp;#039 ; s a classical pianist  and told me about the bombing and what had happened and that children were  killed and he was very affected by it, and kids started playing music that  composers had written for their children, piano composers. And it affected me,  learning this. And well I couldn&amp;#039 ; t get through to Oklahoma on the phone    GS: I&amp;#039 ; m sure    CE: For over 24 hours, I couldn&amp;#039 ; t call my parents or anything. So I just started  writing. I just started writing. And I wrote for 24 hours, I mean off and on,  the next morning I went to the diner again, I had known then what happened. Then  I walked home and that--when I walked home after all that 24 hours of writing,  that&amp;#039 ; s when I sat down and wrote the poem, the 19th of--no it&amp;#039 ; s called the 20th  of April 1995, cause it&amp;#039 ; s about the Oklahoma City Bombing, but I wrote it the  next day. And wrote it almost in its entirety, straight out. And just--and it  was as I wanted it to be and then there was kind of like, you know I did those  drawings and they popped up on my page from that cabinet. The poem was similar,  they often talk about--often times an artist feels like they&amp;#039 ; re a vehicle, you  know, for something to come forth from you, and sometimes those things happen  and it&amp;#039 ; s very special. And then--then I started, I&amp;#039 ; d taken the Oklahoma Flag  with a small Oklahoma flag, I always thought the Oklahoma Flag was so beautiful.  I had it on my wall in my apartment all the time I was there, and then I decided  to make a series of drawings with the Oklahoma Flag to go along with the poem  I&amp;#039 ; d written. So I took the Oklahoma flag and I rolled up an American flag I have  on one of those wooden sticks and I stapled the Oklahoma flag to it and I  carried it first to central part and I sat it down some few places trying to saw  it. It didn&amp;#039 ; t seem quite right, but there was this shared knowledge of what had  happened in Oklahoma City and kind of a quiet in the city, and people would see  the Oklahoma flag walking by and they&amp;#039 ; d stop. They didn&amp;#039 ; t know, and they&amp;#039 ; d start  talking about the bombing or something. And so I ended up rolling, taking the  flag and finding the place in the tulip beds of fifth avenue, nope, yup, the  tulip beds of fifth avenue. Is it fifth avenue? I&amp;#039 ; m not sure, square the  streets, the streets are on both sides and the tulip beds go down the middle.  And so I started doing a series of drawings of the flag in the tulip beds, and  it was April, I continued to draw the flag for almost a year. That&amp;#039 ; s when I  started working at the Oklahoma City Bombing and I called it the Oklahoma City  Project because in studying, I&amp;#039 ; m more of a project person too. Like when John  Lennon died, I was at Parsons at the time. I first started off with sketches at  the Dakota building that night after he was killed. Then I went into Central  Park for the memorial service and did a great big charcoal drawing of the crowd.  Then I took the feeling of that crowd into making sculpture in the studio at  Parsons ;  clay sculpture, steel sculpture, doing interviews. I knew that I wanted  a final project and it took a year before the final project came, which was a  painting. Usually when I do a final project, it&amp;#039 ; s kind of like when I wrote that  poem. You know, I&amp;#039 ; ve written pretty hard for twenty-four hours, couldn&amp;#039 ; t get  what I wanted. Then the next morning I went for a walk and got away from it and  came back and wrote the poem, same thing with the John Lennon project, I&amp;#039 ; d been  working a year on different mediums and ways with John Lennon, I did John Lennon  and the thing is, it stays with you, it doesn&amp;#039 ; t leave.    GS: Right    CE: Okay, and so I knew &amp;quot ; Okay I wanna do a final painting&amp;quot ;  so I put everything  away and one day I put all the work away for a couple of days to sort of  ruminate and then I made this painting of my three muses walking around with a  hole in them. Not gory, but and then on a peace symbol that was on the ground  and sort of colors in the sky like a Van Gogh painting.    GS: Yes    CE: And that was the final, that was the final work. And so then you know it&amp;#039 ; s  done, so that&amp;#039 ; s what fine art is like. You can&amp;#039 ; t predict it, you just have to be  trained in it and trust yourself to know certain things, not give up.    GS: So how did your talent there get applied and how did you become even more  involved in the Murrah building bombing memorial?    CE: Oh well that went on for years, and the way it went on was I continued to do  the drawings, entered the design contest, came back to Oklahoma a number of  times to visit the site for the design contest and whenever I&amp;#039 ; d come home and  visit my family, I would go there because it was still inside working on it and  there were different parts of it, it was pretty big. And then I went to  the--took me a while before I could go the memorial itself, but I went to the  dedication, I think I moved back to Oklahoma at the time just had moved back to  Oklahoma. And I was always able to get it--I knew how to get press passes, so as  an artist it&amp;#039 ; s interesting--it&amp;#039 ; s good to get a press pass if you can. You know,  I did that often times with the Woody Guthrie thing, so I went to the dedication  and sat with the CNN film crew under the bleachers and then when they had the  first Oklahoma City memorial marathon, I went there I think when Rena was  running in that. And local people from Bristow were running in it, Chris may  have been one of them too, Chris Watt. And so it&amp;#039 ; s sort of--tried to take it to  different places at different times, and it would get a certain way then stop,  so I have all this material, huge [Indecipherable] material, and it just kind of  came to a standstill after that.    GS: And you&amp;#039 ; ve been good enough to share that material with us here at the  museum. We were going to do a display of a lot of your material and the  communities reaction to the Oklahoma City Bombing this last April on the 20th  anniversary but COVID stopped that. Tell me about the--    CE: It did--    GS: And I beg your pardon because I don&amp;#039 ; t remember if it was a television thing,  but tell me about that when you had the beautiful dress.    CE: Oh the dress, the blue dress. Okay, well first every year at the anniversary  of the bombing, I&amp;#039 ; m very aware of it so I will always do something just like the  initiative for bringing it to you guys at the 20th anniversary was because of  that normally when I do that. That time of year is I&amp;#039 ; m always getting back  involved with it. Well after I&amp;#039 ; d been working on the project a year, after--    GS: And I need to make a correction, that was the 25th anniversary    CE: Okay, that&amp;#039 ; s right    GS: I said 20th but it was the 25th    CE: It was, so--thanks for catching that Georgia. After I&amp;#039 ; d been working on the  project for a year, I had all this drawing and work and [Indecipherable] and  stuff and I said, alright, I was talking to a friend I said &amp;quot ; I have all this  work for you, I&amp;#039 ; m not sure what to do with it&amp;quot ;  and they said &amp;quot ; Do you know  anybody who has--is in television?&amp;quot ;  well actually because of the first Bristow  all school reunion, I had met this man named Jimmy Baker who had graduated from  Bristow High School right out here on near the bricks at the historical society,  and I had met him and helped him find brick for his family, and we got into a  conversation and he was a producer for ABC from Los Angela&amp;#039 ; s back here in  Bristow to do the All School reunion, so I remembered him because he asked me to  keep in touch with him. So I called him up and said &amp;quot ; I have this material that  I&amp;#039 ; ve written and drawn about the Oklahoma City Bombing, what do you suggest?  Someone said if you know someone in television, talk to them about it&amp;quot ;  so I  talked to him about it, and he said &amp;quot ; Send me everything&amp;quot ; , so I sent him--sent it  to him a lot of it. And he called me shortly thereafter and said &amp;quot ; Can you speak  in front of an audience?&amp;quot ;  and I said yes and he said &amp;quot ; Can you memorize your  poem?&amp;quot ;  And I said yes--    GS: It was probably already memorized    CE: [Indecipherable] I remember my old speech days at Bristow High School, so I  can train to do those things. And so he said &amp;quot ; Well I want you to be an  ambassador for New York and come back to the Oklahoma Hall of Fame ceremony in  November of 1995&amp;quot ; , November the magic month here we are. &amp;quot ; And I want you and a  guy from New York is gonna be honored [Indecipherable] and he&amp;#039 ; ll be coming too&amp;quot ;   so that&amp;#039 ; s how I got there, I was--he invited me to come in November of 1995 to  present the poem and it was gonna be televised on [Indecipherable] it was, it  was filmed. And there was a large audience, my parents were invited, it was a  huge affair, the Oklahoma Hall of Fame ceremony is a big deal every year in  Oklahoma. That and that--so a friend of mine in New York City who knew how to  find beautiful dresses at in great places, she graduated from the fashion  institute in New York, she found that dress.    GS: Oh it was a beautiful dress    CE: It&amp;#039 ; s a beautiful dress. And so I brought the dress, carried it on the plane,  it was a [Indecipherable] plane. So when the [Indecipherable] crew learned what  I was doing because there were, they were very touched by it all because one of  those [Indecipherable] planes, something happened to it off the coast of New  York before Oklahoma City, and so you know I had an all-expenses paid trip, a  beautiful hotel--    GS: Wow    CE: My sister sent beautiful flowers in my room, you know you go to the  Oklahoma--we had rehearsals in the Oklahoma City auditorium, I had a dressing  room with a big star on my door, I had an assistant, and we rehearsed. It was a  big show and then I always remember my mom got me the--she got these blue rings  to match and you know, Trace Kelly (ph) and Polly were there, people were in  tuxes and everything. I remember right before it was time to go out on stage, I  always think this is interesting with acting, you remember your lines, you  remember your lines [Indecipherable] ready to go on the day and you get real  nervous. I remember I looked at Jimmy when we were standing on stage, the stage  lights were on and the ceremony was rolling, and I looked at him and said &amp;quot ; I  don&amp;#039 ; t know if I remember&amp;quot ; . He looked straight me straight in the eyes and said  &amp;quot ; Yes you do, you&amp;#039 ; ll do just fine&amp;quot ;  and he pushed me right out there. In that  beautiful blue dress. So that&amp;#039 ; s--    GS: Well I&amp;#039 ; ve seen your picture, you looked beautiful in that dress.    CE: So that&amp;#039 ; s where it came from    GS: You did ;  alright we&amp;#039 ; re going to switch now. I don&amp;#039 ; t think--I think I know  the answer to this one, but we&amp;#039 ; re gonna throw it out there anyway. Were your  parents involved in politics?    CE: You know, that&amp;#039 ; s a loaded question right now. My parents both voted, they  were both registered republicans though my mother would vote more independently  than my father. But we were up in, you know, it&amp;#039 ; s better to ask that question  about civics I think. You grew up to be a citizen of your community, citizen of  your country. You could have great arguments with someone on the other side of  the fence, and you didn&amp;#039 ; t mud sling.    GS: You still respected them    CE: You did, and you actually learned that way.    GS: Yeah    CE: Because you learned to absorbed someone&amp;#039 ; s else&amp;#039 ; s point of view or see their  side of things without becoming defensive and stonewalling yourself.    GS: Right, right. What are your memories of World War II?    CE: I wasn&amp;#039 ; t born.    GS: That&amp;#039 ; s true, you were just born at the end of it. You said your father  served in World War II?    CE: He did    GS: Do you have--what branch did he serve in?    CE: My father was in the navy    GS: Okay, was he on one of the carriers?    CE: Daddy was on the Princeton    GS: The Princeton, I forgot to turn off that telephone, let me do that real quick.    CE: He was on an aircraft carrier.    GS: The aircraft carrier, Princeton.    CE: Right    GS: Okay, let me just turn this off so we don&amp;#039 ; t have that again. Okay, and did  he--how long did he serve in the navy?    CE: Again I don&amp;#039 ; t know ;  I think he went in I think two or three years    GS: Okay, and you mentioned that he went to Korea then?    CE: Yes, he was called back into Korea.    GS: So he had gotten out of the service but then was called back in    CE: He was    GS: Okay, do you know what he did in the Korean war?    CE: No    GS: Okay. What was that like for you with your father gone off to war as a child?    CE: It was scary because you&amp;#039 ; re a young child with an older sister and you don&amp;#039 ; t  know, you see your mom being very very sad and your dad leaving, and then  you--then we went to live with my mother&amp;#039 ; s parents in Texas, they moved to Texas  because my grandfather Brigo worked for Martin Marietta (ph) and we lived with  them for a while then we came back to Bristow.    GS: We&amp;#039 ; re gonna switch to lifetime changes. Looking back over all the years,  what would you consider to be the most important inventions? Doesn&amp;#039 ; t have to be  just one, it can be several during your lifetime.    CE: I remember my grandmother Greer (ph) who lived a good hundred was asked this  question, and she said seeing the rover land on mars.    GS: Oh my goodness    CE: Or if it was mars, or the moon, one of them. Whichever. I would have to say  that too, man landing on the moon, television, let&amp;#039 ; s see, oh forty-five records.     (Laughing)    GS: Those were wonderful. How is the world different now than when you were a child?    CE: It&amp;#039 ; s a much more defensive world, a more splintered world. I find that quite  sad even in this local community. I think this last election has really shown  that to each group, and this whole--the last four years, but it was building up  to that I think. I think when you believe your own beliefs so strongly that you  become angry at other people, I think it builds walls, and there&amp;#039 ; s something  about having fences not walls. Fences that you can see through or land that you  can see through. You don&amp;#039 ; t have to go along with someone else, but you can be  like that--civil to one another.    GS: Right    CE: And nurture your community as a whole so that children, especially so that  children don&amp;#039 ; t see such a divided world and see the value of [Indecipherable]  your ideas and your philosophies to create a better community for everyone.    GS: I love that, I love that. As you see it, what are the biggest problems that  face our nation, and how do you think they could be solved?    CE: One of the biggest problems now is to think that whatever channel or little  google thing we bring up--I&amp;#039 ; m not looking at this--    GS: No I&amp;#039 ; m just making sure everything&amp;#039 ; s still going well    CE: Whatever social media channel or television channel or place we go to get  our opinions, if that causes us to freeze up and hate other people, I think  there&amp;#039 ; s something quite wrong with that. That&amp;#039 ; s very detrimental to the whole  human being--the value that human beings have for nurturing one another, so that  human beings grow and survive in a healthy way.    GS: What do you think we could do to solve that?    CE: I think we each have to take a step back and look at ourselves and see how  are we doing that and how are we contributing to that, and to watch ourselves  when we get caught up, because we all get caught up. We can step back, but we so  easily get caught up again, I do.    GS: Right    CE: And so I have certain things I do every day or every couple of days that  sort of I say keep your feet on the ground to help me do that with my own self.    GS: That&amp;#039 ; s good. Is there anything else that you&amp;#039 ; d like to tell me today?    CE: I&amp;#039 ; m very glad that everyone at the historical society worked so hard to get  the grants in the first place, and to continue to find more grants to fund the  oral history project, and for everyone who&amp;#039 ; s worked on it during the COVID time.  And that I&amp;#039 ; m just really grateful for everybody&amp;#039 ; s efforts to add this wonderful  element of oral history to our town.    GS: Thank you very much. You&amp;#039 ; ve mentioned COVID, how has COVID affected you this year?    CE: Dramatically, I&amp;#039 ; m not able to give tours at the Gilcrease museum, I&amp;#039 ; m not  able to come here to the historical society and volunteer and sit in the board  meetings, I&amp;#039 ; m not able to go among the people that I&amp;#039 ; m normally with and sit  with them, not everybody wears a mask all the time, especially in our town and  it&amp;#039 ; s kind of scary. My sister is in late stage cancer, and it affects whether or  not I can go see her or not.    GS: I understand    CE: I&amp;#039 ; m in the older category of people, so I have to remember that and wear my  mask and social distance and wash my hands all the time, and the hardest thing  is not being able to see my sister when she was in rehab and not being able to  visit people that need you in hospital and rehabs when they&amp;#039 ; re your family and  you can&amp;#039 ; t go and nurture them. Not being able to hug people physically when  everybody needs to be touched and feel love by hugging or at least seeing our  families whenever we want to. Like even now, coming into the office here was  emotional. I didn&amp;#039 ; t need to be emotional, but it was emotional because I&amp;#039 ; m able  to sit here with you and have a conversation like we did before March--    GS: COVID    CE: Of 2020    GS: And I have found that to be the case with several people I&amp;#039 ; ve interviewed.  They have been so thankful for the companionship of someone else to talk to.  It&amp;#039 ; s a sad time we&amp;#039 ; re going through. Well Carole, thank you so much for this    CE: Thank you Georgia, this was a pleasure    GS: I have learned so much and we appreciate you and everything you&amp;#039 ; ve done in  our community so very much.    CE: Well I appreciate you too and all that you all are doing to keep this going    GS: Thank you Carole    CE: Alright    GS: Alright then.         audio   0 https://bristoworalhistory.org/ohms/viewer.php?cachefile=OHP-2020-09_Carole_Ellis.xml OHP-2020-09_Carole_Ellis.xml      </text>
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                <text>In this 2020 interview, Carole Ellis talks about her experience growing up in Bristow. She discusses the different businesses located throughout the community and her passion for art.</text>
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              <text>    5.4  June 6, 2021 OHP-2021-21 Mary Jane Trigalet OHP-2021-21 00:00- 78:26         Bristow Historical Society, Inc.    Mary Jane Trigalet Joe Trigalet MP3   1:|71(9)|87(7)|107(3)|123(2)|146(14)|156(13)|188(2)|208(14)|217(3)|234(1)|259(7)|271(1)|294(6)|317(4)|331(6)|346(12)|374(3)|399(12)|416(1)|431(6)|458(1)|471(15)|485(2)|535(5)|556(4)|588(13)|605(1)|617(3)|642(8)|656(10)|684(2)|704(2)|734(3)|747(16)|766(13)|783(11)|813(1)|846(2)|865(2)|895(7)|927(6)|945(3)|959(13)|988(6)|1009(1)|1031(2)|1042(4)|1056(3)|1073(10)|1090(8)|1106(6)|1123(9)|1148(2)|1166(5)|1184(9)|1207(3)|1225(3)|1246(9)|1278(2)|1308(2)|1326(1)|1347(9)|1368(9)|1378(13)|1401(5)|1418(11)|1433(15)|1464(9)|1491(14)|1517(5)|1536(8)|1558(5)|1594(7)|1647(3)|1674(5)|1686(7)|1710(7)|1724(11)     0   https://bristoworalhistory.org/interviews/Mary Jane Trigalet.mp3  Other         audio          0 Introduction   MT: Now is it recording?    JT: Yeah    MT: Check    JT: This is Joe Trigalet with the Bristow Historical Society in Bristow, Oklahoma, and this interview is part of the Historical Societies ongoing oral history project. The date is June 6, 2021 and I’m sitting here with Mary Jane Trigalet who is going to tell me a little bit about her history in the Bristow area, and the workings of the garment factory.        Bristow Historical Society ; Bristow, Oklahoma ; Garment Factory ; Joe Trigalet ; Mary Jane Trigalet                           30 Family History   JT: So a few questions about you first, what was your name at birth?    MT: Mary Jane Trigalet    JT: And where were you born?    MT: In Okmulgee, Oklahoma on August the 26th, 1942.    JT: 1942, was that in home or hospital    MT: In a hospital    JT: And your parents’ names?    MT: Was Jean Francois Trigalet (ph) and Margaret Ann Jidasco Trigalet (ph)    JT: And when were they married?    MT: They were married on May the 27th, 1939         Jean Francois Trigalet ; Margaret Ann Jidasco Trigalet ; Mary Jane Trigalet ; Okmulgee, Oklahoma                           170 Garment Factory   JT: And then, I forgot. Okay well thank you. Okay, now then, we were here—and this was my idea basically because I know that you worked a long time out at the garment factory    MT: 19 Years    JT: 19 years at the garment factory. Now first of all, did you work there until they closed down?    MT: M-m    JT: Oh okay    MT: No, no they were going to come along—excuse me, they were coming along and cutting everybody’s wages, cutting their piecework’s. And they got to me after 19 years and were cutting mine back and they told me what my new rates were gonna be and already a lot of people had left the garment factory to go to work at the carpet plant. And so then I didn’t want to go work the carpet plant and I happened to drive by that Saturday morning and they were building the community bank drive in down by the railroad tracks and I thought “I know I can do anything they do”. So the next Monday, I left work early and went home, changed to look presentable, and walked into community bank and asked for an application. And the person I asked for the application was Billy Faha (ph), and he said “You wait right there and I’ll get that application for you”.         Billy Faha ; Gossard Artemis ; Miss Elaine                           1274 Pay Scale   JT: Okay, so I was going to get to that, but first of all before I get there to talk about the—    MT: Processes?    JT: The, no the pay scale and how things worked    MT: Oh that was, yeah so all these different processes there’d be a piece of kind of a thin cardboard, and all of the processes were, how was it. Let me kind of start over, okay so you had this piece of paper more or less about the size of a typing sheet, and it told what that was, the size of it and everything and then down below I think there were pins on, I think two rows, and they were little printed tickets. Anyway you snipped that off with your scissors and you had this stuff called paper tape, it was actually a big big roll of brown paper, like wrapping paper that was sticky. And so if you didn’t have a thing, a sponge to wet down, you licked them all. But anyway you wear them down and you stuck them on your paper and that’s what you turned in for your work, that’s what you did, how many of those you had on that paper. And that’s how you got, that was called piecework.                                     1822 Starting Work   JT: Okay, so you worked there 19 years, and you talked a little about your pregnant and you stuck a needle through your—    MT: Yeah    JT: Why did you go to work there?    MT: Well, it’s just like anybody else. You’re young and you’re getting a family and sometimes one income just doesn’t do it. And so you start looking around.    JT: Okay so you were, you started looking around for a job. It wasn’t that you had a perplivity (ph) to do some sewing    MT: No no cause it’s—there’s so much of it that you would not call basic sewing    JT: No it was an assembly line                                     2221 Miss Elaine   JT: And so you talked about—also, earlier you talked about the label, the Miss Elaine    MT: Mhm    JT: Were there other labels too or just the one Miss Elaine    MT: Miss Elaine was it, now I think there was maybe a variation of what set on the label like luxury or I don’t know, [Indecipherable]    JT: Yeah    MT: And I don’t think I—did I ever tack on labels? They were just tacked on as the garment was finished, that was one of the final things I think. Some of those may have been put on before they were sewed, I really can’t remember that part.    JT: Okay but it was all Miss Elaine?    MT: It was all Miss Elaine         Clarks ; Gossard Artemis ; Macys ; Miss Elaine ; Utica Square ; Zacs                           2375 Packaging   JT: Yeah, so all the jobs that you did, did you ever have to fold the garments and put them in the boxes?    MT: No, I didn’t have to do that. But there were some people who could, and they were on piece work too, that folding and there were some people who could fold those really nice and put those right down in that box and like I think like the panties a lot of the time there’d be like three in a box. And of course the gowns and all that, they’d just be one. Then those boxes were all stacked up over and then the shipping department would out them into the bigger boxes for transporting out    JT: Yeah, cases, cases of those little smaller boxes. It seems to me that someone had to pop those boxes into shape, that they would’ve come in flat and that someone would’ve had to—    MT: Yeah if I remember right as you did it, I had one very good friend that was a folder and as you did it, you just took that box, you know, and you’ve seen these flat boxes, they have these little creases on there and everything. You’d just take that flat box and you’d flip it around, put your garments in it, flip the top around, and—    JT: Right         Marie Shelton                           2513 Roles   JT: Yeah, okay. Well, so you mostly did button holes and buttons    MT: Tacking    JT: And tacking    MT: And the—I forgot about the bra straps actually, and yeah I did a few of those things. It was interesting though but especially when I think I was doing the tacking ;  it was like almost [Indecipherable]. I used to sit there and write poems    JT: Well I was gonna say a lot of times, and I learned this years and years ago, that people who like assembly line work, they like it because it’s repetitious and they can actually think of things    MT: Oh yeah, you can—like I said I could’ve wrote novels. But I did write some poetry and what I used to write it on was that little brown sticky paper. And we all, most of us had our little radios with us and we listened to music and everything and, you know, nobody turned them up so loudly. Usually you could hear it right in your area. Because, you know, machines weren’t like stacked on top of each other, you had several feet in between                                     2861 Machine Malfunctions   JT: Well did, maybe not your machine, but maybe your machine. Did they ever just break?    MT: Oh yeah, we had two really good mechanics and I think actually there for a while there was three, and you put up a flag at your place and if you were having enough of a problem and they didn’t come soon enough, you got one of the four girls to go tell them what was going on because it was your downtime and if you wasn’t doing it, you wasn’t getting tickets. So you know, if you were down for 40 minutes, you could lose a lot of product there    JT: Yeah    MT: And so anyway, yeah it was—but they worked hard and they were—    JT: Never had the machine just blow up on you or anything?                                     3079 Training   JT: Okay, well did you ever, did you ever do things like dad did? Was there another plant? Was a Gossard plant that you would go--?    MT: There were other plants, but I never had to go to one    JT: You never had to?    MT: No, I think maybe, maybe, especially some of the supervisors or something like that, and I’m not sure whether the technicians that did the timing and stuff if they ever went to other plants to see how well they were doing a certain process, I don’t know for sure on that. I just remember two different people that were [Indecipherable] of the technicians that worked with me and you know, of course when I was first started the first few years, no one ever come to time me for anything. But as I got into more and more doing different things and was doing good on that, then they come and time me.          Gossard Artemis                           3316 Seasons   JT: And so what’s this—can you explain what the seasons were?    MT: Well you were always way ahead of the seasons so you were making things that were for the winter, you were making those during the summer time, and then you would get back into making the thinner, finer things that would go out for the spring and all and that’s usually when you would start new styles and stuff, and then when it was gonna start on the winter stuff, you would have some new styles, sometimes the same styles and something else added    JT: Well when you said that there were 75 to 100 per season, so did that, did they—    MT: No I’m just saying during all those years, I think that the average would’ve been     JT: Okay         Brams ; Neiman Marcus ; Sharwood, PA                           3682 Perks   MT: So, yeah. And we could, we were given the option of ordering things    JT: Oh from the other factory?    MT: Well for any, we could look in the catalogue and order anything, we could order things that we made, and then a lot of people in Bristow knew that they would sell their left over cloth sometimes, and of course we were right there so we got first chance to get anything, and laces and stuff like that when they quit using a certain lace, they would, you know, you could go back and if you want some of it you could buy it, and it was pretty handy.    JT: It sounds handy    MT: And I think there’s some stuff of course as usual in any place like that that came out of there that wasn’t bought    JT: Yeah                                     3860 Union   JT: Was there any ever any talk of, or maybe it was, but was there a union out there?    MT: Oh yeah we were union    JT: Were you? Okay    MT: Yeah, I get a small pension now because I was there 19 years and not a lot but it comes in every month    JT: But did anybody wanna go on strike?    MT: No I don’t think we ever did, there was one thing happened that one time and what was that? For some reason we did have to shut down and I don’t remember all of the reasons behind it, but we all actually got unemployment and they set it up to where this unemployment place would come and I think we went to that, you know up here on 10th street? That white building? At 10th and chestnut?                                     4075 Coworker Functions   MT: Yeah I wished, I just happened to remember that too. There were things, there were things. But just, this is a part you won’t want to put in there, but when we had the dinners, we knew who made what and we knew who’s we avoided    JT: [Indecipherable]    MT: And there were two or three of those that we avoided, but there was some interesting food too, it was always good but still, yeah.    JT: Yeah    MT: Yeah, we had to, you had to    JT: Okay, well I’m not gonna ask—you know I really wanted to do this to get through how the garment factory worked    MT: Yeah    JT: And I think I’ve got pretty much a sense of the way things worked and the assembly line                                     4353 Family   JT: So Bug [Indecipherable]    MT: So you gonna edit that? You gonna put bug in there, are you gonna leave that?    JT: Yeah I think so, I think I will. I’ll have to explain that, but—    MT: Well you can explain that, you can explain the family thing and all    JT: Yeah    MT: You know? And just say this is my oldest sister and whatever    JT: Yeah, yeah this is my oldest sister. My dad had a nickname for her, he called her Jane Bug because of the June Bug, and so that kind of got—    MT: Actually no, he called my Betsy. And that got started from Janet, so Janet started calling me, couldn’t say Mary Jane so she said Mary Jane, and then my two brothers and my cousin decided it sounded like she was saying drain, so they started calling me drain bug.                                     4472 Radio   MT: Well I can tell you another thing that you may not put in there or not. Anyway this one time we were—we always had our radios right there and one of my real good friends was across from me and she was one that did the hanging so we could chat back and forth a little bit, but always had the radio. Well I listened to this one station out of Tulsa, and one of the pizza companies was giving out these tickets, and then they had these drawings every day, maybe even more than one a day, I can’t remember it. Anyway, so we had our radios all tuned to this station so we could hear the numbers called. So we’d take our weekends and go to different pizza places in Tulsa and get tickets. So then instead of holding all tickets, we’d write our list of numbers down so we had this list of numbers. So this one time I had to go over to the IRS the day before, and really bugged me out even though it didn’t cost me a bunch or anything, but just the whole thing had been traumatic and bummed me out.        Cherry Cherry ; Neil Diamond                           4710 Conclusion   JT: Well, thank you again for coming up here and doing this    MT: You’re welcome    JT: And we’ll end this now    MT: Yeah you can [Indecipherable]    JT: I probably will                                       In this 2021 interview, Mary Jane Trigalet shares her experience working for the garment factory in Bristow.  Interviewer: Joe Trigalet    Interviewee: Mary Jane Trigalet    Other Persons:    Date of Interview: June 6, 2021    Location: Bristow, Creek County Oklahoma    Transcriber: Abby Thompson    Organization: Bristow Historical Society, Inc.    Original Cassette Tape Location: OHP-2021-21 00:00 -- 78:26     Abstract:    Preface: The following oral history testimony is the result of a cassette tape  interview and is part of the Bristow Historical Society, Inc.&amp;#039 ; s collection of  oral histories. The interview was transcribed and processed by the Bristow  Historical Society, Inc., with financial assistance from the Montfort Jones &amp;amp ;   Allie Brown Jones Foundation. Rights to the material are held exclusively by the  Bristow Historical Society, Inc.    The reader should bear in mind that he or she is reading a verbatim transcript  of spoken, rather than written prose. Insofar as possible, this transcript tries  to represent the spoken word. Thus, it should be read as a personal memoir and  not as either a researched monograph or edited account.    To the extent possible, the spelling of place names, foreign words, and personal  names have been verified, either by reference resources or directly by the  interviewee. In some cases, a footnote has been added to the transcript in order  to provide more information and/or to clarify a statement. Some uncertainties  will inevitably remain regarding some words and their spellings. In these  scenarios, a (ph) follows a word or name that is spelled phonetically. The  notation [indecipherable] is used when the transcriber has not been able to  comprehend the word or phrase being spoken. The notation [inaudible] is used  where there is more mumbling than words, or when interference on the tape has  made transcription impossible.    MT: Now is it recording?    JT: Yeah    MT: Check    JT: This is Joe Trigalet with the Bristow Historical Society in Bristow,  Oklahoma, and this interview is part of the Historical Societies ongoing oral  history project. The date is June 6, 2021 and I&amp;#039 ; m sitting here with Mary Jane  Trigalet who is going to tell me a little bit about her history in the Bristow  area, and the workings of the garment factory. So a few questions about you  first, what was your name at birth?    MT: Mary Jane Trigalet    JT: And where were you born?    MT: In Okmulgee, Oklahoma on August the 26th, 1942.    JT: 1942, was that in home or hospital    MT: In a hospital    JT: And your parents&amp;#039 ;  names?    MT: Was Jean Francois Trigalet (ph) and Margaret Ann Jidasco Trigalet (ph)    JT: And when were they married?    MT: They were married on May the 27th, 1939    JT: 1922, wasn&amp;#039 ; t it?    MT: 1939 is when they got married    JT: Oh when they got married, yes that&amp;#039 ; s right, okay.    MT: You wanna say it all over again?    JT: Okay, where did they meet and why did they come to Oklahoma?    MT: My father was in Pennsylvania for the war effort cutting glass, that was his  trade, he was an apprentice to my grandfather who was also a glass cutter. And  they were in Pennsylvania and he actually met my mother at a skating rink. And I  guess they were dating for about a year, close to a year and then she graduated  from high school and they got married.    JT: And why did they come to Oklahoma?    MT: They came to Oklahoma to begin with because my father, being a glass cutter,  came to work at the Okmulgee and Henrietta plants doing the same thing, cutting  glass. And he wanted to come back to Oklahoma and still be in there in  Pennsylvania. So anyway they came back with their first child, which was Steven,  and they moved to Okmulgee where he had the job. And he worked there for several  years and then he had an opportunity to come to Bristow and buy what was a bus  station from Mr. Fullerton (ph). And so he took the opportunity, and so then we  ended up in Bristow and at that time I was about three.    JT: And then, I forgot. Okay well thank you. Okay, now then, we were here--and  this was my idea basically because I know that you worked a long time out at the  garment factory    MT: 19 Years    JT: 19 years at the garment factory. Now first of all, did you work there until  they closed down?    MT: M-m    JT: Oh okay    MT: No, no they were going to come along--excuse me, they were coming along and  cutting everybody&amp;#039 ; s wages, cutting their piecework&amp;#039 ; s. And they got to me after  19 years and were cutting mine back and they told me what my new rates were  gonna be and already a lot of people had left the garment factory to go to work  at the carpet plant. And so then I didn&amp;#039 ; t want to go work the carpet plant and I  happened to drive by that Saturday morning and they were building the community  bank drive in down by the railroad tracks and I thought &amp;quot ; I know I can do  anything they do&amp;quot ; . So the next Monday, I left work early and went home, changed  to look presentable, and walked into community bank and asked for an  application. And the person I asked for the application was Billy Faha (ph), and  he said &amp;quot ; You wait right there and I&amp;#039 ; ll get that application for you&amp;quot ; .    JT: So    MT: So then I went to work there about three months later    JT: Okay, and so when was that, when that happened?    MT: 1983    JT: So that was 1983, how much longer was the garment factory open? Do you remember?    MT: Oh, a few more years, I don&amp;#039 ; t really know exactly. But it had a lot of, not  as much staff or anything, and then I believe the manager kind of took it over  in some other kind of capacity instead of actually that company that--    JT: Who was that company?    MT: I believe it got changed and all and I&amp;#039 ; m not even sure what it was. I&amp;#039 ; ve  heard way back, but I remember it being as Gossard Artemis (ph)    JT: Gossard Artemis (ph)    MT: Artemis, and then it became Miss Elaine, so maybe it was still Gossard  Artemis but the products we made were under the Miss Elaine label    JT: Label, okay. Okay, we&amp;#039 ; ll get back to some other of that, but--so you were  talking earlier about when they were starting to cut things and you were talking  about the items and your rate, so can you tell me how that was structured?    MT: Yes, all the way from what we call the back of the building to the front,  everything was set up and everything processed through there. Started out on the  huge, huge tables with stacks and stacks of fabric. And then there was a tall  electric type knife thing that would cut through these, I don&amp;#039 ; t even know how  many layers of fabric, it would be, oh a foot and a half tall or so.    JT: Of fabric?    MT: Of fabric    JT: Just laying flat?    MT: Laid flat, and I&amp;#039 ; m not--maybe it wasn&amp;#039 ; t, maybe it was a foot. But it was tall.    JT: Mhm    MT: And this knife, they had the pattern on there and they just went around and  moved that around and cut off, cut what they needed just like any other pattern    JT: And you--so the pattern cut through every layer of cloth    MT: Yes, the knife. And one girl actually cut her finger, maybe two fingers off.  And went to the hospital and they put it back on, and she had a crooked finger  but she came back to work later and anyway.    JT: So, so they had these stacked. I mean this is layers of fabric    MT: Yes, yes.    JT: And this, wow    MT: And I never worked back in that part. But then they took that and they had  to take each piece and they would take so many of each piece that went together  to make the garment and it&amp;#039 ; d be wrapped up in a bundle.    JT: Mhm    MT: Everything that was needed. And then it started the back, it started certain  processes and went from one group of sewers did one thing and then it moved up  and went to the next one, and they&amp;#039 ; d do their thing, bundle it back up and throw  it in the bin in front of them. And then the next people would get them and do  their thing and it just kept coming up until it got to the front    JT: Yeah, so the--if they threw it in the bin in front of them, then the next  person would just turn around and pick one up out of the bin and then turn back  around and sew it    MT: Yeah and some of those got kind of heavy because a lot of times there was  like a dozen garments in one, maybe even more than that some of the time. And  they got, they were kind of heavy. But yeah they&amp;#039 ; d pick up the bundle and then  they&amp;#039 ; d take it and lay it at their machine and start doing their thing.    JT: Wow    MT: And I mean it went from having, you know, the seams were made and sleeves  were put in and, you know, all the little details and made some beautiful  beautiful things and then it&amp;#039 ; d move on up until it maybe get lace added around  it or somewhere the lace, they used a lot of lace on things, and then they&amp;#039 ; d get  up and it&amp;#039 ; d be hemmed and then it would get on up there and if it something that  needed button and button holes, that was mine, I did the button holes basically,  I didn&amp;#039 ; t do that many buttons. But I can do anywhere from between 6-8 thousand  button holes in a day just going through there. But I was good at it. But  anyway, so then after it left me, it went to the inspectors, every garment was  inspected. And if something came up looking wrong or something, it was taken  back by runners to wherever it needed to go to get fixed. And you know, maybe  there&amp;#039 ; d be a flaw in the material that was discovered for some reason, and if it  had gone, you know, it was too hard to do, that just went into the seconds. But  yeah everything was inspected. And then it went to, they used to do folding,  they folded everything and they went to little flat boxes. Other people probably  remember, the little flat boxes, little lingerie boxes and all that were just  skinny, and so everything had to be folded and put in there wrapped in tissue  and so it was all in boxes. And then they went to hanging them and they didn&amp;#039 ; t  do the boxes anymore.    JT: Well, so I want to go back to, because I have some questions about this  whole process, but I know that in--now these were, I understand these were  pretty high class garments that were being made    MT: Oh yes, yeah these were in the finest stores    JT: In the finest stores, well it seems like to me that in these fine stores,  that the pattern on a blouse where the sleeve would meet the shirt or blouse    MT: Yeah, yeah    JT: That it matches, it would match. Did, maybe that was a later thing where  people got a little more--    MT: Match of what?    JT: The pattern, the pattern would be--    MT: Oh like it was a plaid or something?    JT: Yeah    MT: They usually, they were cuffed and laid, they were laid on the pattern to  come out right.    JT: Oh, they just did them, it was automatically the way they laid them out that  they would come out that way    MT: Yeah, yeah. Yeah but yeah that&amp;#039 ; s--that would be how they did it to match,  it&amp;#039 ; d all be figured out by engineers and all that set these up with the new  styles and all. And oh goodness, they made so many different different items,  you know, and every year of course they&amp;#039 ; d come out with new things and they  would change the process a little bit and get going on them. There was a lot of things    JT: Well if, yeah it sounds like it. Did you ever do anything except button holes?    MT: Yes, yes when I very first started, I actually sewed and I was nine months  pregnant and due to have my baby any day and I put a needle through my finger  and I kept saying &amp;quot ; I don&amp;#039 ; t wanna go right now, I gotta do Christmas first&amp;quot ;  so  anyway yeah, but yeah I did that sewing for a while and then I actually got to  be--to where I could do several little things, I never did what they called the  overlock machines, and not too much of the straight sewing. But as far as, you  know, doing the buttons and the button holes and running the pairs and just, you  know, helping out on the floor some and everything, I could do a lot of those  different things.    JT: Why did you not do the straight sewing? Was that not quite as a specialty  kind of thing?    MT: They just--that&amp;#039 ; s not where they needed me    JT: Oh okay    MT: I guess after I came back, I was out for what, six weeks or so, and I came  back and I think almost immediately they put me into doing, they called it  tacking and it&amp;#039 ; d be like tacking bra straps onto a bra or something, they called  it tacking and it would reinforce seams. So I did that a lot I think even before  I started doing the button holes. But the button holes were tricky    JT: Okay, we&amp;#039 ; ll get to them, but I guess I&amp;#039 ; m a little more interested in--    MT: The sewing part?    JT: The sewing part, yeah because--but you didn&amp;#039 ; t really do any straight sewing.    MT: I didn&amp;#039 ; t do that much straight sewing, like I did--at first I was, I was  doing something I can&amp;#039 ; t really remember exactly what parts I were sewing, but  they had so many different styles and maybe you might work on one type of  garment for a while and then later the day or even a day or two later you&amp;#039 ; d be  into something else that was maybe a nightgown or a robe or a heavy winter robe  and stuff like that, it changed.    JT: Did they make blouses and dresses and all kinds of stuff?    MT: No it was all lingerie    JT: Oh it was all lingerie, okay.    MT: It was bras and panties and robes and little gowns, and like I said winter  type things too and sometimes some flannel gowns and, you know, they made sets,  things that matched each other. Like you&amp;#039 ; d get a robe and a gown matched and  different things like that    JT: Oh okay, and so--how many of the, back to the beginning of this where they  cut the material    MT: Mhm    JT: And they had the foot layer of material, how many cutting tables did they have?    MT: If I remember right, they had maybe three and if anybody&amp;#039 ; s ever seen the  building, those cutting tables went at the back end pretty close to cross the  width of the building    JT: So they were big tables    MT: They were long, long tables and wide, I can&amp;#039 ; t say exactly how, but they were  tall, they weren&amp;#039 ; t like card table length or anything or even dinner table, they  were taller. I don&amp;#039 ; t remember that they--    JT: Work table, a work table    MT: yeah, yeah. But those tall knife things, I saw them do it a few times, I  never did that. But the electricity came from the top down to the knife and it  just, it just went through there and yeah. I mean they did a good job, I mean  they were even, I mean the cutting never looked hacked up or anything like that.    JT: Hm, and so if someone had--let&amp;#039 ; s leave the lid off of that, it won&amp;#039 ; t crinkle  so much while we&amp;#039 ; re capturing it on--the, so how long would it take for a person  to get through cutting out the pattern for one garment?    MT: Well you know I don&amp;#039 ; t know as much as you can say because the way they laid  those out, they were often times, there wasn&amp;#039 ; t, you know, they may have all  fronts in one area and all backs in an area, all sleeves in one area, or  something, so I don&amp;#039 ; t know. But I mean you could imagine those tables and even  the biggest pieces for a nightgown were, what, five foot by three foot or  something like that, you know, and they would just lay it on there.    JT: But when a person got, would a person that was cutting out these patterns,  would they go through one set of material, the twelve inches thick of material    MT: Uh-huh    JT: And then that would all get bundled up    MT: Uh-huh    JT: And then would they cut out more the same day?    MT: They could, yeah    JT: So that--they wouldn&amp;#039 ; t cut one time and that would be the whole thing    MT: It depends on what--how many they were intending to make. But yeah most of  these came through when they started on a new garment or something, they&amp;#039 ; d come  through for weeks and weeks the same garment, the same sets of garments.    JT: And really so what I&amp;#039 ; m trying to understand is the person doing the cutting,  was it an 8 hour job to cut one pattern out through that whole--    MT: I don&amp;#039 ; t know how long it took, I was never actually back there. I just  mostly, when I was doing some of the running and stuff, because I usually worked  up towards the front in the finishing part, so I never really got to watch that  very often.    JT: Okay, okay.    MT: I would&amp;#039 ; ve, it was interesting, it was    JT: So they have the--    MT: I think there were three, seemed to me like there were three people that did  that, cutting that I knew of, maybe there were three tables, I&amp;#039 ; m not sure how  exactly that was back then    JT: Okay, and then when that left, it went to the first set of sewer. How many,  I&amp;#039 ; m imaging this as long rows of people doing the same thing    MT: Uh-huh, yes    JT: The first is sewing and then they throw it in a basket in front and then  another row of people with their machines and they turn around and get stuff out  of the basket and do their thing and throw it in front    MT: Yeah they were big, big--    JT: How many people in a row, how many sewers--    MT: Well sometimes the rows, depending on what they were working on, sometimes  the rows has more in them and sometimes they had less because a lot of it had to  do with, like, if they were working on big robes and all, things had to have  more room, you know, especially the big puffy ones and quilted and all that kind  of thing. So things changed around but I don&amp;#039 ; t know, like in the section where I  did some button holes, and sometimes they moved things, rearranged, but I&amp;#039 ; d say  there were maybe three or four button hole machines lined up and those didn&amp;#039 ; t  have to have a lot of space between them. So then there was the panty department  was over to my right at one time anyway, and of course theirs all came from the  panty department, it didn&amp;#039 ; t take that much to do them so basically they were  made--maybe, I don&amp;#039 ; t know I&amp;#039 ; m guessing 8 -- 10 people that were maybe doing  different things to the panties, you know, putting it together then adding the  lace and the elastic and stuff like that.    JT: Oh and so that was from getting the pattern material after it was cut out    MT: Yeah [Indecipherable]--    JT: [Indecipherable]    MT: Yeah it didn&amp;#039 ; t have to start at the back because there wasn&amp;#039 ; t that many  processes so it didn&amp;#039 ; t have to start at the back.    JT: Yeah    MT: But, and they had--it was interesting, we had people come by to take tours  and watch us and I had little kids that were really fascinated when I was  putting on those buttons and those button holes, but there was a process and it  didn&amp;#039 ; t take that long to really do it. You went through that stuff    JT: Yeah, I can imagine that would, especially when you&amp;#039 ; re doing the button  holes and there&amp;#039 ; s a machine there doing it, then you&amp;#039 ; re--    MT: You have to measure them, you have to pull it out like you&amp;#039 ; ve got a garment  in your hands and of course most button holes and things are in odd numbers,  they&amp;#039 ; re gonna be, you know, five or seven or something. But anyway you put the  first button hole where it belongs and then you stretch, you pull the material  to the left to a certain area, so a certain marking and then you do the next one  and then you pull it and then you keep on until you get that and then you stack  them back up and you throw them over on your table and then you get them all  together and rolled up and bundle them up for the next person.    JT: Wow, okay    MT: Yeah    JT: Hm, interesting. And how many of you were making button holes? Three?    MT: Yeah probably something like that because some of us that did the button  holes also did the buttons.    JT: Okay    MT: And there was, you know, and though the button machines were real close to  where the button hole machine was, and I don&amp;#039 ; t know, it was, what can I say? It  just went    JT: It is--    MT: But these people, I don&amp;#039 ; t know, everybody was good and friendly. Every once  in a while considering you had that many mostly women that were in this  building, every once in a while there was some ruckus going on, but basically  yeah it was good, we had dinners now and then and you know, for occasions and  celebrate peoples&amp;#039 ;  birthdays and joked around some and all but you know, if you  wanted to be there to work, you stayed at your machine and you didn&amp;#039 ; t take a lot  of breaks. You know, and then that paid off for you.    JT: Okay, so I was going to get to that, but first of all before I get there to  talk about the--    MT: Processes?    JT: The, no the pay scale and how things worked    MT: Oh that was, yeah so all these different processes there&amp;#039 ; d be a piece of  kind of a thin cardboard, and all of the processes were, how was it. Let me kind  of start over, okay so you had this piece of paper more or less about the size  of a typing sheet, and it told what that was, the size of it and everything and  then down below I think there were pins on, I think two rows, and they were  little printed tickets. Anyway you snipped that off with your scissors and you  had this stuff called paper tape, it was actually a big big roll of brown paper,  like wrapping paper that was sticky. And so if you didn&amp;#039 ; t have a thing, a sponge  to wet down, you licked them all. But anyway you wear them down and you stuck  them on your paper and that&amp;#039 ; s what you turned in for your work, that&amp;#039 ; s what you  did, how many of those you had on that paper. And that&amp;#039 ; s how you got, that was  called piecework.    JT: Oh okay, so when you got a garment, you got a robe and you had to put seven  button holes on it, is that one of those little pieces of--    MT: No that bundle comes with its own paper    JT: That bundle comes with its own    MT: So whatever is in that bundle, the paper reflects how many is in that    JT: Okay so you pull that one off and then you wet it and you put it on yours--    MT: Yeah, you put it on your paper    JT: On your, yeah and you called it piecework, okay    MT: Yeah    JT: Yeah, okay.    MT: That&amp;#039 ; s how you got paid for like, you know if you had a dozen in this one or  some of them that were like thinner material could be a dozen and a half, the  biggest heaviest robes a lot of times were only six in a bundle because, you  know, they&amp;#039 ; re big and heavy.    JT: But each one of those robes had the--    MT: Each bundle    JT: Each bundle    MT: Each bundle had this--    JT: Oh it was per bundle    MT: this cardboard with it per bundle and as you did your bundle, you know your  one ticket&amp;#039 ; s gonna cover everything you did in that bundle    JT: In the whole bundle    MT: In the whole bundle    JT: Got it    MT: So like I said, you worked and then you just kind of threw it over to the  side flat and when you got done, they were kind of restacked and you went from  one side to the other side by pulling it across your lap and--    JT: Did you have to wrap it back up into the bundle?    MT: Yeah then you rolled it back up    JT: You did, okay    MT: And there was a cordlike string stuff that they used. One string, it was  more of a--just a fabric type something that you rolled it up--    JT: [Indecipherable]    MT: Yeah    JT: Okay    MT: and yeah you just rolled it back up then you tossed it in the box in front  of you and the boxes were big, they could probably hold, I don&amp;#039 ; t know, 20 or 30  bundles at a time even because they would be, oh probably three-foot-deep and  four to five feet in width and maybe, I&amp;#039 ; m guessing 8 or 9-foot long    JT: Wow    MT: So yeah, so you had these big boxes and you tossed them for the next person  to pick them up and go on with it    JT: That&amp;#039 ; s, it&amp;#039 ; s an assembly line    MT: It is, it&amp;#039 ; s an assembly line. That&amp;#039 ; s exactly what it is. It was interesting    JT: So if you were making, if you were doing six to eight thousand button holes  a day, let&amp;#039 ; s say that--I mean that&amp;#039 ; s a thousand garments a day say if they had  five or seven button holes.    MT: Yeah I mean it was, maybe I&amp;#039 ; m off by a big bunch on that button hole thing  because if you have one bundle of a dozen and you&amp;#039 ; re--yeah I may be off, it  maybe it was 60 thousand. I can&amp;#039 ; t remember, I remember I figured it one time.  How many fabrics I did    JT: I thought you were gonna say you were overestimating, but you&amp;#039 ; re saying  you&amp;#039 ; re underestimating    MT: I&amp;#039 ; m probably underestimating ;  I cannot remember exactly how. But I mean I  would&amp;#039 ; ve done more than 10 or 12 bundles in a day. The button holes went fast    JT: So a bundle would have a hundred garments in it?    MT: No, a bundle could have a dozen, depends on what material it was.    JT: Okay    MT: How heavy it was, they could have a dozen, they could have a dozen and a half    JT: I see, okay.    MT: I guess there were some maybe come--the panties usually had I think two  dozen or something    JT: Yeah    MT: But I didn&amp;#039 ; t work those much, I did tacking on them though. So when you had  an overlock string that was left, that wasn&amp;#039 ; t actually looped in that were a  stress point, that&amp;#039 ; s when you tacked and you made this little zigzag tack the  machine wouldn&amp;#039 ; t do anything else except do that, I mean it was designed just  for that.    JT: Oh okay, and you&amp;#039 ; re just feeding the garment into it    MT: You just put what you want tacked under it just like you would if you were  putting a button on it, you&amp;#039 ; d just stick it under there and do it and go to the  next one and go to the next one and--    JT: Yeah, it&amp;#039 ; s an assembly line    MT: The other thing that I did was, [Indecipherable], the other thing that I did  for a while, we made bras. And so I had this process that I would, I can&amp;#039 ; t think  of the word. You take these bra straps and this machine held those little metal  brackets and you had to feed these through a certain way to get the bra straps  made. I mean, you had these long thin pieces of a ribbon type material and then  the one end would be--had been sewed across, I&amp;#039 ; d done that one too, and you  would take these little tiny pieces of strap and you&amp;#039 ; d fold it up and it&amp;#039 ; d go  through your machine. And what you did, you just kept going, you just didn&amp;#039 ; t do  one and cut it off. You just fed one then you fed another and a lot of the  processes in the back were the same thing. You fed what you did and the  stitching, the thread actually held on and did the next one and then you went  through when you finished, clipped them all apart.    JT: Okay    MT: It was, yeah kind of forgot kind of about that part but yeah. A lot of them  it&amp;#039 ; s just like those little strap things and then you&amp;#039 ; d go and you&amp;#039 ; d then,  depending on which job you were doing, you&amp;#039 ; d feed those through these little  metal things, and they still do, and it was pretty interesting and depending on  how fast you got on that, you&amp;#039 ; d know how much you could make.    JT: Yeah, Okay. And so you were saying earlier about the pay scale and the way  they counted, they had the counting system, which were the little tabs that you  took off    MT: Mhm mhm.    JT: The bundle and stuck it onto your tally thing    MT: Yeah, and you knew, you kept your own tally of what you done for a day and  you had it down in your little book and so when you got your check and it showed  what you&amp;#039 ; d done, if it wasn&amp;#039 ; t right you could take of it.    JT: Okay    MT: And you did    JT: And so was there a pay scale of--was it different based on maybe the  material you were gonna do?    MT: Well they--that was set up by a technician who came by and a lot of times on  my jobs, because I worked at a steady pace, and kept things going and a lot of  the times I would be the one that they timed to set a rate and it&amp;#039 ; d be so much  for whichever job that that happened to be. But I was timed a lot of the times  on just about every job I ever did, I was timed on. But they had to have  somebody who was consistent and--    JT: Didn&amp;#039 ; t they have quotas that they expected you to do so much?    MT: Yeah, they wanted you to do so much and you know, if you fell behind well  then the next person&amp;#039 ; s gonna fall behind. But there were still people who liked  to take long coffee breaks with their thermostats, you know, in the bathroom  so-- but I thought, you know, how do you make any money if you&amp;#039 ; re gonna go in  there and spend 20 minutes a day. Of course, if you&amp;#039 ; re fast enough, you&amp;#039 ; re  probably gonna make your quota and you&amp;#039 ; ve got that time if that&amp;#039 ; s what you wanna  do, so yeah it was work, it was work, but I can still remember it. To me, it was  enjoyable to try to beat your own rate or something. Yup, it&amp;#039 ; s a challenge.    JT: Okay, so you worked there 19 years, and you talked a little about your  pregnant and you stuck a needle through your--    MT: Yeah    JT: Why did you go to work there?    MT: Well, it&amp;#039 ; s just like anybody else. You&amp;#039 ; re young and you&amp;#039 ; re getting a family  and sometimes one income just doesn&amp;#039 ; t do it. And so you start looking around.    JT: Okay so you were, you started looking around for a job. It wasn&amp;#039 ; t that you  had a perplivity (ph) to do some sewing    MT: No no cause it&amp;#039 ; s--there&amp;#039 ; s so much of it that you would not call basic sewing    JT: No it was an assembly line    MT: Uh-huh, and I loved it, I always loved to sew and make my own clothes and  stuff, but that was not like that.    JT: But did you think it was going to be when you went and applied? Did you  think you were going to be sewing?    MT: No I really didn&amp;#039 ; t know what to expect, but when you had to apply, they put  you down to a sewing machine with a piece of paper with some, like, squiggles  and curves and straight lines and all and that&amp;#039 ; s what they looked at if you  could do that pretty well you could get hired. But if you went all over the  place and couldn&amp;#039 ; t follow those lines, forget it.    JT: Well that&amp;#039 ; s interesting    MT: Yeah it was, that was like besides the application, that was about the only  real thing you had to do as I can remember.    JT: Yeah because being in an assembly line it seems like you&amp;#039 ; re just moving the  material to the machine and the machine&amp;#039 ; s doing all the work.    MT: Well you have to guide it, there&amp;#039 ; s the actual sewing part but you have to do  a lot of guiding    JT: Okay    MT: Just like when I&amp;#039 ; m doing the button holes or something, I&amp;#039 ; ve gotta move it a  certain length across there and then keep going. So yeah, and the buttons the  same thing. You would just, you moved it over a certain length, so it was  all--yeah, that&amp;#039 ; s, you had to know how to follow those lines, especially if you  were doing the sewing part.    JT: Yeah    MT: And most everybody I think started out on the sewing parts, that would seem  to me if I could remember right that&amp;#039 ; s a lot--and a lot of people stayed in that  and that&amp;#039 ; s what they did all the time was the sewing.    JT: Yeah, okay.    MT: Yeah    JT: So do you remember when you started?    MT: I started in something like March or April of 1964    JT: And how old were you? 22? 21?    MT: Hm, 1964, yeah I was--    JT: 21 and 8 months    MT: Probably 21, going on 22.    JT: Yeah    MT: That sounds about right.    JT: [Indecipherable], Okay. Did they, did they have things like team leads or  bosses of an area?    MT: Oh yeah there were bosses in different areas that helped you, you know, if  you needed help and make sure things are going smoothly and everything and yeah  different sections had different people. Now I mean there wasn&amp;#039 ; t like one person  sitting there watching buttons and button holes and stuff like that, but you had  someone that made sure things got, you know, flowed through right and  everything. And some really good supervisors and stuff and I was even doing that  for a while on some things, you know, just to make sure things were working right.    JT: Yeah, okay I was wondering if you ever did that.    MT: Yeah, like I said I ran the floor, I wasn&amp;#039 ; t really a supervisor per say, I  just, you know, if someone, if they needed me to do something I did it, that&amp;#039 ; s  all there was to it. If I could do it, I went and did it so.    JT: Okay, so--yeah I thought, sitting here thinking about how an assembly line  worked like that, is that you would have someone, not a supervisor, but maybe a  team leader    MT: No I don&amp;#039 ; t know of anything like that, you kind of just did your own part  and I guess if you fell behind and didn&amp;#039 ; t do enough, then you maybe had a  talking to or something, you know, if you couldn&amp;#039 ; t keep up the work that needed  to be done, like I said it had to go to the next person.    JT: Did you ever get a talking to?    MT: I don&amp;#039 ; t think I did    JT: Did you admit it?    MT: My talking to was when they were gonna drop my raise, that was me talking.    JT: So, yeah that&amp;#039 ; s kind of interesting that the way that would happen. See, to  me that typically when someone they are entry level in a position, that they&amp;#039 ; re  paid entry level wages or entry level rates. And then as they get better and  more productive, they get higher rates and--    MT: I think there was probably a minimum wage that you would do hourly, but  basically it was the piece work. Now there were people who some of them who  didn&amp;#039 ; t do piece work that didn&amp;#039 ; t even have the tickets or anything, they just  had a job that they did for so many hours.    JT: Okay    MT: And yeah I mean there were some that were at that    JT: Yeah, okay. And so I guess where I&amp;#039 ; m--what I&amp;#039 ; m thinking about now is if  people started getting hired to go out to the carpet factory, it seemed like did  the orders start, did they start losing orders out there? Or--    MT: Well    JT: Because it, they could&amp;#039 ; ve just hired other people and kept them the same--    MT: Yeah, and they were still hiring at that time, but mostly they weren&amp;#039 ; t  because the carpet factory had come in and there they were cutting out rates. It  was just like me when they got to me, but they started I think towards the back  and, of course I was towards the front, and by the time that they got to me,  there had been a lot of people had left.    JT: And typically if a company wants to keep a worker, they&amp;#039 ; d pay more.    MT: Yeah    JT: They don&amp;#039 ; t come and say [Indecipherable]    MT: No, no.    JT: That&amp;#039 ; s weird    MT: And they were cutting every bodies rates    JT: Huh    MT: I mean, they felt like with the price of what they sold these things for and  all and how much it cost to get them through there, they--maybe they felt like  they had to and maybe that&amp;#039 ; s eventually what happened. But of course this was  American made, American rates, and then you realize what started happening with  all the stuff coming in from all the other countries, it just kind of blew it  all apart.    JT: And so you talked about--also, earlier you talked about the label, the Miss Elaine    MT: Mhm    JT: Were there other labels too or just the one Miss Elaine    MT: Miss Elaine was it, now I think there was maybe a variation of what set on  the label like luxury or I don&amp;#039 ; t know, [Indecipherable]    JT: Yeah    MT: And I don&amp;#039 ; t think I--did I ever tack on labels? They were just tacked on as  the garment was finished, that was one of the final things I think. Some of  those may have been put on before they were sewed, I really can&amp;#039 ; t remember that part.    JT: Okay but it was all Miss Elaine?    MT: It was all Miss Elaine    JT: But different quality items    MT: But before I started it was called I think Artemis, Gossard Artemis (ph)  from way way back, and then somehow it went to Miss Elaine    JT: [Indecipherable]    MT: I think that was actually after I started that it went to being Miss Elaine    JT: Yeah, the garment factory itself started operating in Bristow in the mid to  late 50&amp;#039 ; s, didn&amp;#039 ; t it? So when you went to work for them, it was already--    MT: It was probably earlier than that. Well, I don&amp;#039 ; t know.    JT: I&amp;#039 ; ve seen some pictures that show the garment factory in [Indecipherable]    MT: I don&amp;#039 ; t really know, it was, it was quite a few years before I started  because there had been some people who had been there already, I don&amp;#039 ; t know, 12  or 14 years I think when I started.    JT: Okay, okay. And the Miss Elaine label, what stores carried that brand, that label?    MT: Whatever there was back then, mostly it&amp;#039 ; d be exclusive stores, you know    JT: High end    MT: Yeah, and like the Macys maybe, what&amp;#039 ; s the big one in Chicago, and then  there&amp;#039 ; s Zac&amp;#039 ; s and then there&amp;#039 ; s I don&amp;#039 ; t know. Yeah, that&amp;#039 ; s where they went to.    JT: Wow    MT: That&amp;#039 ; s where they went to, these were well made made in America and all  this, you know.    JT: And I heard that Clarks in--    MT: Clarks had them, yeah. Clarks was one of the big ones, yeah    JT: Utica Square    MT: Yeah, and Clarks even when they were just downtown    JT: Oh    MT: Before they even did Utica Square in the early 50s, I think they already had  one the way I understand.    JT: Wow, okay.    MT: Of course I wasn&amp;#039 ; t there then, but just the different things I heard    JT: Yeah, so all the jobs that you did, did you ever have to fold the garments  and put them in the boxes?    MT: No, I didn&amp;#039 ; t have to do that. But there were some people who could, and they  were on piece work too, that folding and there were some people who could fold  those really nice and put those right down in that box and like I think like the  panties a lot of the time there&amp;#039 ; d be like three in a box. And of course the  gowns and all that, they&amp;#039 ; d just be one. Then those boxes were all stacked up  over and then the shipping department would out them into the bigger boxes for  transporting out    JT: Yeah, cases, cases of those little smaller boxes. It seems to me that  someone had to pop those boxes into shape, that they would&amp;#039 ; ve come in flat and  that someone would&amp;#039 ; ve had to--    MT: Yeah if I remember right as you did it, I had one very good friend that was  a folder and as you did it, you just took that box, you know, and you&amp;#039 ; ve seen  these flat boxes, they have these little creases on there and everything. You&amp;#039 ; d  just take that flat box and you&amp;#039 ; d flip it around, put your garments in it, flip  the top around, and--    JT: Right    MT: Generally, they weren&amp;#039 ; t the attached tops that I can remember though, they  were separate    JT: Separate, yeah that&amp;#039 ; s [Indecipherable]    MT: Yeah    JT: Okay    MT: And you know, I didn&amp;#039 ; t do that part so that&amp;#039 ; s just what I saw    JT: Yeah    MT: Oh but she was fast    JT: I would imagine you&amp;#039 ; d have to be fast if you got--    MT: The thing about it was, you may want to put this in or maybe not, but that  was Marie Shelton and she had that arthritis in her hands so her hands were getting--    JT: And it was from all that?    MT: It could be from all that, but she just got--she just kept at it and then  I&amp;#039 ; m not sure how many years that they were still doing the folding, a few years,  and then they went to the hanging. But I can&amp;#039 ; t remember exactly hanging  went--might have been quite a few years before, I can&amp;#039 ; t remember. But yeah, then  they went to the hanging and you know I don&amp;#039 ; t know exactly what they did, they  put plastic bags over them. You know, each one had its plastic bag, and then  from there they went to the shipping department and I&amp;#039 ; m not sure how they--if  they just laid so many in each big box or how they did that really.    JT: Yeah, okay. Well, so you mostly did button holes and buttons    MT: Tacking    JT: And tacking    MT: And the--I forgot about the bra straps actually, and yeah I did a few of  those things. It was interesting though but especially when I think I was doing  the tacking ;  it was like almost [Indecipherable]. I used to sit there and write poems    JT: Well I was gonna say a lot of times, and I learned this years and years ago,  that people who like assembly line work, they like it because it&amp;#039 ; s repetitious  and they can actually think of things    MT: Oh yeah, you can--like I said I could&amp;#039 ; ve wrote novels. But I did write some  poetry and what I used to write it on was that little brown sticky paper. And we  all, most of us had our little radios with us and we listened to music and  everything and, you know, nobody turned them up so loudly. Usually you could  hear it right in your area. Because, you know, machines weren&amp;#039 ; t like stacked on  top of each other, you had several feet in between    JT: And did the machines make a lot of noise?    MT: Some of them did    JT: Yeah, I can imagine they did    MT: Some of them did, but it wasn&amp;#039 ; t like the tremendous amount of noise, you  know, it wasn&amp;#039 ; t.    JT: Okay    MT: Yeah, it was--    JT: Was there a lot of movement of the workers from one section to the other?    MT: Yeah because a lot of the people had been there long enough that they did  different things, and if they need someone else to go up and do something  different, you know, they&amp;#039 ; d move them. Like, like if someone was--some of the  processes where you almost sewed the whole garment together, then it went on to  get finished. But there were a lot of people who could switch off and go do  different things, and the people who did the hemming and stuff, there were quite  few of them and those little rolled hem things, I mean they can throw those  things through there and it just--    JT: The machine did that though, [Indecipherable]    MT: Yeah you just had to--    JT: Guide    MT: Guide the material through    JT: Yeah    MT: But you know, if you didn&amp;#039 ; t you&amp;#039 ; re gonna have big old chunks taken out  where--there were a few things like an overlock machine, that most people don&amp;#039 ; t  know, maybe they do. [Indecipherable]. Anyway, the overlock machines, that cut  off the edge of the material. If you ever looked at some of your things that are  sewed, well you see these, there&amp;#039 ; s no real seam, there&amp;#039 ; s just this little tiny  edging that holds the material together. Well that&amp;#039 ; s an overlock machine, and  that cut off material as it did, and so yeah if you went the wrong way, you  could mess things up pretty good.    JT: Mhm    MT: And that&amp;#039 ; s why ever once in a while you realize that you try on something,  one fits different than the other, and it may have been the same size starting  with, but it may have got adjusted a little bit unknowingly. But most of the  time the inspectors, when they were inspecting, they could notice things like  that that were really a flaw, you know, and they wouldn&amp;#039 ; t, they&amp;#039 ; d just pull it  out. But it was interesting.    JT: I&amp;#039 ; ve also wondered why that happened, because that happens to me, I don&amp;#039 ; t  know, it seems like a lot.    MT: Yeah, oh yeah. There&amp;#039 ; s different things that you could try on    JT: Blue jeans and things like that    MT: Yeah, the very same size. I remember I was in the store one time and I went  to try on a pair of blue jeans and I couldn&amp;#039 ; t even get my foot through the leg,  it was so narrow. And that was before they had narrow leggings. I thought whoa,  this one go taken care of. No wonder it was in the seconds. But yeah, it&amp;#039 ; s, that  can happen real easy. So I never did overlock, I never did that one at all.    JT: What size is your foot? I&amp;#039 ; m just kidding    MT: My foot    JT: So, okay have we kind of been through the workings of the garment factory? I  mean is there something that I didn&amp;#039 ; t get to to ask you about?    MT: Well I&amp;#039 ; m trying to think of what, I mean yeah there is probably some things,  I don&amp;#039 ; t know exactly what, I mean like I said we all, we all got along really  well. There were a few things, there were some jealousies going on and just  different things could happen, and people would get kind of nasty. I had, maybe  y&amp;#039 ; all will put this in, but I had one girl that, she was jealous because I made  so much money, I made way more than her. She was doing the same job, and there  was two of them and they were behind me. I even stepped back and showed them a  better process, something--they were never doing the same process, but better  way to move it or handle it or something to try and help them speed up. Then as  soon as I&amp;#039 ; d sit back down at my machine, they were laughing behind my back  because they slowed me down. So then this one, she would--she was behind me but  a little bit over to the right and she would start asking me about my boys who  played sports and how they were this and that and how they were doing and  different stuff so I turned around and visited a few minutes. Well then they&amp;#039 ; d  laugh because they slowed me down, they thought. It didn&amp;#039 ; t slow me down much ;   I&amp;#039 ; d just go that much harder.    JT: Well did, maybe not your machine, but maybe your machine. Did they ever just break?    MT: Oh yeah, we had two really good mechanics and I think actually there for a  while there was three, and you put up a flag at your place and if you were  having enough of a problem and they didn&amp;#039 ; t come soon enough, you got one of the  four girls to go tell them what was going on because it was your downtime and if  you wasn&amp;#039 ; t doing it, you wasn&amp;#039 ; t getting tickets. So you know, if you were down  for 40 minutes, you could lose a lot of product there    JT: Yeah    MT: And so anyway, yeah it was--but they worked hard and they were--    JT: Never had the machine just blow up on you or anything?    MT: Yeah, never had them blow up, I did have--one thing I had was the button  pole machine was, they couldn&amp;#039 ; t get it to not skip and sometimes I&amp;#039 ; d see those  button holes and as I&amp;#039 ; d finish I said, you know, it had a skip spot in it or  something. Then I&amp;#039 ; d have to take that button hole and recenter that and try to  hit it back in the very same place cause when that button hole was made, it also  cut the hole. The knife came down and cut it just as it was made, so if I had to  redo one, which I did redid a lots of them. Anyway, I had to try to set that  where you couldn&amp;#039 ; t tell that it&amp;#039 ; d actually been sewed over, and if it was bad  enough, I had to pull the thread, but if you pull the thread, then the material  didn&amp;#039 ; t have--it was kind of looser right there. So when you tried to go around  it, it lot of time didn&amp;#039 ; t look any good anymore so, yeah it was--so anyway, that  was part of the timing. When I was having a lot of problems with that, I&amp;#039 ; d get  him to come out there and retime me I said and just, you know, stand here for  two hours and watch what I do, watch how many times I have to redo these things,  so that made a difference on my timing.    JT: Yeah    MT: So I&amp;#039 ; m sure other people did kind of the same thing, you know, if there was  something that was troublesome they kept having a problem with some certain  something. But that button hole machine, that was, I don&amp;#039 ; t know, probably would  be the worst for that, as far as having to redo something that quick. But yeah,  it was--    JT: You never got a button hole needle to the finger, did you?    MT: No I didn&amp;#039 ; t get that thing, I&amp;#039 ; m glad I didn&amp;#039 ; t get that thing. But yeah that  needle went right down through my finger and I was sitting there looking at it.  Of course when you do it, you automatically jerk, so I mean it had broke it off  when I jerked and there it was    JT: Was there thread in it?    MT: No, no I don&amp;#039 ; t think there was thread in it. There was a lot of threads came  through that you had to keep it threaded, but when I got it off, no there  wasn&amp;#039 ; t, but I don&amp;#039 ; t think anyway. But I think they sent me out to the emergency  room and had that, or maybe they just pulled it, I can&amp;#039 ; t even remember for sure.  I just didn&amp;#039 ; t wanna have my baby yet because it was two or three days before  Christmas and I had babies at home    JT: You thought that was going to put you into labour?    MT: Well yeah, and then it ended up that--cause Mikey was actually due on  Christmas day, he was three weeks late. So there it was, almost Christmas day  when that happened and I mean I just did not want to have him be in the hospital  away from Steve [Indecipherable]. So yeah, it kind of shook me up a little bit.    JT: Okay, well did you ever, did you ever do things like dad did? Was there  another plant? Was a Gossard plant that you would go--?    MT: There were other plants, but I never had to go to one    JT: You never had to?    MT: No, I think maybe, maybe, especially some of the supervisors or something  like that, and I&amp;#039 ; m not sure whether the technicians that did the timing and  stuff if they ever went to other plants to see how well they were doing a  certain process, I don&amp;#039 ; t know for sure on that. I just remember two different  people that were [Indecipherable] of the technicians that worked with me and you  know, of course when I was first started the first few years, no one ever come  to time me for anything. But as I got into more and more doing different things  and was doing good on that, then they come and time me.    JT: Yeah, who trained you?    MT: Who trained me?    JT: Who trained? Who trained?    MT: Well, if you went to a new job, you kind of just watched what they were  doing and you were kind of showed that way the person who&amp;#039 ; s already doing some  of them, you just kind of watch them and then you sit down and try it for a  little while and then you went after it    JT: That&amp;#039 ; s when you did it, okay    MT: Yeah, I mean it--most of it, it didn&amp;#039 ; t take a whole lot of training to do  that or anything    JT: Okay, yeah.    MT: Yeah, you know especially since usually it was just like one more or less  process, two at the most. Now doing these buckles on these bra straps, that was  intricate because there had to be a certain way that you did this and this and  this, and you had a foot thing or something that would raise them up and down, I  don&amp;#039 ; t remember how that worked. But man, I could fly through those things, they  were--it was interesting though.    JT: Could you do six thousand buckles a day?    MT: I don&amp;#039 ; t know how many I did, but I did a bunch    JT: Did you really?    MT: Yeah because you know, here you got a stack of bras coming through but  there&amp;#039 ; s gonna be two of these straps reach one and then you had the longer ones  and the shorter ones I think, no I think most of them just had the one. They had  it one time did some double or something. But anyway, it was--that was, and it  was one time James, sometimes those little buckles down in this little tube they  would jam up, so I took and I banged it into my hand and I tore up some tendons  in my hand, I hit it that hard. I had some pretty good pain there for a while,  but it didn&amp;#039 ; t stop me or anything, I don&amp;#039 ; t think I went to the doctor with it,  but it did tore up my hand, it would just kind of freeze up and stuff. But you  know, that&amp;#039 ; s just part of it.    JT: Yeah, how many people worked up there in the production part? I don&amp;#039 ; t mean  supervisors and that, but do you know about how big the--?    MT: You know ;  I don&amp;#039 ; t really know. There&amp;#039 ; s some people who might know about how  many were there ;  I&amp;#039 ; m trying to think of I can think of anybody right off who&amp;#039 ; s  still around. The ones that been there the longest, but yeah there for a while  they were hiring quite a few and I guess it could&amp;#039 ; ve been in the neighbourhood  of a hundred, 125.    JT: Okay that&amp;#039 ; s what I was wondering because I didn&amp;#039 ; t know. Around 100 or was it  200 or something like that?    MT: I think? No it wouldn&amp;#039 ; t have been anything like 300, but I don&amp;#039 ; t know if  there&amp;#039 ; d even be 200. I would think an average season would usually have 75 to  100 people    JT: Okay    MT: I&amp;#039 ; m trying to think of different rows and--but I don&amp;#039 ; t know, I mean when you  get to counting them, it&amp;#039 ; s got to be around 100 I would say    JT: And so what&amp;#039 ; s this--can you explain what the seasons were?    MT: Well you were always way ahead of the seasons so you were making things that  were for the winter, you were making those during the summer time, and then you  would get back into making the thinner, finer things that would go out for the  spring and all and that&amp;#039 ; s usually when you would start new styles and stuff, and  then when it was gonna start on the winter stuff, you would have some new  styles, sometimes the same styles and something else added    JT: Well when you said that there were 75 to 100 per season, so did that, did they--    MT: No I&amp;#039 ; m just saying during all those years, I think that the average would&amp;#039 ; ve been    JT: Okay    MT: As the year rotated, and all those years rotated, probably the average for  any season would&amp;#039 ; ve been I would say 75 to 100    JT: Okay    MT: I was thinking how many people there were in just different areas, you know,  how many cutters there were, how many sewers, how many folders or hangers, how  many, you know, button holers, how many of the panties and just, yeah I would  guess it would have to be something like that.    JT: Yeah, okay    MT: I Think there was five inspectors, five or six inspectors. They had tall  table things and the tables were, they were angled and they were kind of thin  slats with not very much room in between the slats, and they&amp;#039 ; d throw those  things up on there and there was a bright light on them, and then they would go  through and they would look at the button holes, look at the buttons, I guess  they just to match them up, look at the hem wasn&amp;#039 ; t wavy and, you know, just  different things. And of course when the folders or the hangers, sometimes  they&amp;#039 ; d get around there and they&amp;#039 ; d find something that got missed, you know.    JT: Mhm, sure.    MT: Yeah, it happened.    JT: So when they did that and when they went from to the next seasons garments,  was there any downtime while they [Indecipherable] the machines or anything?    MT: No, no they&amp;#039 ; d usually start out a new season, if I understand it right  anyway, they&amp;#039 ; d start out a new season, well they&amp;#039 ; d have to start at least one  table would start cutting the newer stuff, or they may be finishing up on  another table cutting, you know. And then they&amp;#039 ; d start and so then they&amp;#039 ; d just  have a few machines over to one side that would maybe start on the rows or  something and then--    JT: Okay    MT: Actually the robes stay towards the back because I know when I did buttons  and button holes and tacking on the robes, I think I had to move back there to  do some of them, yeah I&amp;#039 ; m pretty sure those--and they were so heavy too because  I mean even if you got six or whatever they had in those bundles, that&amp;#039 ; s big and  it gets bulkier and heavier    JT: Depending on [Indecipherable]    MT: It&amp;#039 ; s a lot to move around    JT: Yeah, okay    MT: So, I just remember that one time when I was doing some of the--I know I had  to go in the back    JT: Yeah    MT: To do it, yeah I was--we were working overtime and it was a Saturday and  usually we just worked until noon on Saturday, and they were needing some stuff  done and I was working on these robes, and I was tired and I didn&amp;#039 ; t really want  to and I asked my supervisor, I said &amp;quot ; I will come back after lunch if you let me  bring my iced tea with me&amp;quot ;  because you&amp;#039 ; re not supposed to have anything to  drink, that&amp;#039 ; s the deal, and she let me and I didn&amp;#039 ; t spill it or anything, but  yeah she let me. I said &amp;quot ; if I can&amp;#039 ; t bring my tea with me, I&amp;#039 ; m not coming back&amp;quot ;  so    JT: The store in Chicago    MT: Hm?    JT: The store in Chicago that we talked about earlier, Neiman Marcus (ph), was  that it?    MT: Yes, I think it was    JT: Neman Marcus    MT: Because Jennet took me there one time, was just as much alter, but I was  already at the back then. But anyway, I bought a Christmas decoration there and  when I saw that, I remembered that was one of them that was on the list too    JT: Yeah, okay    MT: But I mean it wasn&amp;#039 ; t, they didn&amp;#039 ; t--I think the later maybe, they may have  started going to a Pennys or not ever a sears I don&amp;#039 ; t think, but Pennys may at  one time have handled some of the Miss Elaine, much later though. But yeah when  I started quite a few years to that, it was just these exclusives. There was a  shop in Sharwood (ph), a town in Pennsylvania where my family is from, there was  a little small shop, you know, exclusive shop and they had it in that shop    JT: Hm, yeah    MT: So yeah, that&amp;#039 ; s the typical of where they were at    JT: Oh okay, is that Brams still around?    MT: I think it is    JT: Is it? Okay    MT: I think it is    JT: Wow    MT: So I don&amp;#039 ; t know for sure, I know they had quite a few other factories at  different places, but I&amp;#039 ; m not--I don&amp;#039 ; t remember the, and I used to kind of know  some names but I don&amp;#039 ; t now remember where all they were. Missouri I think had  one or two, maybe around Joplin or Saint Louis, somewhere up that way because it  seemed like, seemed like our manager had to go up that way a few times or  something. So yeah, there was some connections between with all the different  plants, but I know that one time too I understood that sometimes they would do  an entirely different items than what we were doing. You know, they might have a  complete different line of [Indecipherable] and stuff like that than what we  were handling, you know or buy them in different colours or whatever.    JT: Yeah    MT: Yeah, cause--    JT: Okay    MT: Cause lot of times, we would be handling three--when you start on a line,  you would be, you know, on one--what am I trying to say? On one design, so you&amp;#039 ; d  basically be working mostly on maybe one or two designs going through all the  time, you know. You didn&amp;#039 ; t have a whole bunch of different, so you did, you  know, dozens and dozens and dozens of any said item, and that could go on for  quite a few months.    JT: Mhm    MT: So, and I know if you went to the store and looked at Miss Elaine stuff, you  saw stuff--I saw stuff that I had never seen before    JT: Mhm    MT: So, yeah. And we could, we were given the option of ordering things    JT: Oh from the other factory?    MT: Well for any, we could look in the catalogue and order anything, we could  order things that we made, and then a lot of people in Bristow knew that they  would sell their left over cloth sometimes, and of course we were right there so  we got first chance to get anything, and laces and stuff like that when they  quit using a certain lace, they would, you know, you could go back and if you  want some of it you could buy it, and it was pretty handy.    JT: It sounds handy    MT: And I think there&amp;#039 ; s some stuff of course as usual in any place like that  that came out of there that wasn&amp;#039 ; t bought    JT: Yeah    MT: That&amp;#039 ; s just I guess normal, but--    JT: Yeah    MT: Yeah, there&amp;#039 ; s still people who have some of these this material and all. I  have a few little scraps of it, I don&amp;#039 ; t have very anything really big anymore.  But yeah, you know I&amp;#039 ; d buy these different things and it&amp;#039 ; s like, yeah it was  handy if you did any sewing at home, a lot of people did, you know. Back then a  lot more people sewed, you know it was cool. So I mean we were, we were a  good--we had all had good report with our supervisors and especially up where I  was and everything. So this one time I was going getting ready to go to  Pennsylvania and they took through about five or six different people back  there, they took this one fabric and made me more or less a sundress, with no  pattern, they just cut it and it just had, it just came up around--it had some  sort of pattern, come up and tied on the shoulders and it had this big swirly  skirt and they even put a liner to it and everything. That was the prettiest  dress though, I wish I hadn&amp;#039 ; t got rid of it, I mean it was almost like a dancing  dress or something, it was just so neat. But yeah things would happen like that,  you know, people were good, people were good. So it was a good place to work,  I--and when I first changed jobs, I had a hard time not getting my old pickup  not to end up up there at the parking lot instead of going downtown, I don&amp;#039 ; t  know how many times I did that. And then I dreamt that I was, I dreamt that I  was doing my job at the bank, but then I was coming getting off at the bank  early and coming out there and working for a few hours, I was doing both. It was  hard to give up, I mean I didn&amp;#039 ; t hate the job or anything.    JT: Yeah    MT: It was a challenge where at the bank it wasn&amp;#039 ; t, there wasn&amp;#039 ; t no challenge  really. I mean just do your best, but you know.    JT: Was there any ever any talk of, or maybe it was, but was there a union out there?    MT: Oh yeah we were union    JT: Were you? Okay    MT: Yeah, I get a small pension now because I was there 19 years and not a lot  but it comes in every month    JT: But did anybody wanna go on strike?    MT: No I don&amp;#039 ; t think we ever did, there was one thing happened that one time and  what was that? For some reason we did have to shut down and I don&amp;#039 ; t remember all  of the reasons behind it, but we all actually got unemployment and they set it  up to where this unemployment place would come and I think we went to that, you  know up here on 10th street? That white building? At 10th and chestnut?    JT: Mhm, yeah the community center?    MT: Okay, I think that&amp;#039 ; s where they--yeah I think that&amp;#039 ; s where they set it up,  and so every week we had to go up there and of course I was one of the last ones  to be off, but I was also one of the last ones to come back too. I mean we could  all see it coming, and I don&amp;#039 ; t remember why we were off, but we were off for  like I think about 6 weeks to 2 months. Something like that, then we it  gradually got going again. I don&amp;#039 ; t remember the reasoning behind all that.    JT: It seems to me that they may have to retool every once in a while    MT: I don&amp;#039 ; t know, maybe it-- I don&amp;#039 ; t know, maybe the, maybe they just weren&amp;#039 ; t  doing as well or something, or maybe, I don&amp;#039 ; t know what it really was. Maybe the  orders weren&amp;#039 ; t coming in fast enough or something, I don&amp;#039 ; t know. I just cannot  remember what that was all about, but then we got started back and then I&amp;#039 ; m  trying in my mind to think how long was that before they started doing all this,  you know, redoing everything on the rates and everything so I thought. It was  probably at least a few years, maybe that was the ultimate thing they found out  they had to do or something.    JT: Yeah I don&amp;#039 ; t know    MT: Yeah they lost a lot of people, but lot of people went out there and ended  up freezing stuff they shouldn&amp;#039 ; t have and everything else, especially when it  went to a lock plant and had that. Yeah I mean out there sometimes you get your  allergies will kick up and stuff, and man I hate to take my allergy pill because  sometimes that would slow me down a little, because I&amp;#039 ; d kind of get sleepy. You  know, get up and walk around for a few minutes or something, go ask my  supervisor if there&amp;#039 ; s anything I could do for her for a bit or something, you  know, but usually it did, it yeah, I didn&amp;#039 ; t want to take that allergy pill.    JT: Well--    MT: There&amp;#039 ; s so many dyes in it in that fabric and everything    JT: Oh most certainly    MT: Yeah, and then all the lint of course and everything    JT: Yeah it seemed like there&amp;#039 ; d be, yeah, particle matter in the air from  cutting and stuff    MT: Yeah, oh yeah, yeah.    JT: It just, yeah [Indecipherable]    MT: Well I think, I&amp;#039 ; m pretty sure that the girls back there actually wore masks  when they were cutting because of that and I don&amp;#039 ; t think I ever wore--had to  wear a mask or anything, but by the time it got up to me, the worst thing about  that was those big big boxes, when you got toward the bottom of those big boxes  to pull you out a bundle, there&amp;#039 ; d be these huge, huge spiders. Those big ol&amp;#039 ;   grass spiders, you know, with the tan ones. Ugh I hated those things, I have nightmares    JT: Oh my gosh    MT: Because I hate spiders, oh I hate spiders.    JT: Wow    MT: Yeah I wished, I just happened to remember that too. There were things,  there were things. But just, this is a part you won&amp;#039 ; t want to put in there, but  when we had the dinners, we knew who made what and we knew who&amp;#039 ; s we avoided    JT: [Indecipherable]    MT: And there were two or three of those that we avoided, but there was some  interesting food too, it was always good but still, yeah.    JT: Yeah    MT: Yeah, we had to, you had to    JT: Okay, well I&amp;#039 ; m not gonna ask--you know I really wanted to do this to get  through how the garment factory worked    MT: Yeah    JT: And I think I&amp;#039 ; ve got pretty much a sense of the way things worked and the  assembly line    MT: If I could add anything, I&amp;#039 ; d just--I don&amp;#039 ; t know, you know, it just moved  from the back to the front, there was separate machine shop. There was a  separate place that worked up the laces and there was a, you know, different  little processes that had to be done    JT: Yeah    MT: I mean some people had to sit there for hours and I don&amp;#039 ; t, I&amp;#039 ; m not sure, I  don&amp;#039 ; t think they had tickets, maybe they did, I don&amp;#039 ; t know. And they&amp;#039 ; d tie  little bitty bows together, you know, all day long they were tying these bows,  tying these bows. Yeah, I mean and these bows looked perfect    JT: They didn&amp;#039 ; t have a machine that tied a bow    MT: No, but what you do is like you could do it at home, you take two nails and  then you just wrap that around, flip it, and you&amp;#039 ; re done.    JT: Oh is what they did    MT: But yeah, the nails make them all come out the same, so yeah. There&amp;#039 ; s a lot  of our things that had these little bows, little about two and a half to three  inch bows, a lot of things had bows    JT: Yeah    MT: Yeah those ladies sit there and tied those bows and chatted and chatted and  chatted, I mean.    JT: And then they&amp;#039 ; d be tacked on    MT: Yeah then they&amp;#039 ; d be tacked on, yeah I did a lot of tacking on the bows and  yeah, that tacking machine was pretty interesting because it&amp;#039 ; d doo-doo, and it&amp;#039 ; s  done. Doo-doo, and it&amp;#039 ; s done. I mean, just like, and what it does is it, I think  it sews, it may sew one way and back straight and then zig-zags over    JT: Okay    MT: Yeah, and so like I said, if you could, you went ahead and just did one  after another and then you had these little scissor things that you held in your  hand and you just clip them like that, you know they weren&amp;#039 ; t like big scissors,  they were like clipper things. So everybody had their clippers and you protected  your clippers. Because at that time, it wouldn&amp;#039 ; t be a big price now, but you  know, I don&amp;#039 ; t know some of them paid $5 or $6 even back then, they may be  cheaper now.    JT: You had to buy them?    MT: Yeah, yeah. So yeah you protected the clippers. But most people didn&amp;#039 ; t ever  bother anything, you know usually you could have--you could leave your radio  there, you could leave your box of tissues and all this and--another funny thing  in this one lady, whatever she, wherever she worked back there, and I can&amp;#039 ; t  remember what it was for that these things, whatever she did, she may have put  on lace. Anyway, it had like masking tape in strips, and she started out this  one time and put that masking tape together, and then she kept putting all her  masking tape instead of just wadding it up and throwing it out, she&amp;#039 ; d stick it  on this ball. She ended up with a ball as big as a basketball.    JT: How long did it take? How long did it take her to do that?    MT: I don&amp;#039 ; t know, she was on for quite a while, I&amp;#039 ; d say a year or two, I don&amp;#039 ; t  know maybe longer. Maybe shorter, I don&amp;#039 ; t know. But it was--it was, someone  stole it.    JT: Oh wow    MT: Someone took her ball of this tape. It was sad because I mean, you know,  you&amp;#039 ; re--it&amp;#039 ; s your work, it&amp;#039 ; s what you&amp;#039 ; ve done, it&amp;#039 ; s just kind of like, you know,  meeting your goals or something, you know? You can see, right, exactly, yeah  took her ball of tape.    JT: Wow    MT: No one ever did own up to it. But yeah that was kind of interesting, I think  it must have been on lace or something, something that would&amp;#039 ; ve--that would&amp;#039 ; ve  come unwrapped if it wasn&amp;#039 ; t taped down. So that&amp;#039 ; s what I&amp;#039 ; m thinking it was  something like the laces or something, but yeah she had that ball of tape.  Crazy. There was a lot of things happened out there though, you know, just  different things    JT: Well, I think we&amp;#039 ; ve been at this for--    MT: How long?    JT: How long have we been at this? An hour?    MT: Almost two hours?    JT: An hour and 12 minutes    MT: Oh yeah I was here at 4    JT: Yeah    MT: Oh so yeah, but that--yeah, I&amp;#039 ; ve been here since, yeah.    JT: So Bug [Indecipherable]    MT: So you gonna edit that? You gonna put bug in there, are you gonna leave that?    JT: Yeah I think so, I think I will. I&amp;#039 ; ll have to explain that, but--    MT: Well you can explain that, you can explain the family thing and all    JT: Yeah    MT: You know? And just say this is my oldest sister and whatever    JT: Yeah, yeah this is my oldest sister. My dad had a nickname for her, he  called her Jane Bug because of the June Bug, and so that kind of got--    MT: Actually no, he called my Betsy. And that got started from Janet, so Janet  started calling me, couldn&amp;#039 ; t say Mary Jane so she said Mary Jane, and then my  two brothers and my cousin decided it sounded like she was saying drain, so they  started calling me drain bug.    JT: Oh, okay.    MT: It was Janet that did that, I just sent her a birthday card, I almost  reminded her of that.    JT: Okay    MT: Anyway, so anyway they switched it to bug from Drain Bug    JT: You got shortened a bug    MT: Yeah    JT: Okay    MT: So yeah daddy actually did call me Betsy among other things I think, but yeah    JT: Well I heard him calling--there&amp;#039 ; s several members of our family named Jane    MT: He&amp;#039 ; s called Betsy    JT: No, the--    MT: Oh it&amp;#039 ; s called Jane?    JT: It&amp;#039 ; s called Jane, and I&amp;#039 ; ve heard him call someone Jane Bug    MT: Did he?    JT: Yeah    MT: I think he called your daughter Jane Bug    JT: Yeah, maybe    MT: Yeah    JT: That might&amp;#039 ; ve been it    MT: Yeah    JT: Anyway, okay well--    MT: Yeah and Janet did that same--instead of Jane she would say it sounded more  like drain    JT: Mhm    MT: And yeah, Butch and Bobby, and probably Butch and Buddy mostly is the one  that picked up on it    JT: Okay    MT: And--    JT: Okay well--    MT: And switched it    JT: Yeah, well I was gonna say thank you Bug for doing this, and--    MT: It was interesting to try to think of all this stuff    JT: Yeah    MT: That&amp;#039 ; s why I hope I haven&amp;#039 ; t left out any exciting for important things about it    JT: Well and you were there, this is what you remembered in your years there so    MT: Well I can tell you another thing that you may not put in there or not.  Anyway this one time we were--we always had our radios right there and one of my  real good friends was across from me and she was one that did the hanging so we  could chat back and forth a little bit, but always had the radio. Well I  listened to this one station out of Tulsa, and one of the pizza companies was  giving out these tickets, and then they had these drawings every day, maybe even  more than one a day, I can&amp;#039 ; t remember it. Anyway, so we had our radios all tuned  to this station so we could hear the numbers called. So we&amp;#039 ; d take our weekends  and go to different pizza places in Tulsa and get tickets. So then instead of  holding all tickets, we&amp;#039 ; d write our list of numbers down so we had this list of  numbers. So this one time I had to go over to the IRS the day before, and really  bugged me out even though it didn&amp;#039 ; t cost me a bunch or anything, but just the  whole thing had been traumatic and bummed me out. So there I was, it was in the  morning and working away and everything and they were getting ready to call some  numbers and I told Genie (ph), I said &amp;quot ; I don&amp;#039 ; t even wanna look&amp;quot ;  I was just, you  know, kind of bummed out and everything and so they go to call these numbers and  I told Genie, I said &amp;quot ; That sounds like one of my numbers&amp;quot ;  so I grabbed my list,  sure enough it was my number. So I ran to the front and had to use a payphone.  Well I grabbed some quarters and maybe, I don&amp;#039 ; t know, some people handed me a  couple of quarters--you only had five minutes to call it in. So I run out there  and they&amp;#039 ; re looking at me in the office like, and I said &amp;quot ; You can fire--don&amp;#039 ; t  fire me&amp;quot ;  but I said &amp;quot ; You can clock me out or what you&amp;#039 ; ve gotta do, but I&amp;#039 ; ve  gotta use this phone&amp;quot ;  and then you couldn&amp;#039 ; t get the quarters to go in the slot,  I kept dropping them. So anyway what I did was I won a record album a week for a  year, 52 record albums    JT: Wow    MT: Yeah I&amp;#039 ; ve still got quite a few of those    JT: Do ya?    MT: Yeah    JT: Oh    MT: But, so then I let the boys go with me and this was already, I don&amp;#039 ; t know,  Steve would&amp;#039 ; ve been already up like in maybe even lower high school or  something, I can&amp;#039 ; t--Oh no, he was maybe a senior or junior because he was, that  was another thing. This was out at the garment factory, he was probably early  high school or you know, 8th grade or something like that. But he was already  into music, so anyway I let them go with me and they could each one pick out so  they had picked out some of them too, you know on that. But then, this other  thing just telling me this, is it still recording?    JT: Mhm    MT: But you can take it off. But anyway this other thing, so I was down at the  bank, and I listened to the radio station and you could call in and tell them  your desk dancing song, which song would you get up and dance on your desk for.  And I can&amp;#039 ; t remember, it was of Neil Diamonds, and I called in and I gave it and  they chose mine, and I don&amp;#039 ; t know if you remember it or not, but anyway when I  called and I was so excited that they used my voice for six months. They had me  on there because I was so excited, Steve was in log doing the log and they had  the radio on and they heard me too, so he knew it before I even got to tell him.  But yeah, so then I had people come by and say, well because I was in that back  window, &amp;quot ; Well when are you gonna get up on that desk and dance?&amp;quot ;  It was funny,  it was funny. But yeah it was a Neil Diamond, I can&amp;#039 ; t remember if it was Cherry  Cherry or one of those, I don&amp;#039 ; t know, but it was a Neil Diamond song. But  anyway, it was, yeah. And I won a shirt and a mug I think or something, but  anyway. The things you do, you know, back in life you&amp;#039 ; ve done these things, it  helps you get through life and everything, you know.    JT: Well, thank you again for coming up here and doing this    MT: You&amp;#039 ; re welcome    JT: And we&amp;#039 ; ll end this now    MT: Yeah you can [Indecipherable]    JT: I probably will         audio   0 https://bristoworalhistory.org/ohms/viewer.php?cachefile=OHP-2021-21_Mary_Jane_Trigalet.xml OHP-2021-21_Mary_Jane_Trigalet.xml      </text>
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          <description>This field should be added if you are using the Philly Theme with your OHMS&#13;
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          <description>This field adds keywords to the Omeka Oral History item type. Keywords are&#13;
included in the OHMS XML, this field in Omeka will allow for full data migration&#13;
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            <name>Title</name>
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            <name>Identifier</name>
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            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
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                <text>Copyright Bristow Historical Society, Inc.</text>
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          <description>The person(s) performing the interview</description>
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              <text>Georgia Smith</text>
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              <text>Marland Armitage</text>
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          <description>This field contains the OHMS Hyperlink (link to the XML file within the OHMS&#13;
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contents of the OHMS object searchable in Omeka</description>
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              <text>    5.4  June 29, 2021 OHP-2021-23 Marland Armitage OHP-2021-23 0:00 - 66:51         Bristow Historical Society, Inc.    Marland Armitage Georgia Smith MP3   1:|74(3)|105(5)|126(3)|162(3)|189(6)|213(7)|257(16)|300(2)|329(2)|361(6)|399(4)|422(2)|457(2)|477(2)|495(5)|516(12)|545(5)|586(3)|617(4)|654(11)|689(14)|720(2)|753(3)|780(7)|801(3)|834(6)|863(11)|889(2)|921(2)|962(8)|999(2)|1035(6)|1066(2)|1109(3)|1149(4)|1172(4)|1198(14)|1234(2)|1261(7)|1281(9)|1323(9)|1346(2)|1364(12)|1393(2)|1415(1)|1437(2)|1474(12)|1510(1)|1534(15)|1569(8)|1608(2)|1630(8)|1654(2)|1682(10)|1715(2)|1737(5)|1753(5)|1774(5)|1805(5)|1829(12)|1850(2)|1881(2)|1903(11)|1931(14)|1957(15)|1994(4)|2016(12)     0   https://bristoworalhistory.org/interviews/Marland Armitage.mp3  Other         audio          0 Introduction   GS: This is Georgia Smith with the Bristow Historical Society in Bristow, Oklahoma, and this interview is part of the historical societies ongoing oral history project. The date is June 29th, 2021, and I’m sitting here with Marland Armitage at the Museum depot and he’s going to tell me a little bit about his history in Bristow. Now, Marland could you give me your full name?    MA: Frank Marland Armitage    GS: Alright, and that was your name at birth?    MA: That’s correct    GS: Alright. Where were you born Marland?    MA: Born in Slick, Oklahoma    GS: Alright    MA: Ten miles away    GS: Ten miles away, so were you born in a hospital or were you born in a house?    MA: Born in a house         Bristow Historical Society ; Bristow, Oklahoma ; Frank Marland Armitage ; Frank Sisler ; Georgia Smith ; Marland Armitage ; Slick, Oklahoma                           75 Family   GS: Awesome, what were your parents’ names? Let’s start with your mother’s maiden name    MA: Mothers name was Nola Lee Fletcher (ph)    GS: Nola Lee Fletcher, and what’s your father’s name?    MA: Jay Bryan Armitage    GS: And do you know where they were married?    MA: I think it was in Sapulpa    GS: Okay    MA: They were from Slick    GS: Okay, you think they—    MA: But I think they married in Sapulpa         Betty Lee Armitage ; Dorothy Jane ; Georgia Marzetta ; Georgia McGuire ; Jay Bryan Armitage ; Nola Lee Fletcher ; Orville, Texas ; Prairie Pipeline ; Robert Henry Armitage ; Shirley Holderfield ; Shirley Jane ; Sinclair                  https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/21363625/nola-l-armitage Nola Lee Fletcher     https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/21363621/jay-bryan-armitage Jay Bryan Armitage     https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/62652740/jay-bryan-armitage Jay Bryan Armitage     https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/159535892/betty-lee-livingston Betty Lee Armitage     https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/22213680/robert-henry-armitage Robert Henry Armitage     https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/240957219/shirley-jane-holderfield Shirley Jane Holderfield      323 Childhood   GS: Tell me about your home when you were growing up, what kind of house did you grow up in?    MA: Georgia, I just found, not just recently, the title to the home mom and dad bought    GS: Oh how wonderful    MA: They bought a house and I think it only had three rooms in it when they bought it    GS: Mhm    MA: It had four lots on the end of east 6th street, and they gave $200 for one    GS: Isn’t that amazing    MA: The note was that they paid $10 down and $10 a month    GS: Wow    MA: To pay for it         John Bell                           540 Appliances   GS: What kind of laundry apparatus did your mom use? Did she have a washing machine, was it ringer, or—    MA: Number three washtub    GS: Number three washtub    MA: And a rubber [Indecipherable] and I don’t know when we got a washer, but I know I can remember laundry and baths were taken on Saturday.     GS: Yup, yup    MA: And that number three washtub just depend on how far the line you were, if you got your turn or not.    GS: What kind of stove did she cook on?    MA: She had a gas stove                                     654 Depression (1934)   GS: So you were born, refresh my memory again, what year was it?    MA: 1934    GS: 1934, so you were born in the middle of the depression, do you remember anything of that?    MA: No    GS: Yeah    MA: My dad always had a job during the depression, half of his family, I think they took care of him a very long time. But dad had a job during that time    GS: Was it with the oil and gas company?    MA: It was with Sinclair    GS: With Sinclair, that’s wonderful. Did you have chores in the home? Daily chores you had to do?         Sinclair                           817 Grandparents   GS: Alright do you remember—blah, do you remember anything about your grandparents lives?    MA: I do somewhat. My mother’s father ran a filming station in Slick    GS: Okay    MA: Way back there, he had lost one, it was [Indecipherable]    GS: Aw    MA: Raised a big family on the farm with—and his plow that had one handle and had a ring on the other side, and he would put that ring up to his elbow so he could run that plow, and—    GS: Disability didn’t stop him, did it?    MA: He was on the farm until all his kids were gone, and my dad’s parents lived in Bristow. My grandad was—wrote to the Salvation Army, he preached. And so we—they died when I was young, like 8 years old when my grandmother passed away         Henry Armitage ; Hulda Armitage ; Nellie Fletcher ; Robert Fletcher ; Salvation Army                  https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/21579862/v-hulda-armitage Hulda Armitage     https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/21579855/henry-bascum-armitage Henry Armitage     https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/21580705/nellie-g-fletcher Nellie Fletcher     https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/21580708/robert-amos-fletcher Robert Fletcher      941 School   GS: Yeah, okay where did you first attend school?    MA: Bristow, Oklahoma Washington school on east 1st street    GS: Alright, and do you remember who your teacher was?    MA: I think my first grade teacher was Mrs. Asher and I had Mrs. Lester as we called her. I think she taught second grade    GS: Okay    MA: And Mrs. Wilson was a principle, lived just a couple of blocks from us    GS: Wow    MA: And I can remember we’d go over there and help her grade papers at times    GS: Oh how fun         Bristow, Oklahoma ; Mrs. Asher ; Mrs. Lester ; Mrs. Wilson ; Okemah, Oklahoma ; Washington School                           1289 Jobs   MA: I worked during high school    GS: What did you do?    MA: I worked for, started my career. I turned 13 years old and loaded freight cars for Bill Bursar (ph)    GS: Oh wonderful    MA: For two weeks, I worked a two-week vacation for somebody, that was it. And I turned 13 at that time    GS: Wow    MA: And then at 15 I went to work for C. R. Anthony    GS: Yes    MA: And I made thirty-five cents in an hour    GS: That wasn’t bad back then    MA: I could buy all the pop and candy I wanted         Bill Bursar ; C. R. Anthony ; M. W. Woolworth ; Woolworth                           1433 Church   GS: Okay I’m gonna switch to church life. Did your family attend church when you were growing up?    MA: We attended all of my life, the Nazarene church that started in Slick. I did not—that, here in Bristow our church was located on 8th and—    GS: 8th street    MA: Maple and had a little brown church, doors in the corner, with one by four pews    GS: One by four, yup    MA: And then we later built a frame [Indecipherable]    GS: Uh-huh    MA: And I know my dad was on the board of the church, one day we were redecorating it and they were painting it and apparently gasoline caught fire and exploded, blew that church to pieces.    GS: Aw    MA: and I mean [indecipherable]    GS: How disappointing         Gladys Banks ; Nazarene church ; Okmulgee, Oklahoma                           1732 Medical Care   GS: Okay, now you’ve already said Franks Sisler was your doctor, did he make house calls?    MA: As I recall, he did early    GS: Okay, you probably didn’t need him very often, did you?    MA: Not very often, I recall having pneumonia when I was real young, and they called it then double pneumonia, but and I was really sick and I believe he came to the house then.    GS: But you didn’t go to the hospital?    MA: No    GS: Did we have a hospital in Bristow at that time?    MA: We did    GS: Sisler, was it Sisler Clinic or the one that was before that?    MA: Cowart and Sisler         American Legion ; Cowart and Sisler ; Frank Sisler ; Sisler Clinic                           1807 Town Life   GS: Okay, what was Bristow like when you were growing up?    MA: Bristow was a lot like it is today    GS: Really?    MA: Buildings are mostly the same    GS: Uh-huh    MA: As usual, drug stores    GS: Few more things for kids to do maybe    MA: Few more things, well we played baseball in the summer, [Indecipherable]    GS: Uh-huh    MA: And the swimming pool was there, I can remember I couldn’t swim but I went to the swimming pool         J. C. Pennys ; Kemps ; Max Kemp ; Rexal ; Route Hometown Furniture ; S&amp;amp ; M ; Smiths Drug ; The Princess ; Walmer                           2061 Clothing   GS: How did people dress back then?    MA: Well, the girls wore penny loafers and they put the penny in the little slot in the front of it    GS: Yes, yes    MA: I recall in high school what we would do, we went through a spell of wearing white shirt and overall cowboy boots    GS: Oh    MA: We wore blue overalls, or the striped ones    GS: Uh-huh    MA: And I used to sell them at Anthony’s                                     2123 Travel   GS: Did you ever take the train out of town?    MA: We did, we took the train when I was in grade school, and went to the Will Rogers memorial in Claremore    GS: Oh wonderful, uh-huh    MA: And the thing I remember is when we went to the, I called it the tunnel in Tulsa, it was dark for a short time, that’s where their depot was apparently up there.     GS: Oh okay    MA: But we went to Will Rogers memorial and then toured it when I was in—    GS: Took the train there, did you come down here to the depot? Was it this depot or was it the one before?    MA: It’s the same one that’s here now    GS: Well that’s wonderful. Now we’ve talked about your jobs already, did you ever serve in the military?    MA: No I didn’t         Claremore, Oklahoma ; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma ; Tulsa, Oklahoma ; Will Rogers ; Will Rogers Memorial                           2423 Segregation   GS: Okay we’re gonna really shift gears here now, do you remember if Bristow is segregated when you were growing up?    MA: It was    GS: Mhm    MA: Black school was on north east side of town    GS: Do you remember the name of it by chance?    MA: Lincoln    GS: Lincoln, okay    MA: Lincoln high school. I lived about three blocks from it    GS: Okay, okay    MA: So pretty much 8th street was the dividing line, you know    GS: Okay    MA: At that time    GS: Yeah    MA: A few of us, I mixed with them, you know         Henry Kemp ; Joe Mouse ; Lafayette Johnson ; Lincoln High School ; P. M. Moore ; Roosevelt Joseph ; Smiths Drugstore                           2763 Local Businesses   GS: That gas station you mentioned, is it the one that’s just back here behind?    MA: Right    GS: Do you remember the name of that gas station? Was it a DX Station?    MA: I don’t think it was DX, an independent station    GS: We were trying to think of it the other day    MA: I think we were just, Henry Kemp ran it    GS: Okay    MA: And then he later had a [Indecipherable] that’s when Merle Baker went in partnership with the Kemps    GS: Okay    MA: And then he had a [Indecipherable] across the street    GS: Okay    MA: [Indecipherable]    GS: Okay         Alonzo ; Arthur Foster ; DX Station ; Foslers ; Fosters ; Henry Kemp ; Merle Baker ; Prairie Pipeline ; Sinclair                           2910 World War II   GS: Okay, okay I’m gonna switch to World War II. What kind of memories do you have of World War II? You were a teenager or preteen during the years?    MA: I was a preteen    GS: Preteen    MA: I was—my brother graduated high school here in 43’, and went straight to the navy    GS: Okay    MA: And that was the year we lived in Okemah, and as I remember him being gone then coming back home    GS: Was he stationed on a ship?    MA: He was on a what they call an LST, which is [Indecipherable], but he used to describe it as one that goes over one wave and under two. But it was at the end of it would drop down and make it rain so that you were just [Indecipherable]    GS: Oh okay    MA: He had [Indecipherable]    GS: I see ;  I’ve seen those in movies         LST ; Okemah, Oklahoma ; Sallisaw, Oklahoma                           3092 Early Adulthood   GS: Okay, tell me about after you got married here in Bristow. I think I failed to ask you earlier about your children. You and your wife, did you have children?    MA: We had one son    GS: Mark    MA: And—    GS: What was his name?    MA: His name was Marcus Allen (ph) and he graduated from—he was the next one to graduate from high school after I did    GS: Aw    MA: When we came back from Bristow. Mark grew up in Sapulpa, we transferred to Sapulpa not long after I went to work O&amp;amp ; G here in Bristow    GS: When did you go to work for O&amp;amp ; G?    MA: Went to work for O&amp;amp ; G the Monday after I graduated high school    GS: And you worked for them all those years    MA: Worked for them a little over 41 years         Marcus Allen ; O&amp;amp ; G ; Sapulpa, Oklahoma                           3295 O&amp;amp ; G Career   GS: Tell me about your work with O&amp;amp ; G    MA: I started out as a meter reader    GS: Okay    MA: Transferred from here to Sapulpa, went into the county department, with no county training at all, but I could add and subtract, I could do that    GS: Right, and you were a fast learner I’m sure    MA: And I went into the county there, and in the mid 60’s I transferred to Tulsa still in the county, went to a nice school at TU for a couple of years, got some accounting courses in that they told me I needed         O&amp;amp ; G ; TU ; Tulsa University ; Tulsa, Oklahoma                           3375 Clubs and Organizations   GS: Okay, what can you tell me about Bristow during those years? For instance, were you active in any organizations here in Bristow?    MA: This year I would’ve completed 50 years as a member of the Lions Club, I went into the Lions Club, I’ve always been active in city [Indecipherable]    GS: I thought you had    MA: And when I was in Sapulpa I was in the J.C.s (ph), went to the J.C.s, wasn’t old enough to join. You had to be 21, I’m 19, and—    GS: They took you anyway?    MA: They let me to go meetings until I got old enough to join, and then when I went into Tulsa I did fundraising for a YMCA, was active over there with the boy scouts, did fundraising for the boy scouts, salvation army, and then when I come back here I’ve always been active here in Bristow    GS: Yes, you have    MA: President of Chamber of Commerce, president of the Lions Club         Assembly of God Church ; Chamber of Commerce ; Freewill Baptist Chuch ; J. C.s ; Lions Club ; Nazarene Church ; YMCA                           3656 COVID 19 Pandemic   GS: Alright now we’re gonna shift a little bit. We’ve just, we’re just coming out of a pandemic from COVID 19, how has that affected you?    MA: Caused me to spend a lot more time at home    GS: Yes    MA: My usual routine was to get up and go to coffee, with a whole bunch of coffee drinkers about 9 o’clock in the morning for about an hour    GS: And that stopped that for about a year and a half, didn’t it?    MA: That stopped that for about a year and a half, and in fact we had our first session back yesterday    GS: Oh wonderful, wonderful    MA: But it has made a difference on it, it’s something to respect    GS: It is    MA: We were able to—we got the shots fairly early         COVID 19                           3755 Most Important Invention   GS: Looking back over your life, what would you consider to be some of the most important, or the most important, inventions during your lifetime?    MA: It would be hard to decide which one. Of course the cars were already here, they had washing machines, we didn’t happen to have one of them but, but I think, you know, refrigeration. We grew up with an ice man coming to the door    GS: Yes, yes    MA: And putting a chunk of ice in the box    GS: In the bottom of the fridge    MA: In the wooden ice box    GS: Uh-huh    MA: At our house, we had a window box    GS: Okay                                     3858 Biggest Problems that Face Our Nation   GS: As you see it, what are some of the biggest problems that face our nation right now and how do you think they could be solved?    MA: Well, just the relationship of people is something that bothers me    GS: Yes    MA: It seems like it’s nothing. You know, I grew up with if there’s something that needs to get done, we’d go and do it    GS: Exactly    MA: Now it’s, you know, you do it. And the kids today, the younger generations, I’ve told my family, you know, just two words they know and that’s me and I    GS: Mhm    MA: If it’s not and if it doesn’t benefit me, I don’t care about it    GS: That’s so sad    MA: And it bothers me    GS: Yeah, you’re not the only person I’ve interviewed who has said this    MA: Church is important to me                                       In this 2021 interview, Marland Armitage shares his experience living in Bristow throughout the years. He discusses the different businesses located in town and what life was like during the depression.  Interviewer: Georgia Smith    Interviewee: Marland Armitage    Other Persons:    Date of Interview: June 29, 2021    Location: Bristow, Creek County Oklahoma    Transcriber: Abby Thompson    Organization: Bristow Historical Society, Inc.    Original Cassette Tape Location: OHP-2021-23 00:00 -- 66:51     Abstract:    Preface: The following oral history testimony is the result of a cassette tape  interview and is part of the Bristow Historical Society, Inc.&amp;#039 ; s collection of  oral histories. The interview was transcribed and processed by the Bristow  Historical Society, Inc., with financial assistance from the Montfort Jones &amp;amp ;   Allie Brown Jones Foundation. Rights to the material are held exclusively by the  Bristow Historical Society, Inc.    The reader should bear in mind that he or she is reading a verbatim transcript  of spoken, rather than written prose. Insofar as possible, this transcript tries  to represent the spoken word. Thus, it should be read as a personal memoir and  not as either a researched monograph or edited account.    To the extent possible, the spelling of place names, foreign words, and personal  names have been verified, either by reference resources or directly by the  interviewee. In some cases, a footnote has been added to the transcript in order  to provide more information and/or to clarify a statement. Some uncertainties  will inevitably remain regarding some words and their spellings. In these  scenarios, a (ph) follows a word or name that is spelled phonetically. The  notation [indecipherable] is used when the transcriber has not been able to  comprehend the word or phrase being spoken. The notation [inaudible] is used  where there is more mumbling than words, or when interference on the tape has  made transcription impossible.    GS: This is Georgia Smith with the Bristow Historical Society in Bristow,  Oklahoma, and this interview is part of the historical societies ongoing oral  history project. The date is June 29th, 2021, and I&amp;#039 ; m sitting here with Marland  Armitage at the Museum depot and he&amp;#039 ; s going to tell me a little bit about his  history in Bristow. Now, Marland could you give me your full name?    MA: Frank Marland Armitage    GS: Alright, and that was your name at birth?    MA: That&amp;#039 ; s correct    GS: Alright. Where were you born Marland?    MA: Born in Slick, Oklahoma    GS: Alright    MA: Ten miles away    GS: Ten miles away, so were you born in a hospital or were you born in a house?    MA: Born in a house    GS: Yeah, yeah. And did you have a doctor deliver you?    MA: Not that I know of.    GS: Okay, well now you said that Frank was from Frank Sisler, was he your doctor?    MA: When we came to Bristow    GS: Oh okay    MA: [Indecipherable]    GS: Okay    MA: My baby sister was delivered by him    GS: Oh alright, alright. And what year and day were you born?    MA: August the 7th, 1934    GS: Awesome, what were your parents&amp;#039 ;  names? Let&amp;#039 ; s start with your mother&amp;#039 ; s  maiden name    MA: Mothers name was Nola Lee Fletcher (ph)    GS: Nola Lee Fletcher, and what&amp;#039 ; s your father&amp;#039 ; s name?    MA: Jay Bryan ArmitageGS: And do you know where they were married?    MA: I think it was in Sapulpa    GS: Okay    MA: They were from Slick    GS: Okay, you think they--    MA: But I think they married in Sapulpa    GS: But they were living in Slick, do you know what year that might have been?  Or approximate year?    MA: Uhm, not exactly but it was would&amp;#039 ; ve been early 20&amp;#039 ; s    GS: Okay, how many children did your parents have?    MA: Had six    GS: Six children, that was pretty common back then, wasn&amp;#039 ; t it?    MA: Yeah it was, and I was number five    GS: You were number five? Oh my goodness, what were your sibling&amp;#039 ; s names?    MA: My oldest brothers name was Jay Bryan Armitage, and my sister was Betty Lee  Armitage, then we had Dorothy Jane and then a brother Robert Henry Armitage, he  was named from his grandparents    GS: Okay    MA: On both sides    GS: Oh how nice    MA: And then our baby sisters name is Shirley JaneGS: And are any of them still living?    MA: My middle sister, Dorothy is living, lives in Orville, Texas. And my younger  sister Shirley Holderfield (ph) lives in Bristow    GS: Shirley Holderfield is your sister    MA: That&amp;#039 ; s it    GS: Aw I just love Shirley ;  I did not know that. That&amp;#039 ; s good to know. What did  your father do for a living?    MA: Dad worked for originally the Prairie Pipeline, which later became Sinclair    GS: Ah    MA: And he worked out of state, and then they transferred their office to Bristow    GS: Okay    MA: And he worked from here all these years    GS: Until he retired?    MA: He didn&amp;#039 ; t get to retire    GS: Aw that&amp;#039 ; s a shame    MA: He had a heart attack at 59 years old, and we lost him    GS: That&amp;#039 ; s a shame, how old were you when you lost your dad?    MA: I was twenty-three    GS: Twenty-three, that&amp;#039 ; s hard. What did your mother do when you were growing up?    MA: She cooked more for six kids. She didn&amp;#039 ; t work outside the home--    GS: I don&amp;#039 ; t think she could&amp;#039 ; ve    MA: She was a homebody    GS: Yes    MA: And a wonderful cook, and just did a good job on raising us kids    GS: That&amp;#039 ; s--    MA: I always told them we didn&amp;#039 ; t have much, but we had plenty to eat and clean clothes    GS: Knowing you and Shirley I believe she did a wonderful job. What&amp;#039 ; s your  spouse&amp;#039 ; s name?    MA: Georgia Marzetta, her maiden name was McGuire, lived in Kellyville    GS: Okay, and do you remember the date of your marriage?    MA: I think, I think I&amp;#039 ; ve got it wrong on here    GS: Oh no, we can fix it. We&amp;#039 ; ll--    MA: Complete    GS: Okay    MA: February the 19th    GS: February the 19th, of 53&amp;#039 ; ?    MA: I think--no, of 54&amp;#039 ; .    GS: Alrighty, very good thanks for correcting that Marland. Tell me about your  home when you were growing up, what kind of house did you grow up in?    MA: Georgia, I just found, not just recently, the title to the home mom and dad bought    GS: Oh how wonderful    MA: They bought a house and I think it only had three rooms in it when they  bought it    GS: Mhm    MA: It had four lots on the end of east 6th street, and they gave $200 for one    GS: Isn&amp;#039 ; t that amazing    MA: The note was that they paid $10 down and $10 a month    GS: Wow    MA: To pay for it    GS: That&amp;#039 ; s wonderful    MA: They later had to build on so all the kids had a place to sleep    GS: Sure    MA: And it wasn&amp;#039 ; t much, but it was home    GS: It worked and it was home. Was it a frame house?    MA: Frame house, actually had some of the walls were two by twelves    GS: Oh my goodness    MA: When we got into it, I can remember they papered it, when they put the  cheesecloth on the wall.    GS: Really?    MA: So the paper would stay    GS: I did not know that    MA: And our neighbor papered that house for us, John Bell lived across the  street from us    GS: Uh-huh    MA: And he papered our house for us    GS: Well, and cheesecloth underneath it    MA: Yeah    GS: I never knew that. Did you live in the country or in town? I guess that was  at Slick    MA: It was right at the edge of town, we had the best of both worlds. The  pavement ended just before you got to our house and then we had the woods to play    GS: And that was at Slick? On the edge of Slick?    MA: On the edge here in Bristow    GA: Or the edge of Bristow    MA: I came to Bristow when I was about a year old    GS: Okay    MA: And our parents lived on west 12th    GS: Okay    MA: Right up by the water tower    GS: Uh-huh    MA: And for a short time until we bought the house on east 6th    GS: On east 6th    MA: And I don&amp;#039 ; t know at what age it had to be in    GS: Yeah. Did you have to share beds with brothers and sisters?    MA: I did    GS: Yeah    MA: Shared it with Dorothy and my brother    GS: Uh-huh, yup. Did you have toys growing up? Did you have boxes of toys like  they do today?    MA: Good night, no. We didn&amp;#039 ; t have boxes of toys    GS: But you had some toys    MA: We had some toys    GS: What type of toys?    MA: But we made most of ours.    GS: Yeah    MA: I can remember rolling those little hoop with the stick    GS: Yes    MA: We would crush carnation mint cans on our shoes and walk on them. We set out  under the streetlight, taking--I can remember us taking saw blades from the saw    GS: Yes    MA: And we&amp;#039 ; d throw them, stick them in the light pole    GS: Oh my goodness    MA: And then every once in a while, they&amp;#039 ; d have to come back and change the pole.    GS: They&amp;#039 ; d say those kids have been at it again probably    MA: Those kids have been at it again    GS: What kind of laundry apparatus did your mom use? Did she have a washing  machine, was it ringer, or--    MA: Number three washtub    GS: Number three washtub    MA: And a rubber [Indecipherable] and I don&amp;#039 ; t know when we got a washer, but I  know I can remember laundry and baths were taken on Saturday.    GS: Yup, yup    MA: And that number three washtub just depend on how far the line you were, if  you got your turn or not.    GS: What kind of stove did she cook on?    MA: She had a gas stove    GS: Good, mhm    MA: That early, we had a wood heat stove    GS: Okay    MA: [Indecipherable] the best I remember that, I don&amp;#039 ; t remember her ever cooking  on it    GS: Was she a good cook?    MA: Correct    GS: What were some of your favorite meals she made?    MA: Great baker, she would bake pies. The ones that I&amp;#039 ; d always tell people about  was her apple pies and mom would sit in front of the oven and baste them with  butter and browning    GS: Uh-huh    MA: And she made a hundred of them, they&amp;#039 ; re all just exactly like that    GS: Oh my goodness I envy that, mine never look the same    MA: We had family dinners, you know the kitchen table was full of dessert    GS: Uh-huh    MA: I can remember she asked my older brother &amp;quot ; What kind of pie do you want  bud?&amp;quot ;  and he&amp;#039 ; d say &amp;quot ; Well I&amp;#039 ; ll take this first&amp;quot ; . And then he&amp;#039 ; d go through the  rest of them. She was a wonderful cook.    GS: So you were born, refresh my memory again, what year was it?    MA: 1934    GS: 1934, so you were born in the middle of the depression, do you remember  anything of that?    MA: No    GS: Yeah    MA: My dad always had a job during the depression, half of his family, I think  they took care of him a very long time. But dad had a job during that time    GS: Was it with the oil and gas company?    MA: It was with Sinclair    GS: With Sinclair, that&amp;#039 ; s wonderful. Did you have chores in the home? Daily  chores you had to do?    MA: Not in the house. Well the only, I was made to dry dishes because when I got  in the age, my brother older than me had gone to the military soon as he got out  of high school. So just me and my baby sister    GS: Uh-huh    MA: And I had to dry dishes and I hated it    GS: So you took care of things on the outside of the house?    MA: I, yeah I did the eggs and mother would, you know, we always had a cat or  more, and she sold milk and butter and eggs around the neighborhood    GS: Yup, yup    MA: I had a little cart, a little crate that I carried and I delivered milk and  butter to the neighbors    GS: That would be a fun job    MA: Gathered those eggs and [Indecipherable] then I got to do the [Indecipherable]    GS: Oh    MA: Quite often, but I can remember I don&amp;#039 ; t know if I was excited about it, we  had to churn with the plunger.    GS: Yes, yes.    MA: Momma would put a dish towel over my lap so I didn&amp;#039 ; t get my pants wet    GS: Uh-huh    MA: And I churned that butter and then in later years we graduated to daisy churn    GS: Yes    MA: With the crank    GS: Yes    MA: That went better    GS: Yes, yes, I have a couple of those at home    MA: Do you?    GS: Do you remember the first time you heard a radio?    MA: I don&amp;#039 ; t remember    GS: Or was there always one in the home?    MA: We were real young, but that was the way my dad started his day    GS: Listening to the radio    MA: He would get up early, eat breakfast, but before he left for work he would  sit in front of the radio and listen to the farm show.    GS: Aw    MA: You know the old Purina (ph) song, Get Up and Feed those Chickens    GS: Can you sing it?    MA: Don&amp;#039 ; t know that I can do all of it, but it&amp;#039 ; s started &amp;quot ; Get up and feed those  chickens, [Indecipherable], gonna make them grow before they&amp;#039 ; re done. Gonna do  the right thing, that&amp;#039 ; s everything a chicken needs. It&amp;#039 ; s superior all in one&amp;quot ;     GS: I love it, thank you, thank you very much. Alright do you remember--blah, do  you remember anything about your grandparents lives?    MA: I do somewhat. My mother&amp;#039 ; s father ran a filming station in Slick    GS: Okay    MA: Way back there, he had lost one, it was [Indecipherable]    GS: Aw    MA: Raised a big family on the farm with--and his plow that had one handle and  had a ring on the other side, and he would put that ring up to his elbow so he  could run that plow, and--    GS: Disability didn&amp;#039 ; t stop him, did it?    MA: He was on the farm until all his kids were gone, and my dad&amp;#039 ; s parents lived  in Bristow. My grandad was--wrote to the Salvation Army, he preached. And so  we--they died when I was young, like 8 years old when my grandmother passed away.    GS: Do you remember their names?    MA: Don&amp;#039 ; t know the middle ones    GS: That&amp;#039 ; s okay    MA: But my grandmother Armitage was Hulda (ph) and my granddad Armitage, his  name was Henry. And mom&amp;#039 ; s parents were Nellie and RobertGS: Nellie and Robert,  and the last name again?    MA: Fletcher    GS: Fletcher, Nellie and Robert Fletcher. Who is the oldest person in your  family that you can remember? Would it have been those grandparents?    MA: Those grandparents    GS: Yeah, okay where did you first attend school?    MA: Bristow, Oklahoma Washington school on east 1st street    GS: Alright, and do you remember who your teacher was?    MA: I think my first grade teacher was Mrs. Asher and I had Mrs. Lester as we  called her. I think she taught second grade    GS: Okay    MA: And Mrs. Wilson was a principle, lived just a couple of blocks from us    GS: Wow    MA: And I can remember we&amp;#039 ; d go over there and help her grade papers at times    GS: Oh how fun    MA: But we had a wonderful time there    GS: And--    MA: We had our own playground and softball field and you had to pitch uphill    GS: Oh my    MA: The batter was up on the top and then the ground sloped    GS: That must be before they leveled it and put the blacktop there    MA: Yeah, [Indecipherable] cafeteria where it was [Indecipherable]    GS: Okay    MA: And if you hit it too far, we had a drain collection down at the east end of  it, and the water would run into there. But every once in a while the ball would  get down there    GS: Aw, was that a home run if it did?    MA: It had to be because it would take a while to get it out. You could get into  that hole but it&amp;#039 ; s hard to get out    GS: And so did you go through 6th grade at Washington?    MA: Went to--I went to first and 2nd grade in Bristow, and then we moved to  Okemah for a year    GS: Okay    MA: Just happened, and I hate to tell it, but I flunked 2nd grade    GS: Oh well that happens, that&amp;#039 ; s nothing to--no shame in that    MA: And so I went to Okemah    GS: Uh-huh    MA: And took 2nd grade over    GS: Okay    MA: And then we came back and I--so I went to Bristow all 12 years    GS: Well good, yes you did, didn&amp;#039 ; t you?    MA: I didn&amp;#039 ; t skip that one    GS: Just a year you&amp;#039 ; d like to forget, huh?    MA: Yeah I&amp;#039 ; d just forget    GS: How many kids were in your classes back then in, you know, in a classroom.  Do you remember? I wouldn&amp;#039 ; t know all mine.    MA: There were several, I&amp;#039 ; m gonna guess 20    GS: Yeah    MA: Or so many of them I still remember    GS: And did you walk to school?    MA: Walked to school    GS: Did you have a best friend that you walked with or with brothers and sisters or?    MA: Walked with my brother, but we had neighbors that we&amp;#039 ; d pick up along the way    GS: Right    MA: You might, I don&amp;#039 ; t know about best friends because some of them I&amp;#039 ; d fight  with before I got home    GS: So how many blocks did you have to walk?    MA: Let&amp;#039 ; s see, six?    GS: That&amp;#039 ; s not a bad walk    MA: That&amp;#039 ; s not a bad walk, even in the winter    GS: Yeah, and did you graduate from Bristow?    MA: Graduated from Bristow in 1953    GS: Do you have--were you active in sports or organizations in high school?    MA: Probably too much    GS: Aw, well tell me about it    MA: In junior high, I played football, basketball    GS: Yup    MA: And wrestling.    GS: Doesn&amp;#039 ; t seem to have hurt you a bit    MA: No, didn&amp;#039 ; t hurt me any. My only problem was I had two older brothers who  were good athletes    GS: Oh, you had to live up to them    MA: Best I could do wasn&amp;#039 ; t gonna be good enough    GS: Aww    MA: I think my mother never saw me play a football game    GS: Aww    MA: But she went to my older brothers    GS: Well that&amp;#039 ; s a shame, that&amp;#039 ; s a shame.    MA: We--they used to tell you know, that&amp;#039 ; s probably the reason they started  putting the fence around the football field. When my brother would get hurt, my  mom would wanna get down there and check on [Indecipherable]    GS: Well that makes sense, yeah.    MA: But in high school I played basketball and was captain, went on to senior,  was the captain of the basketball team    GS: Uh-huh    MA: Didn&amp;#039 ; t have a good year    GS: Aw    MA: But we made all the games    GS: Yup    MA: I think I recall I wrestled one match in high school when I was a sophomore    GS: Just decided that wasn&amp;#039 ; t for you?    MA: Well we had a basketball game scheduled for that night and a wrestling match  in the evening    GS: Gosh    MA: So I went up and tried out and made the weight and wound up having to  wrestle the captain of the team and it was Oklahoma [Indecipherable]    GS: Aw    MA: I never had such a day in my life    GS: I imagine, I imagine    MA: That&amp;#039 ; s a long seven minutes    GS: I&amp;#039 ; m sure, I&amp;#039 ; m sure    MA:I told them, I said &amp;quot ; You couldn&amp;#039 ; t even hear me?&amp;quot ;  when I told him [Indecipherable]    GS: Aw    MA: Oh well. I didn&amp;#039 ; t enjoy sports, but I was active in school    GS: Any class offices or anything like that? Any other organizations?    MA: Well, back then when I was in high school, we had district education plans,  which was [Indecipherable]    GS: Okay    MA: And I was president of that for a year. I worked during high school    GS: What did you do?    MA: I worked for, started my career. I turned 13 years old and loaded freight  cars for Bill Bursar (ph)    GS: Oh wonderful    MA: For two weeks, I worked a two-week vacation for somebody, that was it. And I  turned 13 at that time    GS: Wow    MA: And then at 15 I went to work for C. R. Anthony    GS: Yes    MA: And I made thirty-five cents in an hour    GS: That wasn&amp;#039 ; t bad back then    MA: I could buy all the pop and candy I wanted    GS: Sure you could    MA: And I kept myself in clothes.    GS: There you go    MA: And then I went from C. R. Anthony&amp;#039 ; s to Woolworth (ph), M. W. Woolworth    GS: Uh-huh    MA: Got a raise, made 50cents an hour    GS: Very good! I&amp;#039 ; m sure you were a great employee    MA: I tell them, I used to take them, one of my jobs was to check the fire  extinguisher, which at that time was a two-and-a-half-gallon bucket of water  under the counter, floors were all [Indecipherable]    GS: Oh my    MA: Mop them, and when I worked at Woolworth it was during the war, and all the  employees were women    GS: Yeah, yeah    MA: And I--    GS: Of course you were a teenager, right?    MA: I was a teenager, I was, well I was worked until I was graduated, so 16, 17  years old.    GS: Uh-huh    MA: I&amp;#039 ; ve been--they called, you know they sold canaries and parakeets.    GS: Really?    MA: And inadvertently somebody&amp;#039 ; s gonna leave the door open then they--    GS: Aw    MA: And I remember getting called out of school and I&amp;#039 ; d go down there and catch  some bird with a butterfly net. Put them back in the pen and go back to school    GS: Oh my goodness. And the school let you, didn&amp;#039 ; t they?    MA: The school let me, yeah    GS: It was no problem    MA: They were good    GS: That&amp;#039 ; s wonderful. Okay I&amp;#039 ; m gonna switch to church life. Did your family  attend church when you were growing up?    MA: We attended all of my life, the Nazarene church that started in Slick. I did  not--that, here in Bristow our church was located on 8th and--    GS: 8th street    MA: Maple and had a little brown church, doors in the corner, with one by four pews    GS: One by four, yup    MA: And then we later built a frame [Indecipherable]    GS: Uh-huh    MA: And I know my dad was on the board of the church, one day we were  redecorating it and they were painting it and apparently gasoline caught fire  and exploded, blew that church to pieces.    GS: Aw    MA: and I mean [indecipherable]    GS: How disappointing    MA: Nobody injured    GS: Well that&amp;#039 ; s good    MA: They rebuilt it, and then that brick church on top of the basement    GS: Yeah    MA: And I can remember my dad telling me we cannot afford a brick church, it  just cost too much    GS: Yeah    MA: We struggled, but we had a brick church    GS: But you made it, and it that the church that&amp;#039 ; s still standing there today?    MA: That&amp;#039 ; s the church that&amp;#039 ; s still standing there, and a lot of wonderful  memories there    GS: I&amp;#039 ; m sure    MA: Yeah    GS: Can you tell me about any of them?    MA: A few. I know as a teenager, I was a head of our youth group. The one thing  I remember about it, we had a convention in Okmulgee, and I was probably 15, and  one of the ladies was taking us down there the road from Bristow to Slick, down  through there. And I [Indecipherable], it was rutty, muddy, and she drove down  there in the mud in an old [Indecipherable]. But when she got to Okmulgee, she  couldn&amp;#039 ; t parallel park    GS: Oh, she could drive on the muddy roads but not parallel park    MA: So I parallel parked the car for her    GS: You probably didn&amp;#039 ; t even have your license yet    MA: Oh no, no I didn&amp;#039 ; t at the time.    GS: Well that&amp;#039 ; s a neat memory, any others?    MA: We really enjoyed it, growing up there. Lots of young people    GS: Good youth group    MA: I was looking at some pictures not long ago, the pictures of our classroom.  Sunday school teachers name was Gladys Banks (ph), and she lived out between  Bristow and Slick    GS: Okay    MA: [Indecipherable]    GS: Yup    MA: And we&amp;#039 ; ve had problems before getting in that class [Indecipherable] and it  would, we just covered the whole stairs, steps going up into the church. Lot of  wonderful people, there&amp;#039 ; s a lot of memories    GS: That&amp;#039 ; s wonderful. What were the Sunday, what were the services like on  Sunday? You know, did you have Sunday school then worship service?    MA: We had Sunday school, just basically like we do today. I mean, we had Sunday  school early and as I recall, we sang a little song about 9:45, gotta be at  Sunday school at 9:45    GS: Yup    MA: Back then during the war, they had a bus    GS: And you&amp;#039 ; re saying during the war, which war are you referring to?    MA: World War II    GS: Okay    MA: They had a bus that would run and it would come to your house and would, it  would come and we would walk about a block I think, and catch the bus if dad  wasn&amp;#039 ; t able to go. Normally he was.    GS: Yeah    MA: And, but we rode the bus home just because it was gasoline was rationed    GS: Right, oh yeah.    MA: So, but we had some wonderful times there, good times.    GS: Did your--you said your dad helped build the church, did they have a choir  back then? Did, because now aren&amp;#039 ; t you a singer? Don&amp;#039 ; t you sing?    MA: Well choir, yeah. I didn&amp;#039 ; t sing    GS: Okay    MA: It was best I didn&amp;#039 ; t    GS: Oh    MA: But we did have a choir, and you know a couple pews in the choir, not a big one    GS: Uh-huh    MA: &amp;#039 ; Cause we didn&amp;#039 ; t have, you know, [Indecipherable]    GS: Did your mom or dad sing in the choir?    MA: No    GS: No    MA: No, they did not sing in the choir, but they were faithful.    GS: Okay, now you&amp;#039 ; ve already said Franks Sisler was your doctor, did he make  house calls?    MA: As I recall, he did early    GS: Okay, you probably didn&amp;#039 ; t need him very often, did you?    MA: Not very often, I recall having pneumonia when I was real young, and they  called it then double pneumonia, but and I was really sick and I believe he came  to the house then.    GS: But you didn&amp;#039 ; t go to the hospital?    MA: No    GS: Did we have a hospital in Bristow at that time?    MA: We did    GS: Sisler, was it Sisler Clinic or the one that was before that?    MA: Cowart and Sisler    GS: Okay    MA: It was on west 8th street next to the American Legion    GS: Okay    MA: I spent one night there    GS: Oh you did?    MA: Had my tonsils taken out, almost bled out    GS: Oh my    MA: But it was I remember two or three stories tall that I can remember. Looking  out the window, and the school&amp;#039 ; s having a bonfire before a football game    GS: Aw    MA: And, but as far as I know, till I was old, it was the only night I spent in  the hospital    GS: Well that&amp;#039 ; s wonderful. Okay, what was Bristow like when you were growing up?    MA: Bristow was a lot like it is today    GS: Really?    MA: Buildings are mostly the same    GS: Uh-huh    MA: As usual, drug stores    GS: Few more things for kids to do maybe    MA: Few more things, well we played baseball in the summer, [Indecipherable]    GS: Uh-huh    MA: And the swimming pool was there, I can remember I couldn&amp;#039 ; t swim but I went  to the swimming pool    GS: Did they have the day camp and pre-swim back then?    MA: Not that, not the day camp    GS: Okay    MA: Not that far back    GS: Okay    MA: They had the building out by the swimming pool and I&amp;#039 ; m trying to think of  the name, they had a junior college    GS: Yes    MA: And they--and I can remember that building    GS: Oh it was not ;  it was not in the old high school? The junior college?    MA: As I recalled it was in that building that later became the farm center for state    GS: Okay, out by the lake?    MA: Had a gin out by the lake, yeah    GS: Okay    MA: There&amp;#039 ; s just a parking lot there now    GS: Okay    MA: But they had it in [Indecipherable]. I think they had a gin and that&amp;#039 ; s where  the junior college started    GS: Was, where it started    MA: Huh?    GS: Where it started, where it began. Do you remember, were there theatres in  town? Where there--you know?    MA: We had Walmer (ph) and the ones I remember was Walmer and The Princess (ph)    GS: Uh-huh    MA: I didn&amp;#039 ; t go hardly    GS: Yeah, you didn&amp;#039 ; t get to go to the movies?    MA: I didn&amp;#039 ; t have the time    GS: Oh yeah, you were too busy in sports, weren&amp;#039 ; t you? And working    MA: But the Walmer was between 6th and 7th and the Princess was between 7th and 8th    GS: And was it always there or do you remember when it was built or?    MA: I don&amp;#039 ; t remember, but they were there as far as I can remember. We had  several drug stores    GS: Okay    MA: You know, Smiths Drug and S&amp;amp ; M (ph) and Rexal (ph)    GS: Yes    MA: And Kemps was there    GS: Oh    MA: And--    GS: Well yes because Max Kemp took it over from his father, didn&amp;#039 ; t he?    MA: It was his family, right    GS: That&amp;#039 ; s right. Did you ever eat out at restaurants in town?    MA: Very seldom, the only thing I can really remember is maybe a hamburger    GS: Uh-huh    MA: Mom cooked    GS: Yeah    MA: It was better coking at home [Indecipherable]    GS: I&amp;#039 ; m sure it was. Did you have a favourite hamburger place?    MA: I can remember some, I never did eat much of it, but I can remember one that  we had which would be, would&amp;#039 ; ve been right across from the fire station now.    GS: Okay    MA: Little old building on the ally way    GS: Okay    MA: And you could get ten hamburgers for a dollar    GS: Oh my goodness    MA: But you didn&amp;#039 ; t go in and sit down, you just buy them, take them out the window    GS: Just to go place strictly, huh?    MA: Just to go    GS: Was there a place that was a teen hangout?    MA: We had a teen youth center above what would be now the old Route Hometown Furniture    GS: Okay    MA: Where J. C. Pennys was    GS: Yes    MA: Upstairs was the youth center    GS: Yes, I didn&amp;#039 ; t realize that    MA: [Indecipherable] and had music they played, I never did dance, but you could    GS: Uh-huh    MA: They would just sit and visit primarily    GS: Well that&amp;#039 ; s wonderful they had that place    MA: It was nice for that time    GS: Sure, my parents square danced in that area in the 60&amp;#039 ; s    MA: Yeah    GS: How did people dress back then?    MA: Well, the girls wore penny loafers and they put the penny in the little slot  in the front of it    GS: Yes, yes    MA: I recall in high school what we would do, we went through a spell of wearing  white shirt and overall cowboy boots    GS: Oh    MA: We wore blue overalls, or the striped ones    GS: Uh-huh    MA: And I used to sell them at Anthony&amp;#039 ; s    GS: Ah    MA: And--    GS: So that would&amp;#039 ; ve been early 50&amp;#039 ; s?    MA: Early 50&amp;#039 ; s, yeah, late 40&amp;#039 ; s.    GS: Okay, that&amp;#039 ; s interesting. Was that kind of a general trend across maybe the  area, or just a Bristow thing?    MA: As far as I know it was Bristow, we didn&amp;#039 ; t know about the other areas, we  didn&amp;#039 ; t get out of town much    GS: Did you ever take the train out of town?    MA: We did, we took the train when I was in grade school, and went to the Will  Rogers memorial in Claremore    GS: Oh wonderful, uh-huh    MA: And the thing I remember is when we went to the, I called it the tunnel in  Tulsa, it was dark for a short time, that&amp;#039 ; s where their depot was apparently up there.    GS: Oh okay    MA: But we went to Will Rogers memorial and then toured it when I was in--    GS: Took the train there, did you come down here to the depot? Was it this depot  or was it the one before?    MA: It&amp;#039 ; s the same one that&amp;#039 ; s here now    GS: Well that&amp;#039 ; s wonderful. Now we&amp;#039 ; ve talked about your jobs already, did you  ever serve in the military?    MA: No I didn&amp;#039 ; t    GS: Lucky youMA: I can recall [Indecipherable], back then a lot of our  classmates was on the national guard    GS: Okay    MA: And during my hospital deal when it was activated for Korea    GS: Okay    MA: And several of my classmates went to Korea with the national guard bureau  45th division, but I had some issues with--the doctor told me, he said if they  call you let me know because they don&amp;#039 ; t need you    GS: Well very good, very good    MA: Had a vision problem    GS: Yeah, that&amp;#039 ; s alright    MA: Well I would&amp;#039 ; ve gone, they tried to get me to join the national guard  and--no I&amp;#039 ; ll go when they call me    GS: There you go    MA: But I don&amp;#039 ; t need to    GS: Yeah, yeah. Okay, let&amp;#039 ; s see. Did you go to Tulsa or Oklahoma City much  growing up?    MA: We would go to Tulsa a lot, I had relatives in Oklahoma City    GS: Okay    MA: And several summers I would go spend a week or two    GS: Oh that&amp;#039 ; s nice    MA: With my cousins up there. But that was our vacation was to go to Oklahoma  City on the weekend    GS: Ah, what would you do when you were there? Just visit with the relatives?    MA: Just visit with the relatives    GS: And the kids probably played and--    MA: I was telling Joy (ph) earlier that that was our vacation where you go up on  Saturday, spend a night, then come back on Sunday    GS: Yeah    MA: And now we run up there and eat lunch    GS: That&amp;#039 ; s true, don&amp;#039 ; t have to make it an overnight trip    MA: Don&amp;#039 ; t have to make it an overnight trip    GS: Did your family have a car?    MA: We did, now as far back as I can remember    GS: Do you remember what kind?    MA: Yeah, my dad had a--I think probably the first one I recall what&amp;#039 ; s the name.  38&amp;#039 ;  Cheverolette, four door sedan    GS: Uh-huh    MA: We never had a new car    GS: Yeah, yeah    MA: Dad says you can fix them, his concern was if the body&amp;#039 ; s good you can fix  them up.    GS: And back then you could    MA: Yeah    GS: Without all the computer stuff on it    MA: But I can remember a lot of them he had, I can remember when my brother was  a senior, he was working part time during school, and we bought a 37&amp;#039 ;  Chevy [Indecipherable]    GS: Oh yeah    MA: I said we did, he did and old [Indecipherable] went out north of town that I  can remember [Indecipherable] hotel, and Jay, if those boys want that car to  last, tell them to just drive it like it was new, like they were breaking it in.  So it&amp;#039 ; s never been over 35 miles an hour, and we did it.    GS: Wow, yup    MA: And when he went to the service, I got to drive the car to school once. I&amp;#039 ; ve  even, it was so seldom, I can remember walking home from school, leaving it at  the school, because I forgot I had it    GS: Oh my goodness    MA: Georgia, I went up and I came back [Indecipherable] several years ago now,  went up and talked to the class at school and when I walked through the parking  lot there and saw all the cars, and I remember going to school and all the cars  that the kids drove to school you could park on elm street between 8th and 9th    GS: Yeah    MA: Between the catholic church and school, there were probably five or six is  all the cars that were at school    GS: Yup    MA: First thing he couldn&amp;#039 ; t afford    GS: Right, exactly. Yeah it&amp;#039 ; s a lot different today    MA: A lot different, a lot.    GS: Okay we&amp;#039 ; re gonna really shift gears here now, do you remember if Bristow is  segregated when you were growing up?    MA: It was    GS: Mhm    MA: Black school was on north east side of town    GS: Do you remember the name of it by chance?    MA: Lincoln    GS: Lincoln, okay    MA: Lincoln high school. I lived about three blocks from it    GS: Okay, okay    MA: So pretty much 8th street was the dividing line, you know    GS: Okay    MA: At that time    GS: Yeah    MA: A few of us, I mixed with them, you know    GS: Yeah, you had some friends    MA: I had some friends at that time, I didn&amp;#039 ; t run with them in school, of course  we weren&amp;#039 ; t in school    GS: &amp;#039 ; Cause you weren&amp;#039 ; t in school together, right?    MA: Right, but I can remember an incident though which is not good, but when I  was visiting one of them downtown, and I said &amp;quot ; Well let&amp;#039 ; s go drink a coke&amp;quot ;  and I  went in Smiths drugstore, and they served it. But the next time I went in there,  they called me out and I said &amp;quot ; Don&amp;#039 ; t you do that, don&amp;#039 ; t do that no more&amp;quot ;     GS: Aw how sad, but that was pretty common back then    MA: That was common, that was common    GS: Yes, a sad time in our history. Do you remember the names of any black  people in the city back then?    MA: Well it&amp;#039 ; s gonna be hard    GS: That&amp;#039 ; s alright, that&amp;#039 ; s alright    MA: I do remember an old gentleman called Roosevelt Joseph (ph)    GS: Roosevelt Joseph    MA: Yup, and then there was one that worked for P. M. Moore at the tire shop,  and then there was a black girl that worked for Joe Mouse (ph) at his station,  and of course one of the ones I remember most was Lafayette Johnson (ph) at the  shoe store    GS: Sure, I think a lot of people remember Lafayette    MA: Shoe shine. Lafayette was remembered by everybody    GS: Yes, yes    MA: Then there was one that was a janitor at the high school, they lived on east  8th street, just about three blocks from me, just wonderful and encouraging to  all of us young kids, and I can&amp;#039 ; t remember his name    GS: Yup, yup    MA: I know where he lives, his house is still there    GS: Yup, I understand. Some of those names slip my memory too anymore. You  mentioned going, well you mentioned the pool. Did you ever go to the pool, and  were black children admitted to the swimming pool? I mean it was total  segregation back then, wasn&amp;#039 ; t it? Yeah, yeah.    MA: I don&amp;#039 ; t remember any in there at all, and I didn&amp;#039 ; t go often    GS: Yeah, do you know if there were any freedmen in Bristow? Freedmen?    MA: Freedmen?    GS: Freedmen    MA: No, I don&amp;#039 ; t remember    GS: Okay, were there ever any episodes of racism that you remember growing up,  other than what you just told me about the drug store    MA: No    GS: Yeah, I don&amp;#039 ; t think we had it bad here    MA: To my knowledge we didn&amp;#039 ; t    GS: Yeah    MA: They were all [Indecipherable] in the north east part of town and that was  pretty much it    GS: Yeah. What about Indians? We were Indian territory, were Indians treated  well in town, did you know any Indian families?    MA: I did, I went to school with some and I don&amp;#039 ; t ever recall an incident. Now I  remember some that would, you know, get drunk    GS: Yeah, do you remember--    MA: They threw them in jail overnight, you know    GS: Yeah, do you remember any that were employed, like you know some of the  blacks you remembered working. Do you remember any Indians being employed at  certain places? It&amp;#039 ; s okay if you can&amp;#039 ; t    MA: One I remember was if I can recall his name, he was a son-in-law for Henry  Kemp, and he worked at the station [Indecipherable], there was a real nice home  over on the east 1st street just as you started out of town, the Indians lived in    GS: Okay    MA: But I can&amp;#039 ; t recall their names    GS: Yup, yup. That gas station you mentioned, is it the one that&amp;#039 ; s just back  here behind?    MA: Right    GS: Do you remember the name of that gas station? Was it a DX Station?    MA: I don&amp;#039 ; t think it was DX, an independent station    GS: We were trying to think of it the other day    MA: I think we were just, Henry Kemp ran it    GS: Okay    MA: And then he later had a [Indecipherable] that&amp;#039 ; s when Merle Baker went in  partnership with the Kemps    GS: Okay    MA: And then he had a [Indecipherable] across the street    GS: Okay    MA: [Indecipherable]    GS: Okay    MA: Which used to be, when I was a kid, there was a purple store    GS: Where the skating rink?    MA: Huh?    GS: Where the--    MA: Skating rink wasn&amp;#039 ; t there then    GS: Okay    MA: It was on the corner, Foslers (ph) had a [Indecipherable] where they sold chicken    GS: Oh    MA: And a guy name Alonzo (ph) used to pick chickens there, a black boy    GS: Okay    MA: And you could buy fresh chickens there    GS: Well    MA: And I can remember going in there, he had a rubber chicken picker    GS: A rubber chicken picker    MA: That old electric deal that would just take the feathers off of it    GS: Huh    MA: But he would, you know, hang them up by their feet and just cut their throat  and let them bleed out there in the store, it was all over    GS: In the store? Oh my goodness    MA: And you&amp;#039 ; d just buy them fresh    GS: Wow    MA: And the Fosters owned the business    GS: Uh-huh, the Fosters you say?    MA: Yeah    GS: Okay    MA: Arthur Fosters dad I think was the one that had it    GS: Okay, that&amp;#039 ; s interesting. Anybody in your family involved in the oil  industry that went on here?    MA: My dad worked for Prairie Pipeline, which later became Sinclair    GS: Right    MA: And he worked with them all his working years until he was dead. And of  course my brother, oldest brother worked for them, and later he worked for  [Indecipherable]. At one time, [Indecipherable] wasn&amp;#039 ; t headquartered in Bristow    GS: Yeah    MA: Worked out in Cushing    GS: Okay, okay I&amp;#039 ; m gonna switch to World War II. What kind of memories do you  have of World War II? You were a teenager or preteen during the years?    MA: I was a preteen    GS: Preteen    MA: I was--my brother graduated high school here in 43&amp;#039 ; , and went straight to  the navy    GS: Okay    MA: And that was the year we lived in Okemah, and as I remember him being gone  then coming back home    GS: Was he stationed on a ship?    MA: He was on a what they call an LST, which is [Indecipherable], but he used to  describe it as one that goes over one wave and under two. But it was at the end  of it would drop down and make it rain so that you were just [Indecipherable]    GS: Oh okay    MA: He had [Indecipherable]    GS: I see ;  I&amp;#039 ; ve seen those in movies    MA: He was a welder in Sallisaw    GS: Okay    MA: Boxed while he was there    GS: And he made it, oh he was a boxer in the army--in the navy?    MA: He was a boxer, he boxed in the navy    GS: My uncle boxed during the war also    MA: Dad had him boxing when he was two or three years&amp;#039 ;  old    GS: Oh my goodness, really? Were you ever a boxer?    MA: But, not me, not me. I told him, you know, in my family the three boys,  there was a boxer, and a fighter, and a diplomat    GS: And you were the diplomat, weren&amp;#039 ; t you?    MA: I was the diplomat. My oldest brother boxed a lot and was good, my middle  brother would fight anybody    GS: Wow    MA: And he was pretty good at that.    GS: He was good at it    MA: Bob ran around with Buck [Indecipherable]    GS: Okay, he goes to my church    MA: Yeah    GS: Buck does    MA: Yeah, and see I graduated--    GS: Sits right in front of me    MA: And I graduated with his younger brother Kenny    GS: Okay    MA: Still know a lot of people in town    GS: Yeah, yeah. Did rationing affect your family a lot during the war?    MA: To some extent, yes. I remember lard was hard to get and momma always had to  use lard    GS: I&amp;#039 ; m sure if she was a baker    MA: I can remember when, I remember when we couldn&amp;#039 ; t get candy bars, you know  some of those places they got them, one of them would have, if they had any,  they put them under the counter for certain people    GS: Oh    MA: But I could walk by that thing look in the window to see if they had any    GS: Could you talk them out of it if you--    MA: Not often. I remember that the sugar was short, gasoline wasn&amp;#039 ; t that--we  didn&amp;#039 ; t need a lot of gasoline cause we wasn&amp;#039 ; t going anywhere    GS: Uh-huh, uh-huh    MA: I--hose, silk stockings were not readily available    GS: Right, right    MA: That&amp;#039 ; s about it    GS: Okay, tell me about after you got married here in Bristow. I think I failed  to ask you earlier about your children. You and your wife, did you have children?    MA: We had one son    GS: Mark    MA: And--    GS: What was his name?    MA: His name was Marcus Allen (ph) and he graduated from--he was the next one to  graduate from high school after I did    GS: Aw    MA: When we came back from Bristow. Mark grew up in Sapulpa, we transferred to  Sapulpa not long after I went to work O&amp;amp ; G here in Bristow    GS: When did you go to work for O&amp;amp ; G?    MA: Went to work for O&amp;amp ; G the Monday after I graduated high school    GS: And you worked for them all those years    MA: Worked for them a little over 41 years    GS: Wow, I did not realize that Marland    MA: I took my test for them while I was in high school, graduated Thursday  night, took my physical on Friday and went to work Monday morning    GS: That&amp;#039 ; s fantastic    MA: And I transferred to Sapulpa and we raised our son in Sapulpa, he came back  to Bristow midterm Junior    GS: Okay    MA: In 1971    GS: Okay    MA: And graduated in 72&amp;#039 ;     GS: He was in my graduating class    MA: Right, with you    GS: Yup, and--    MA: Had a wonderful, I got to come back and be manager of the office where I  went to work    GS: Aw, that is neat, that is neat. And O&amp;amp ; G isn&amp;#039 ; t based in Bristow anymore    MA: They&amp;#039 ; re not based in Bristow, I was there during the transition back in 86&amp;#039 ; ,  and they had a downsizing and the crews that we had here moved to Sapulpa, and  they had an early out push. We only had to have 10 years of service, but you had  to be 55 years old, and I had gotten thirty something years of service    GS: Right    MA: But I was 52, so I went back to Sapulpa, which is where I transferred from  in the beginning of it    GS: Right    MA: I went from Bristow to Sapulpa to Tulsa and from Tulsa back to Bristow    GS: Uh-huh    MA: And then went from Bristow back to Sapulpa    GS: But you were able to still live here the whole time, weren&amp;#039 ; t you?    MA: I didn&amp;#039 ; t move back to Sapulpa in 86&amp;#039 ;     GS: Yeah    MA: I commuted    GS: Right    MA: From then and we were able to keep the office open for just [Indecipherable]  just attached here inside until I retired in 94&amp;#039 ; , and when I retired then they  closed the office.    GS: I missed the offices being open    MA: I do, I miss--    GS: I think it had hurt the communities when that happened    MA: And it just-- right    GS: Tell me about your work with O&amp;amp ; G    MA: I started out as a meter reader    GS: Okay    MA: Transferred from here to Sapulpa, went into the county department, with no  county training at all, but I could add and subtract, I could do that    GS: Right, and you were a fast learner I&amp;#039 ; m sure    MA: And I went into the county there, and in the mid 60&amp;#039 ; s I transferred to Tulsa  still in the county, went to a nice school at TU for a couple of years, got some  accounting courses in that they told me I needed    GS: Yeah    MA: To promote    GS: Yeah    MA: Then I transferred into the budget department, went to our service center  out on east 15th, worked out there a couple of years, and then transferred into  marketing department you know back downtown, and worked in our marketing  department for about three years. And then transferred back to Bristow as  manager of the office where I went to work    GS: Okay, what can you tell me about Bristow during those years? For instance,  were you active in any organizations here in Bristow?    MA: This year I would&amp;#039 ; ve completed 50 years as a member of the Lions Club, I  went into the Lions Club, I&amp;#039 ; ve always been active in city [Indecipherable]    GS: I thought you had    MA: And when I was in Sapulpa I was in the J.C.s (ph), went to the J.C.s, wasn&amp;#039 ; t  old enough to join. You had to be 21, I&amp;#039 ; m 19, and--    GS: They took you anyway?    MA: They let me to go meetings until I got old enough to join, and then when I  went into Tulsa I did fundraising for a YMCA, was active over there with the boy  scouts, did fundraising for the boy scouts, salvation army, and then when I come  back here I&amp;#039 ; ve always been active here in Bristow    GS: Yes, you have    MA: President of Chamber of Commerce, president of the Lions Club    GS: Okay    MA: And I&amp;#039 ; ve actually was awarded citizen of the year    GS: Do you remember what year that was Marland?    MA: I think it was 76&amp;#039 ; , in that area    GS: Okay    MA: I can tell you, I can give you the exact dates but I&amp;#039 ; d have to go home    GS: Right, right    MA: And then I was chosen for lifetime achievement, [Indecipherable] the  chambers highest honour.    GS: That&amp;#039 ; s quite an honour    MA: And one of the few who had got it, well it was [Indecipherable]    GS: That makes it even better, doesn&amp;#039 ; t it?    MA: Makes it even better    GS: A little bit sweeter    MA: And I tried to be, you know, a good citizen and to participate in--    GS: Now you attend--Oh I&amp;#039 ; m sorry, go ahead    MA: And I&amp;#039 ; ve--was received the highest honour that the Lions had, which was the  [Indecipherable] award    GS: Wonderful    MA: And my club here bought me a lifetime membership in the Lions Club, I was  going to retire    GS: Aw    MA: And they said no, when I turned 80 I was gonna retire, and they said no  you&amp;#039 ; re not gonna retire, you just come when you want to    GS: Well that&amp;#039 ; s nice, that&amp;#039 ; s nice    MA: So I still try to go    GS: They know valuable people when they see them, they don&amp;#039 ; t wanna let them go    MA: I&amp;#039 ; ve shared the united way drive twice, and I&amp;#039 ; ve tried to do my part to be a  good citizen    GS: Well and I think you&amp;#039 ; ve done an outstanding job    MA: For in the church and all of that    GS: Now you currently go to the Freewill Baptist, don&amp;#039 ; t you?    MA: Right    GS: How long have you been going there?    MA: We went to Freewill Baptist in Sapulpa, I was raised a Nazarene, but when we  went to Sapulpa, Nazarene church was big. Martha and I, you know, we were kids,  so we went for a while to the Assembly of God church, which was smaller, and her  sister and her family went    GS: Uh-huh    MA: And then while we lived in Sapulpa, her Brother, who is a minister, took the  Freewill Baptist church in Sapulpa so we began to go with him, and then of  course when we came back to Bristow, we transferred back, we went  [Indecipherable]. We&amp;#039 ; ve been in the Freewill church here for 50 years    GS: I thought you&amp;#039 ; d been there a long time    MA: We came back to Bristow in 1971, and--    GS: And you probably are on the boards of elders and about everything that there  is in the church    MA: Sure I&amp;#039 ; m on the board, I was treasurer for several years, taught Sunday  school class, then I got too old    GS: You&amp;#039 ; re not too old Marland. Alright now we&amp;#039 ; re gonna shift a little bit.  We&amp;#039 ; ve just, we&amp;#039 ; re just coming out of a pandemic from COVID 19, how has that  affected you?    MA: Caused me to spend a lot more time at home    GS: Yes    MA: My usual routine was to get up and go to coffee, with a whole bunch of  coffee drinkers about 9 o&amp;#039 ; clock in the morning for about an hour    GS: And that stopped that for about a year and a half, didn&amp;#039 ; t it?    MA: That stopped that for about a year and a half, and in fact we had our first  session back yesterday    GS: Oh wonderful, wonderful    MA: But it has made a difference on it, it&amp;#039 ; s something to respect    GS: It is    MA: We were able to--we got the shots fairly early    GS: Good    MA: And, but we&amp;#039 ; ve--we respect it    GS: Amen, mhm    MA: The danger of it and so I spent a lot more time at home, which was good    GS: Yes    MA: [Indecipherable]    GS: Did you lose anybody in your family due to COVID?    MA: We have not, my sister had it, a light case, several of her family had had  the COVID    GS: Uh-huh    MA: But we did not    GS: Good    MA: Our grandson was exposed to it early in his work, and took the test, but  never did have it    GS: But it didn&amp;#039 ; t affect him much, good. Good, good, good. Looking back over  your life, what would you consider to be some of the most important, or the most  important, inventions during your lifetime?    MA: It would be hard to decide which one. Of course the cars were already here,  they had washing machines, we didn&amp;#039 ; t happen to have one of them but, but I  think, you know, refrigeration. We grew up with an ice man coming to the door    GS: Yes, yes    MA: And putting a chunk of ice in the box    GS: In the bottom of the fridge    MA: In the wooden ice box    GS: Uh-huh    MA: At our house, we had a window box    GS: Okay    MA: In the winter time, we just left our stuff out. They had to build a box  outside the window and you just raised the window up and put the milk and the  butter and stuff, screen wire over it. And in the winter time, it would stay  real cold out there.    GS: Well sure it would, that&amp;#039 ; s the first time I&amp;#039 ; ve heard of that    MA: And I can remember in the kitchens, you know, that&amp;#039 ; s what it was and you  could raise the window and mom would get the milk and stuff    GS: How fun, that time we lost electricity for nine months, nine months--nine days    MA: Nine days    GS: We did that, we put our food outside because it was cold    MA: And during that time, I didn&amp;#039 ; t lose mine    GS: Good for you    MA: I&amp;#039 ; m served off the transmission deal out there, and we were off for two to  three hours    GS: Wow, wow well you were lucky because most of the rest of the town was out.  As you see it, what are some of the biggest problems that face our nation right  now and how do you think they could be solved?    MA: Well, just the relationship of people is something that bothers me    GS: Yes    MA: It seems like it&amp;#039 ; s nothing. You know, I grew up with if there&amp;#039 ; s something  that needs to get done, we&amp;#039 ; d go and do it    GS: Exactly    MA: Now it&amp;#039 ; s, you know, you do it. And the kids today, the younger generations,  I&amp;#039 ; ve told my family, you know, just two words they know and that&amp;#039 ; s me and I    GS: Mhm    MA: If it&amp;#039 ; s not and if it doesn&amp;#039 ; t benefit me, I don&amp;#039 ; t care about it    GS: That&amp;#039 ; s so sad    MA: And it bothers me    GS: Yeah, you&amp;#039 ; re not the only person I&amp;#039 ; ve interviewed who has said this    MA: Church is important to me    GS: Yes    MA: And the attendance at church is not nearly--    GS: No it isn&amp;#039 ; t    MA: --What it should be. Salvation is something that seems like people have just forgotten    GS: I agree 100%, it is    MA: God&amp;#039 ; s still there, God&amp;#039 ; s still on the throne, and his time is gonna come one  of these days    GS: I agree with you Marland    MA: I just hope I&amp;#039 ; ve made mine right    GS: Do what?    MA: I just hope I&amp;#039 ; ve made my life right    GS: Well I know you have. Okay is there anything that you would like to tell us  that I haven&amp;#039 ; t thought to ask?    MA: Georgia, it&amp;#039 ; s just that I came to Bristow early, I like Bristow. When I came  back here, I told them when I was elected for citizen of the year, I didn&amp;#039 ; t have  to come to Bristow    GS: No    MA: But it&amp;#039 ; s home    GS: You chose Bristow    MA: I chose to    GS: Mhm    MA: And I chose to stay here, when I was-- opportunity to go out of town again.  My mother was still alive, which was up in her 90&amp;#039 ; s and I chose to stay here and  drive for 8 years to Sapulpa and back everyday    GS: Yeah, it was a longer trip back then than it is now too    MA: Yeah, and but the only thing, the bad part of going from here to Sapulpa and  doing a day job is that you drive into the sun going--         audio   0 https://bristoworalhistory.org/ohms/viewer.php?cachefile=OHP-2021-23_Marland_Armitage.xml OHP-2021-23_Marland_Armitage.xml      </text>
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          <name>Interview Keyword</name>
          <description>This field adds keywords to the Omeka Oral History item type. Keywords are&#13;
included in the OHMS XML, this field in Omeka will allow for full data migration&#13;
between OHMS XML and the Omeka Record. This field does not impact the&#13;
OHMS / Omeka integration and is optional if you do not need to map the&#13;
“keywords” field in the OHMS XML to the corresponding Omeka record.</description>
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              <text>Bristow, farming, great depression, home life, hospital, Lincoln High School, Nazarene church, oil companies, segregation, Slick, train,  Washington School</text>
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              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                  <text>Several interviews were done by Mary and Bob Mc Carty of people who grew up in the Pinehill area north of Bristow.  This collection is the Pinehill subset of the Bristow Oral Histories</text>
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          <name>Interview Keyword</name>
          <description>This field adds keywords to the Omeka Oral History item type. Keywords are&#13;
included in the OHMS XML, this field in Omeka will allow for full data migration&#13;
between OHMS XML and the Omeka Record. This field does not impact the&#13;
OHMS / Omeka integration and is optional if you do not need to map the&#13;
“keywords” field in the OHMS XML to the corresponding Omeka record.</description>
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              <text>Pinehill, Bristow, Oklahoma, fights, opossum, moonshine, Indian dance</text>
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          <name>OHMS Object Text</name>
          <description>This field contains the OHMS Index and / or Transcript and is what makes the&#13;
contents of the OHMS object searchable in Omeka</description>
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              <text>    5.4    OHP-011-01 Charles Lionel Klock, Sr OHP-0011-01 20:39   Bristow Historical Society - Oral History Archive   Pinehill Bristow Historical Society, Inc.    Early childhood memories Pinehill, Bristow, Oklahoma, fights, opossum, moonshine, Indian dance Charles Lionel Klock, Sr Robert and Mary McCarty MP3 OHP-0011-01 Klock, Charles Sr.mp3 1:|71(1)|85(1)|101(1)|121(1)|133(14)|153(2)|185(14)|223(2)|240(2)|256(8)|277(2)|300(4)|309(13)|341(10)|362(1)|384(14)|397(8)|415(7)|424(7)|439(10)     0   http://bristoworalhistory.org/interviews/OHP-0011-01 Klock, Charles Sr.mp3  Other         audio          0 Family   Seventh - afternoon of June 7, 1977.  We're talking to     Charles Lionel Klock    Charles Lionel Klock, and he's gong to tell us about his family.  Lionel, what war you mother and dad's name?   Charles Lionel Klock describes his family   Beaumont ; brother ; family ; father ; Morgan City (La.) ; mother ; sister ; sisters ; Texas City   Klock family                       121 Pinehill school   Did all of you children go to Pinehill school?    No, just the three oldest - Daphine and myself and Vernon.  I think that was the only ones that really went to the Pinehill school.    How many years did you go?    About two, I believe, because   Lionel Klock describes going to Pinehill school.   Annie over ; Mr. Thomas ; Pinehill ; school   jumping gates ; Pinehill school ; riding a horse to school ; spankings                       396 Chicken roasts   Did you ever hear about - did you ever hear about those chicken roasts?  Would you like to hear, would you like to hear a story -    No, Daphine - Daphine, now I think Daphine -     Would you like to hear the story about them?    Yeah, I'd like to hear that.   Interviewer Mary McCarty relates a story from Lloyd Bruce about stealing chickens and roasting them in a clay shell.   chicken roasts ; Lloyd Bruce ; Lloyd, Bruce   bake in clay ; chicken roasts                       477 Opossum hunting and school spanking and fight with Bob   Well, you missed the fun years out there, then.    Well, maybe so.  But I had plenty of fun.  Going out to - going out in the -    Do you remember the Christma -    - you know, Dad' d take us out hunting at night.  We'd go out and hunt opossum or it jsut so happened that many a times we'd - we'd run over with a old hound, we had an old hound that went out ahead of us.       hound dog ; opossum ; skunk   hound dog ; opossum ; skunk ; Striped skunk                       537 School fight and fight with Bob   You start talking about that fight, you said there was about eighteen of you:    Oh, yeah, well -    You told me while ago there was about eighteen of you got a whipping.  How many of them was in school that year, if eighteen of you got a whipping?    I don't know, I would say it was at least half of the school got it, but the fight really - I don't know exactly what Bobby's part of it is ---   Lionel Klock and Bob McCarty reminisce about a fight and the switching they got from the school teacher.   girl whipping ; school fight ; whipping   school fight                       785 Moonshine and a stomp dance   Hey, Bobby, did you ever get up in the country there, especially up behind old Ellis Heads' house?  You ever go up in there?  You ever see those pigs laying up there in that mud -    Yeah:    - get so drunk on that sour, sour mash that tehm poor sows couldn't get up?   Lionel Klock and Bob McCarty reminisce about a moonshiner and an Indian stomp dance.    moonshine ; pigs ; sour mash ; stomp dance ; war party ; white lightening   deputy sheriff ; Indian stomp dance ; moonshine ; white lightening                       1146 Bobby can fight and Lena can dance   What were some of the kids' names that went to school with you?    Well, I really don't remember a whole lot of 'em.  Naturally, Bob Imhousen, then Lena Hooky    She must have been a pretty little girl.  You keep talking about her.       classmates ; dancing   dances ; two-step                         In this 1977 interview, Charles Lionel Klock, Sr. (1927-2003) describes his very early childhood memories in the Pinehill Community outside Bristow, Oklahoma including fights with schoolmates, opossum hunting, the first time he ever tried corn mash alcohol (moonshine), and attending an Indian dance as a child.  Interviewer: Mary Lee (Fuller) McCarty (1929-2007) (MM)    Interviewee: Charles Lionel Klock, Sr. (1927-2003) (CK)    Other Persons: Robert L. &amp;quot ; Bob&amp;quot ;  McCarty (1927-2007) (BM)    Date of Interview: June 7, 1977    Location: Drumright, Creek County Oklahoma    Transcriber: Melissa Holderby    Organization: Bristow Historical Society, Inc.    Original Cassette Tape Location: OHP-0011 Side ALength: 0:20:39    Abstract: In this 1977 interview, Charles Lionel Klock, Sr. (1927-2003)  describes his very early childhood memories in the Pinehill Community outside  Bristow, Oklahoma including fights with schoolmates, opossum hunting, the first  time he ever tried corn mash alcohol (moonshine), and attending an Indian dance  as a child.    Preface: The following oral history testimony is the result of a cassette tape  interview and is part of the Bristow Historical Society, Inc.&amp;#039 ; s collection of  oral histories. The interview was transcribed and processed by the Bristow  Historical Society, Inc., with financial assistance from the Montfort Jones &amp;amp ;   Allie Brown Jones Foundation. Rights to the material are held exclusively by the  Bristow Historical Society, Inc.    The reader should bear in mind that he or she is reading a verbatim transcript  of spoken, rather than written prose. Insofar as possible, this transcript tries  to represent the spoken word. Thus, it should be read as a personal memoir and  not as either a researched monograph or edited account.    To the extent possible, the spelling of place names, foreign words, and personal  names have been verified, either by reference resources or directly by the  interviewee. In some cases, a footnote has been added to the transcript in order  to provide more information and/or to clarify a statement. Some uncertainties  will inevitably remain regarding some words and their spellings. In these  scenarios, a (ph) follows a word or name that is spelled phonetically. The  notation [indecipherable] is used when the transcriber has not been able to  comprehend the word or phrase being spoken. The notation [inaudible] is used  where there is more mumbling than words, or when interference on the tape has  made transcription impossible.    MM: Seventh--afternoon of June 7, 1977. We&amp;#039 ; re talking to--    CK: Charles Lionel Klock.    MM: Charles Lionel Klock, and he&amp;#039 ; s going to tell us about his family. Lionel,  what was your mother and dad&amp;#039 ; s name?    CK: Dad&amp;#039 ; s name was Charles Ishmael Klock and mother&amp;#039 ; s name was Sybil Emmaline Klock.    MM: What was your mother&amp;#039 ; s name before she married?    CK: Williams. They was--had moved here to Drumright area and mother and dad  married in that area. Followed the oilfields around here for a while and finally  settled here in Bristow at the little pumping plant out north of town.    MM: How many brothers and sisters do you have?    CK: I have one brother and three sisters.    MM: What&amp;#039 ; s their names?    CK: Well, Daphine--do you want me to give their married names?    BM: Yeah.    CK: Daphine--Dorotha Daphine and her last name now is Holmes. She lives in Texas  City, she&amp;#039 ; s a registered nurse. And Vernon Klock lives in Beaumont, Texas and  he&amp;#039 ; s a retired--I guess you&amp;#039 ; d call him superintendent for the McDermott (ph)  shipyard out of Morgan City, Louisiana. And we have Aline Sanders who is there  in Beaumont, lives in Beaumont, her husband&amp;#039 ; s a butcher for the market  [indecipherable]. And then my youngest sister which is Thelma Dean Ross (ph),  and she lives in [indecipherable], Texas which is a little old town just about  ten miles out of Beaumont.    MM: Your mother and dad still alive?    CK: No, mother&amp;#039 ; s living but dad died two years ago on Easter Sunday morning of a  heart attack, there in Beaumont, Texas.    MM: Did all of you children go to Pinehill school?    CK: No, just the three oldest--Daphine and myself and Vernon. I think that was  the only ones that really went to the Pinehill school.    MM: How many years did you go?    CK: About two, I believe, because--well, really, I went, I went--I started for  three, but it just so happened that I was a little early in my going to school  and so after about two or three weeks in school I can remember one day I got up  behind the curtain on the stage and jumped out and hollered &amp;quot ; Boo&amp;quot ;  at everybody  and just immediately after that, Mr. Thomas sent a letter home to my momma and  said, &amp;quot ; Mrs. Klock, please keep Lionel home,&amp;quot ;  says, &amp;quot ; He won&amp;#039 ; t study and won&amp;#039 ; t let  nobody else.&amp;quot ;  So I had to stop and drop out that year and then I started again  the next year. So hopefully that helps.    MM: What kind of sports did you play?    CK: Well, the only thing I can remember playing at Pinehill is that we had an  excellent slide there, we got the old wax--paper wax off of the bread wrappers,  off of the bread. And we put it as slick as you could possibly get it and then  the only other sport that I ever really remember playing at the Pinehill was  they could throw that ball over and catch it and then run around and hit  somebody with it on the other side of the school.    MM: Annie-Over.    CK: What would you call that?    MM: Annie-Over.    CK: Annie-Over! Boy, we had a time with that, now.    MM: Did you ever get in on any of those chicken stealing when you lived there?    CK: No, no, I didn&amp;#039 ; t get into any of that, you know--we lived, when we first  began to go to Pinehill, we lived over on the old Indian home. I don&amp;#039 ; t even  remember what the Indian family was, but it was over close and had a neighbor by  the name of Vann. We had five gates between us and school and we rode a horse.  Daphine and I would ride the horse and mother and dad would always instruct us  to be sure to stop at each one of those gates and open and close it when we went  through. And so we did, we faithfully did our part--at least until we found out  that the horse could jump and from that point on, I don&amp;#039 ; t believe we stopped to  get any--to open any of them. But we--Bobby was showing me here, Minnie Davis  (ph)? Is that where we was living?    BM: That&amp;#039 ; s where he lived, yeah.    CK: Out on the Minnie Davis (ph) place. Anyway, we never did stop to--from that  point on, when that horse came to the gate it always jumped it and how we held  on I don&amp;#039 ; t know, but we made it home safely anyway.    MM: Did you mom and dad know you was jumping the gate?    CK: (laughs) No, they didn&amp;#039 ; t.    MM: Have you told your mother in later years?    CK: Yeah, yeah. You know, I don&amp;#039 ; t know, we--in our going home, we had one place  that we stopped off. I don&amp;#039 ; t know where [indecipherable] it was, don&amp;#039 ; t even  remember the name of the family, but it was somewhere between after we turned  off of a certain road going back over through to the house, we&amp;#039 ; d stop off at  these people&amp;#039 ; s house and get warm! Well, I tell you, when we was coming home,  it&amp;#039 ; d be cold, snow on the ground and our feet would get mighty cold and I tell  you what, I didn&amp;#039 ; t particularly like the boots that I had and I burned the soles  off of them at those people&amp;#039 ; s house by putting my foot up close to the fire. It  got warmed, but I burned the heel--the sole off of &amp;#039 ; em, anyway. (laughs)    MM: About how many spankings a day did you get when you was going to school? Bob  tells how many he got.    CK: Oh, I was a good boy. I don&amp;#039 ; t know, I know I got some but it was mostly hold  your hand out and with a ruler on it, you know, and a lot of that kind of  situation. Only one time I really did get a switching from Mr. Thomas, but I  wasn&amp;#039 ; t alone in that one. There was several others that got a whippin&amp;#039 ;  on that one.    MM: You didn&amp;#039 ; t go, though--if you got up to the seventh or eighth grade like Bob  did, you&amp;#039 ; d have got a few more.    CK: Maybe so, maybe so.    MM: You missed a few things--    BM: I didn&amp;#039 ; t have to [indecipherable]    MM: Did you ever hear about--did you even hear about those chicken roasts? Would  you like to hear, would you like to hear a story--CK: No, Daphine--Daphine, now,  I think Daphine--    MM: Would you like to hear the story about them?    CK: Yeah, I&amp;#039 ; d like to hear that.    MM: They would go to various famers, usually the one that was the crankiest in  the community, and they&amp;#039 ; d steal a chicken.    CK: Oh?    MM: And they&amp;#039 ; d take it down to the creek and they&amp;#039 ; d wrap it in--they had a  certain place where there was good clay, and they&amp;#039 ; d make a thick layer of that  clay, just wring it&amp;#039 ; s neck off and make a thick layer of that clay on that chicken--    CK: Yeah?    MM: And just throw it in the fire and let it bake and then when it got done  they&amp;#039 ; d just break that clay off and just eat it with their fingers.    CK: Uh-huh.    MM: So I asked Loyd Bruce on his tape, I said, &amp;quot ; Loyd, did you remove any  undesirable parts of those chickens?&amp;quot ;  And he paused a minute and he said he  didn&amp;#039 ; t believe they did! But they said you can take the toughest old rooster or  old hen and wrap it in that clay that way and it&amp;#039 ; d get tender and good.    CK: I would suppose they would.    (all laugh)    MM: But they cooked it guts, feathers and all.    CK: Oooh, boy! (laughs)    BM: [indecipherable]    CK: I think I&amp;#039 ; ll [indecipherable], I&amp;#039 ; ll tell you.    MM: Did you steal any water--no, you wouldn&amp;#039 ; t even be big enough to steal--    CK: No, no, I, I didn&amp;#039 ; t, I never did really, I didn&amp;#039 ; t--let&amp;#039 ; s, let&amp;#039 ; s see, it  must&amp;#039 ; ve been--so really first, second grade is about all that I really got to go  there. Well, I tell you--    MM: Well, you missed the fun years.    CK: Well--    BM: Then they moved up to Oilton.    CK: Yeah, we moved up to Drumright and to Oilton in-between there.    MM: Well, you missed the fun years out there, then.    CK: Well, maybe so. But I had plenty of fun. Going out to--going out in the--    MM: Do you remember the Christma--    CK: --you know, dad&amp;#039 ; d take us out hunting at night. We&amp;#039 ; d go out and hunt opossum  or it just so happened that many a times we&amp;#039 ; d (laughs) we&amp;#039 ; d run over with a old  hound, we had an old hound that went out ahead of us. Instead of a opossum he  found a, a good skunk. And run in on top of that skunk and it hit him right in  the face. And I never (laughs), I never heard one dog holler so much and waller  so much, throw his head on the ground and roll and squall and bawl and, you  know? That ruined our hunt for that night. We didn&amp;#039 ; t get to go any further.  (laughs) That old dog just--hooked him up and he went back to the house after that.    MM: You start talking about that fight, you said there was about eighteen of you?    CK: Oh yeah, well--    MM: You told me while ago there was about eighteen of you got a whipping. How  many of them was in school that year, if eighteen of you got a whipping?    CK: I don&amp;#039 ; t know, I would say it was at least half of the school got it, but the  fight really--I don&amp;#039 ; t know exactly what Bobby&amp;#039 ; s part of it is, but I know I come  home crying and dad said, &amp;quot ; What you crying about?&amp;quot ;  and I said, &amp;quot ; Well, somebody  jumped on my back.&amp;quot ;  And sometimes it was Bobby! Other times it might&amp;#039 ; ve been  somebody else but that particular time it was Bobby. And he told me, he said,  &amp;quot ; Son,&amp;quot ;  he said, &amp;quot ; I&amp;#039 ; ll tell you what: If you come home tomorrow night and you&amp;#039 ; re  crying because somebody jumped on your back and you hadn&amp;#039 ; t done nothing about  it,&amp;quot ;  he says, &amp;quot ; I&amp;#039 ; m gonna spank you.&amp;quot ;  Well, the next evening it just happened to  be that Bobby was the one that jumped on my back. And for the next mile and  half--next half a mile, really--it was either me on bottom and him on top or I  was on top and he was on bottom, I don&amp;#039 ; t know how it all wound up like, but I  assure you one thing, this is some--at least thirty-five or thirty-six years  afterward and I&amp;#039 ; m still bearing the scars of those, that fight (laughs) in my face.    MM: It&amp;#039 ; d have to be better than forty years, you didn&amp;#039 ; t go to school out there  after you was ten.    CK: Well, no, let&amp;#039 ; s see--    MM: Come on, now.    CK: Well, five years--six years old, yeah! It&amp;#039 ; s got to be forty, forty-four  years ago. About forty-four to--forty-three to forty-four years. That&amp;#039 ; d be it.  But I&amp;#039 ; ll tell you what, I didn&amp;#039 ; t get a whipping when I got home, and I can&amp;#039 ; t say  whether I got the best of the fight or Bobby got the best, or who got the worst,  or what have you. I&amp;#039 ; ll tell you we both come out with plenty of scars, and not  only us--you know, Alton (ph) and Daphine got into that, too. Alton (ph) wound  up with a pretty good scar on his face over that rack--and Daphine had some  pretty good nails and she shore did get him right across the face.    BM: [inudible]    CK: Clear from the forehead clear to the chin, I&amp;#039 ; ll tell you, he really got a  good one.    MM: And on top of all that, I believe your mother and Bob&amp;#039 ; s mother were best friends.    CK: Ooo-hoo! (laughs) Yeah, yeah! And after that, Bob and I was pretty good  friends, too! (laughs)    BM: (laughs)    MM: Our son that was killed and a boy got into it and knocked each other&amp;#039 ; s teeth  loose and everything else and the next day they wanted visit each other and we  said, &amp;quot ; Mose (ph), we thought you were angry,&amp;quot ;  and he said, &amp;quot ; Why, just &amp;#039 ; cause  your fighting&amp;#039 ; s no sign that you&amp;#039 ; re mad at each other!&amp;quot ;     (all laughing)    BM: But you know, Mr. Thomas didn&amp;#039 ; t like what he heard about that fight. He--the  next day at school he begin to name off the ones that he wanted to talk to after  school, and he kept the boys in one room and the girls in the other. The only  thing is, he appointed Daphine and one of the other girls to go out and they was  to pick the switch that we was to get switched with, and naturally for  themselves they pretty--picked a pretty good, a very small little switch. But  for the boys, I&amp;#039 ; ll assure you we got our--they got the right size. I don&amp;#039 ; t know  if that was a peach limb or just what it was, but I&amp;#039 ; ll assure you--and when Mr.  Thomas laid it on, he was--didn&amp;#039 ; t spare the rod. (laughs) I can remember it.  Now, I also heard from other reports, though, that when he spanked the girls  it--that just the skirt really got the blistering. It really never did get down  next to the body on the girls. But the skirt really did get the blistered on.    CK: I think everybody went down that south road and got a lickin&amp;#039 ;  that day.    BM: (laughs) Eighteen of us, at least.    CK: I know&amp;#039 ; d it, anyway.    MM: Well, you and the McIntyres (ph) got into it one time, didn&amp;#039 ; t you?    CK: No, me and the Wilson boys got into it.    MM: Wilson.    CK: Hey, Bobby, did you ever get up in the country there, especially up behind  old Ellis Head&amp;#039 ; s (ph) house? You ever go up in there? You ever see those pigs  laying up there in that mud?    BM: Yeah?    CK: --get so drunk on that sour, sour mash that them poor sows couldn&amp;#039 ; t get up?    (all laughing)    BM: You know the last time, last time I talked to old Ellis--oh, before the lake  was--had a lot of water in it. When I--    MM: Ellis died slow and hard with that cancer, he had a terrible time of dying--    BM: --I went out and bought some corn off Ellis to fatten out some hogs. And--    MM: --and Lord, that was twenty years ago. Almost twenty years ago.    BM: --I got talking to him that afternoon, and &amp;quot ; Say, Ellis, when is the last  time you ran off a batch of corn?&amp;quot ;  He said, &amp;quot ; Oh, Bob, it&amp;#039 ; s been a good long  time.&amp;quot ;  He said, &amp;quot ; I&amp;#039 ; ll tell you what, I&amp;#039 ; ll tell you where there&amp;#039 ; s a twenty-gallon  keg of it buried.&amp;quot ;  He said, &amp;quot ; I buried it and I runned it off.&amp;quot ;     MM: I guess it&amp;#039 ; s still there!    BM: As far as I know it&amp;#039 ; s still there.    MM: So it&amp;#039 ; s--Bob&amp;#039 ; s been--    BM: You know, [indecipherable]    CK: You know, I guess there might be others that would dispute it but  I--according to my particular knowledge of it, he made some of the best that--    BM: That&amp;#039 ; s right!    CK: --that was run off in our country. I know about the only time that I ever  really got a good, I got exposed to it, so to speak, I think they come over to  the house and three men and dad were standing out in the yard and they had the  bottle and so they started off and tilt that bottle up, you know, and finally it  went around to all four men and then finally dad handed it to me and says,  &amp;quot ; Here, son,&amp;quot ;  he said, &amp;quot ; Here, take a swig.&amp;quot ;  Well, you know, I thought I had some sodee-pop.    BM: Yeah?    CK: And, boy, so I turned that thing up like I would a sodee-pop bottle and I  got me a mouthful and I learned quickly that the white lightening didn&amp;#039 ; t its  name just because it was a white, or clear. It had something else--    BM: (laughs)    CK: It had a little fire! And I don&amp;#039 ; t know that I have ever been burned so in  all my life. I think that did help me, though, to one extent--I never have  touched the stuff very much since.    BM: (laughs) One one of old Ellis--he always, when he was making, he had a few  of &amp;#039 ; em that would come around, he&amp;#039 ; d get &amp;#039 ; em to come around and [indecipherable]  with him, especially when he was running off a batch. And you could just almost  tell when old Ellis would run off a new batch--    CK: (laughs)    BM: --&amp;#039 ; cause there&amp;#039 ; d be some old boy around over the country throw a big dance  that weekend.    CK: Well, you know, this is a lot of memories that you can have about a place  and I guess one of the things that I--stands out most in my memory, you  know--Ollie Hooky (ph) was--I don&amp;#039 ; t know exactly how good he was at his  particular trade in that area, but I do know he was pretty good at selling it,  anyway. We went with him one night down to country out of--somewhere down below  here, out on the--to an Indian dance. You know, called &amp;#039 ; em Indian stomp dances.    MM: They still have them.    CK: And so--but unknown to us, the car was lined with white lightening, and he  was selling it to the, to the different Indians there at the dance. Well, I&amp;#039 ; ll  tell you, I had a ball! I had, I was just big enough that I could slip in and  out of line and I&amp;#039 ; d get ahold of a fellow in front of me, I&amp;#039 ; d get ahold of his  hip pocket and here I&amp;#039 ; d go around that bonfire, stomping and dancing. Well, if  that fellow in the front of me happened to have a bottle in his pocket, I  slipped out of line right quick. I didn&amp;#039 ; t stay behind him. I&amp;#039 ; d get behind  somebody that didn&amp;#039 ; t have a bottle, anyway. But that particular night--    MM: Why would you do that?    CK: Huh?    MM: Why would you--    CK: Well, I wasn&amp;#039 ; t particularly wanting to--the man in my--he didn&amp;#039 ; t have a  bottle in his pocket, but I didn&amp;#039 ; t want--I was trying to get somebody that was  maybe, may not have been quite so drunk as the other one (laughs), but that  night we, as we&amp;#039 ; s sitting--and sitting there, or as the stomp dance continued,  the deputy sheriffs in this county happened to find one of the men that they  were looking for, and they couldn&amp;#039 ; t catch him. And he had jumped on a truck and  was taking off and so the deputy took his gun and fired and shot the man,  really. The leaves that--he shot through the tree and the leaves that fell off  of the tree fell right down in mother&amp;#039 ; s lap. If the bullet had been just a few  inches lower she would&amp;#039 ; ve--well it probably would have hit her instead of the  man. But I&amp;#039 ; ll assure you one thing: when that shot rang out, that stomp dance no  longer was a stomp dance but it turned into a war party. Those Indians jumped  out, went to their teepees and they come out with knives and guns like you never  seen. Well, Ollie (ph) and dad beat it to that car, throwed us kids in the back  seat and I want you to know, that was one wild ride out of there that night. Now  that&amp;#039 ; s one thing that stands out in my memory about that.    MM: What were some of the kids&amp;#039 ;  names that went to school with you?    CK: Well, I really don&amp;#039 ; t remember a whole lot of &amp;#039 ; em. Naturally Bob Imhousen  (ph), then Lena Hooky (ph)--    MM: She must&amp;#039 ; ve been a pretty little girl. You keep talking about her.    CK: Well, Lena (ph) was--she was my dancing partner at the different dances and  I&amp;#039 ; ll assure you, we could cut a pretty good rug, I guarantee you.  We&amp;#039 ; d--especially when Lena (ph) and I got started dancing, well, the whole dance  floor cleared off and I&amp;#039 ; ll assure you we did the two-step. Now, if you had it  today--I don&amp;#039 ; t know what you&amp;#039 ; d call that dance today but I&amp;#039 ; ll tell you what, I  sure did enjoy those few times that we did get to dance together. (pause) But  now, really, some of the others, I&amp;#039 ; m sitting here trying to remember, but I--the  names of many of those children, or young people at that day, I guess just  doesn&amp;#039 ; t--you know, that&amp;#039 ; s forty-four years ago, it doesn&amp;#039 ; t stay with me. Or it  didn&amp;#039 ; t stay with me.    BM: That&amp;#039 ; s right.    CK: They didn&amp;#039 ; t make an impression on me like Bobby. (laughs)    MM: And Lena. Bobby can fight and Lena can dance, huh?    BM: There you go! There you go!    (all laughing)    end of interview         audio   0 bristoworalhistory.org/ohms/app/Ohms/interview/Version3.phpOHP-011-01_Charles_Klock.xml OHP-011-01_Charles_Klock.xml      </text>
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                <text>In this 1977 interview, Charles Lionel Klock, Sr. (1927-2003) describes his very early childhood memories in the Pinehill Community outside Bristow, Oklahoma including fights with schoolmates, opossum hunting, the first time he ever tried corn mash alcohol (moonshine), and attending an Indian dance as a child.</text>
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                  <text>Several interviews were done by Mary and Bob Mc Carty of people who grew up in the Pinehill area north of Bristow.  This collection is the Pinehill subset of the Bristow Oral Histories</text>
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              <text>Pinehill, tool dresser, oil rigs, wood rigs, steam engine, dances, square dance, Two Little Sisters</text>
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              <text>    5.4  October 18, 1976 OHP-0002-01 Bob Moore OHP-0002-01 43:20   Bristow Historical Society - Oral History Archive   Parkhill Bristow Historical Society, Inc.    Drilling in the early 1900s in northern Oklahoma Pinehill, tool dresser, oil rigs, wood rigs, steam engine, dances, square dance, Two Little Sisters Bob Moore Robert L. "Bob" McCarty MP3 OHP-0002-01 Moore, Bob.mp3 1:|26(1)|52(1)|79(3)|96(10)|109(16)|129(7)|141(49)|152(9)|178(2)|197(1)|219(2)|232(9)|246(11)|271(2)|275(66)|287(7)|313(2)|332(2)|360(18)|374(2)|394(58)|409(5)|416(8)|439(3)|457(10)|469(8)|473(40)|481(1)|493(17)|514(2)|537(9)|558(24)|572(1)|597(2)|619(9)|634(15)|645(12)|664(2)|675(4)|696(15)|735(2)|765(2)|788(3)     0   https://bristoworalhistory.org/interviews/OHP-0002-01 Moore, Bob.mp3  Other         audio          0 Drilling in the Pinehill community   B: …in your home on the Pinehill community. The date is 10/18/1976, time five o’clock. Now then, Mr. Moore.    BM: Yeah.    B: They tell me that back in your younger days that you drilled, helped work, or helped drill wells in this community, is that right?    BM: That’s right!    B: Where did you work at in this community?    BM: Well, I worked on the Albert Biggs (ph) Mosquito allotment, right on the side of a crick.    B: That would be on the side of Mosquito Creek.   Bob Moore discusses drilling for oil in the Albert Biggs freedman allotment near Mosquito Creek in the Pinehill area near Bristow.   Albert Biggs ; allotment ; Charlie Lowe ; Mosquito allotment ; Mosquito Creek ; Pinehill        35.950855, -96.375456 17 Pinehill Community NE Bristow              103 Drilling for Barnes and Freeland   B: Naw. Where else in the community did you help drill?    BM: Well, we drilled one over on, you know where this forty-eight  runs up there. For Freeland.    B: For Freeland.    BM: Yeah.    B: Do you remember the Indian allotment that that would drill on?    BM: Oh, let me see. Yeah! The Morrisons (ph).    B: It was on the Morrisons (ph)?    BM: Yeah.    B: You know that that Morrison (ph) was the freeman, didn’t you?    BM: Yeah, yeah. We—that was the first well we worked on that had electric power.   Bob Moore talks about working for various drillers and oil men.  Bob McCarty reads from material provided by George Krumme about a gas well drilled to 900 feet.   1925 ; Albert Mosquito ; Barnes ; Big Mosquito ; Brick Kirchner ; Claude Freeland ; electric power ; Glenn Freeland ; Hoppy Toad ; Indian allotment ; Morrison                           512 Hoppy Toad Oil Company and cable tools   B: This was pub—this information that I have was published in 1925, although I do have records here of the Hoppy Toad Oil Company.    BM: The who?    B: The Hoppy Toad Oil Company.    BM: Oh, yeah.    B: Here is some of the Hoppy Toad and here is the C.L. Freeland Oil Company.    BM: Yeah.    B: Does that bring back memories to you?    BM: That does, yeah. Well, Glen worked on this Hoppy Toad, dressed tools up there. I remember him talkin’ to me about it, and that was before I was—well, I was, had worked the oilfield a little but then since then I hadn’t. For a while I was—    B: I just, this log here that I have in my hand is a log of a well “C.L. Freeland Oil Company Mexi-Farm.” Now where would that be?   Bob talks about the Hoppy Toad Oil Company and early drilling with cable tools like a tag line or manila line.   C. L. Freeland Oil Company ; cable tool rigs ; Ernie Moore ; Hoppy Toad Oil Company ; Manila line ; Mexi-Farm ; rag line ; tag line   Drilling lines ; The Hoppy Toad Oil Company              http://www.petroleumhistory.org/OilHistory/pages/String/rope.html “Manila” line is made out of hemp or sisal      840 Dressing tools   B: You mentioned a while ago about dressing tools? How was the old tools dressed or sharpened or whatever you might do? How was that done?    BM: Well, dressin’ tools is, uh—a driller and a tool dresser work together on a tower, and a tool dresser, he assisted the driller. The driller’s supposed to know more than the tool dresser did, but lots of times they didn’t know as much. I dressed tools for about twelve years before I started drilling because it was much easier on me and no responsibility. Well, I guess where they got the name “tool dresser,” when they dress a bit they’d put ‘em in a forge, they’d heat ‘em up to white heat and then dress ‘em out to gauge. They had a gauge that you’d dress ‘em out to.    B: You had a gauge that slipped over the end of that bit, is that right?    BM: Yeah, that’s right, that’s right. When a bit got in sand formation or after drilling so long, it’d wear out and make the hole small so that the pipe wouldn’t fall, so when it got out of gauge we had to pull the bit off and put it in a forge and dress it, but they always had another bit they put on and we’d be drilling while the bit was heatin’.     B: What kind of point was on that?    BM: Well, we’d dress it to both sides and would come right out the gauge in a side of a circle on the gauge [indecipherable] and we’d work it out the gauge and pound the worn surface off and it was kind of a bevel on a point and a bottom.   Bob talks about dressing, or reforming, the drilling bit.  Different ways of heating the bit and reforming it are discussed.   dressing tools ; driller ; ram ; sand formation ; tool dresser   Dressing the bit on a drilling rig                       1114 Steam engines and wooden derricks   B: This here is the old boiler that—    BM: That’s the boiler, that’s the boiler.    B: That is what, now then—you said this boiler, what part did this boiler play?    BM: That made steam to run the engine on! (laughs)    B: Oh, it was operated by an old steam engine?    BM: Oh, yeah! That was fired with oil and sometimes they fired it with gas. Gas was much better because it was cleaner.    B: It was cleaner than the oil?    BM: Yep. It carried about 120 pounds of steam and the boilers were rated anywhere from thirty to forty-five horsepower boilers. That was the way they rated them.    B: Well now, then, go just a little bit further. What happened, say you’re moved into an area that there wasn’t gas and there wasn’t any oil, how did you fire—what did you use to fire that—    BM: We used to fire with wood or coal. Whichever one they get, which was the cheapest.    B: If coal was cheaper, why you’d fired with coal.    BM: Yeah. They [indecipherable] fired with wood. But boy, that took a lot of wood to heat that water up to where you get 120 pounds of steam.    B: What was this well here made out of?   Bob talks about the steam engines used in early drilling, the fuel used, different beams in the wooden derricks, and how these beams and cranks and belts fit together to drill.   bandwheel ; boilers ; bullwheel ; generator ; Nowata ; rig builder ; smudge pot ; steam engine ; wooden derrick ; yellow gold   Steam engines used in early drilling for oil ; Wooden derricks used in early drilling for oil                       1359 Working conditions   B: Now they had all this drilling, whenever they started drilling the wells before electric came in here, they just drilled in daylight, did they or did they not?    BM: No, we drilled night and day, twelve hour shifts.    B: What kind of light did you use at night?    BM: Oh, we had a generator that made electric light.    B: You made electric light with a generator that operated off of this steam?    BM: Yeah, on the steam. But the first, before they had the generator, we used what they called the “yellow gold.” That was an oil pot come up with two spouts and a piece of hemp in each one of ‘em and we’d light that to work by.    B: Worked by that smudge pot—    BM: Yeah.   Drilling through the night and smudge pot lighting   &amp;quot ; yellow gold&amp;quot ;  ; electric light ; shifts ; smudge pots   Drilling shifts ; Light from smudge pots                       1469 Time to drill a well, fishing tools, casings, building the derrick, moving in the tools   B: About how long did it take to drill one of these wells?    BM: Here? In this area?    B: Yeah, in this area.    BM: Well, ya done well to drill one in about thirty-five days if they didn’t have a fishing job losing tools.    B: Uh-oh, now then, how did that come about? How did that—    BM: Well, sometimes the lines would break, you know, and sometimes they would lose the tools by breaking the line and then they’d go in there and fish ‘em out.    B: What kind of a deal did they use to fish ‘em out with?    BM: Oh, Lord, they had a lot of fishin’ tools. The one thing that, if they had the line on it, they had what they called a three-prong grab. It was a tool that screwed onto the end of a stem and it had three long prongs on it with little wickers that come up. Oh, they were big as, oh, couple inches big. And they’d get ahold of the, try to get ahold of the line and pull them out.    B: How much, how deep where they, or have you ever helped fish out one?    BM: Yeah, I’ve fished one out over at Yale about thirty to a hundred, and I fished one out at Utah, was about two hundred feet. Now that was a fishin’ job. We was out there seventy-nine miles from any town, forty miles from any neighbor, and they hauled the groceries out in trucks. We used what they called a Clark engine. That was operated by gasoline. Didn’t use a boiler there. That was all sand formation and sand would drill close and would sometimes stick the tools. And we stuck the tools about, oh, I guess about two hundred feet deep, and the sand and gypsum around ‘em and we couldn’t pull ‘em out. So we cut the line and filled the hole with tools—stems after stems—and put all forty sticks to drill by it first, with the small tools. We started a twenty-inch hole there. We drilled by it with the small tools and put all forty sticks of dynamite on it.   Bob talks about losing tools in the well, fishing them out, how long it took for the derrick to be built, and how long for the tools to be brought in.   build a derrick ; dynamite ; fishing tools ; grasshopper derrick ; rig builder ; steel derrick ; wooden conductor   Drilling a well in 35 days ; Losing tools and fishing jobs                       2017 Early pay for drilling work   BM: But about four days. And we worked twelve hours a day and when we was rigging up, all four of us would go out the last day and finish rigging up and the driller and tool dresser would stay there and start, they’d work about eighteen hours that day.    B: What was the pay during that time, Bob?    BM: Well, I was getting’ about eight, nine dollars a day.    B: Eight or nine dollars a day?    BM: Yeah.    B: Now today their wages’d be—    BM: Quite a bit more.    B: Yeah, I’d say, what—what would you say the wages would be today on a modern-day rig?    BM: Well, I don’t know what they’re gettin’ now, but when I quit drilling, that was about, oh, I was getting’ twelve, thirteen dollars a day, but I was only workin’ eight hours. Well I started workin’ eight hours about, oh, about 1930.    B: You started workin’ eight hours a day runnin’ three shifts.    BM: Yeah.   Pay for oil field work in the 1910's, going to World War I, coming back to work in the oil fields, and the price of oil then.   driller pay ; early oil worker pay ; shifts ; tool dresser pay ; work day                           2444 Oil field workers fun   MM: What did they do for fun, them oilfield guys?    B: What did they do for fun, you oilfield boys workin’ out there in the oilfield, what did you guys do for the fun? To have fun?    BM: Oh, we’d get—not me, but most of ‘em ‘d get drunk and get into a fight, and something like that. Play craps and play poker and run around with the women—    UW: When you stayed, lived around Yale?    BM: What?    UW: Lived around Yale and worked, what did you all do for fun there?    BM: When?    B: When you lived around Yale, what did you guys do for fun up there?    BM: Oh! I went to dancin’ about twice a week.    B: About twice’st a week??   What oil field workers did for fun and Bob square dance calling of &amp;quot ; Two Little Sisters&amp;quot ; .   dancing ; drunk ; fight ; play craps ; poker ; square dance calling ; square dancing ; women ; Yale                             In this 1976 interview, Bob Moore discusses working as a tool dresser on oil rigs in the early 1900s in northern Oklahoma at a time prior to electricity, when rigs were built of wood, powered by a steam engine, and lighted at night by burning pots of crude oil. He also describes going to dances in Yale, Oklahoma in his spare time and calls a square dance named “Two Little Sisters” for the interviewer.  B [Bob McCarty, Interviewer]: --in your home on the Pinehill community. The date is 10/18/1976, time five  o&amp;#039 ; clock. Now then, Mr. Moore.    BM [Bob Moore, Interviewee]: Yeah.    B: They tell me that back in your younger days that you drilled, helped work, or helped drill wells in this community, is that right?    BM: That&amp;#039 ; s right!    B: Where did you work at in this community?    BM: Well, I worked on the Albert Biggs Mosquito allotment, right on the  side of a crick.    B: That would be on the side of Mosquito Creek.    BM: Yeah, that, that&amp;#039 ; s right!    B: Right on the side of Mosquito Creek.    BM: Yeah. And I worked for Charlie Lowe he was drillin&amp;#039 ;  a well there. He  was a contractor.    B: Charlie Lowe was a contractor.    BM: Yeah.    B: Uh, do you remember, Mr. Moore, do you remember the depth that that well was?    BM: I think it was about 3,200 feet.    B: Did you get oil at that time, or did it--    BM: Yeah, yeah. We got oil there. It was a small well but it was a producer.    B: It was a producer.    BM: Yeah.    B: Roughly what would you say that that well would make a day?    BM: I&amp;#039 ; d say about fifty barrels at that time when we brought it in.    B: You dug, when it came in, it came in at fifty barrel a day?    BM: Yeah, something like that, yeah.    MM [Mary McCarty, Interviewer]: Is that too strong? (sound of cups clinking)    B: Naw. Where else in the community did you help drill?    BM: Well, we drilled one over on, you know where this forty-eight runs up there. For Freeland.    B: For Freeland.    BM: Yeah.    B: Do you remember the Indian allotment that that would drill on?    BM: Oh, let me see. Yeah! The Morrisons.    B: It was on the Morrisons?    BM: Yeah.    B: You know that that Morrison was the freeman, didn&amp;#039 ; t you?    BM: Yeah, yeah. We--that was the first well we worked on that had electric power.    B: The Morrison well was the first one that you had electric power to?    BM: Yeah.    B: What year was that, Mr. Moore?    BM: Oh, let&amp;#039 ; s see--that must&amp;#039 ; ve been about 1925.    B: Nineteen-and-twenty-five? When you first went to work in the oil field  working the drilling, was there any other wells located around in that part of  the country?    BM: Yeah, there was a well or two around in there. Freeland had some  production over in that part of the country.    B: Do you have any idea where that production was?    BM: Well, it was right around in there, quite a little bit of it, and then, oh,  Glen Freeland, he&amp;#039 ; s still alive, he could tell you where it is.    B: Now I talked to Glen the other night--    BM: You did?    B: --and I found out from Brick Kirchner that Glen Freeland has had an eye  surgery and his thinking at the present time is not very much. It&amp;#039 ; s pretty weak,  he doesn&amp;#039 ; t remember. When I asked him about it, he said, &amp;quot ; I don&amp;#039 ; t remember. I just don&amp;#039 ; t remember.&amp;quot ;     BM: You know, I&amp;#039 ; ve known Glen Freeland for practically all his life. When  he was about--when he first come from West Virginia, up around Nowata.    B: Did you know Claude Freeland?    BM: Oh, yeah. Yeah. I worked for Claude Freeland once.    B: Our deed according to the records that we have on the, this oil survey that  was made through here, Claude Freeland and--where&amp;#039 ; s that notebook at?  (pause ;  sound of pages flipping) Uh--it was drilled--    BM: He drilled a well right up here about a half a mile called the Hoppy Toad.    B: There you go, now we&amp;#039 ; re gettin&amp;#039 ;  somewhere!    BM: Yeah.    B: We&amp;#039 ; re getting&amp;#039 ;  somewhere now!    BM: Yeah.    B: This is some stuff I got from Albert--or George Krumme--    BM: Yeah.    B:--and it gives in here the first well that was actually drilled in this  community. It was Barnes and Freeland, was it or was it not?    BM: Yeah! Barnes and Freeland. Yeah. I knew Barnes. I knew Freeland, too. See when I first come to Bristow in 19-3. I was just a small kid then, then I come in 1911.    B: See, this thing here, (referencing publication) &amp;quot ; on April 11 one-third of a  mile to the northwest in section thirty-six,&amp;quot ;  which would be way over here,  &amp;quot ; township seventeen north, range nine east, with a depth of nine hundred and  ninety feet to a thousand ten feet, it was encountered of the initial flow of  seven million cubic feet per day.&amp;quot ;     BM: That&amp;#039 ; s gas.    B: Gas.    BM: Yeah.    B: (continues reading) &amp;quot ; This well&amp;#039 ; s flood was turned into a twelve-inch line of  this company, which at that time carried gas to the Oklahoma City area until the pressure decreased to a flood of which it would no longer force gas into the pipeline. The well was again connected to the pipeline in February 1917 when its open flow capacity registered 350,000 cubic feet a day with a rock pressure of 375 pounds.&amp;quot ;  Alright, now then, on this rock pressure, what did they mean by that rock pressure?    BM: That was, I don&amp;#039 ; t know. I don&amp;#039 ; t know what they meant by that rock pressure. You see, we never drilled very many gas wells. We were drillin&amp;#039 ;  for oil, mostly.    B: Drillin&amp;#039 ;  for oil, mostly.    BM: Yeah.    B: Now, this well that you were talkin&amp;#039 ;  about, what year was it--what year that  you drilled here on the Big Mosquito--Albert Mosquito, what year was that?    BM: Let&amp;#039 ; s see, oh, must&amp;#039 ; ve been about 1930, 19--, let&amp;#039 ; s see, about 1920-25.  Between 1925 and 1930, I&amp;#039 ; d say.    (woman talking in background)    BM: You got a record of that, haven&amp;#039 ; t you?    B: No, I don&amp;#039 ; t have a record of that one.    BM: No, you don&amp;#039 ; t.    B: I&amp;#039 ; ve got &amp;#039 ; em up to, uh, oh, looks like about--    MM: [Indecipherable] published that in &amp;#039 ; 23 so he wouldn&amp;#039 ; t have anything on &amp;#039 ; 25 [indecipherable], remember?    B: This was pub--this information that I have was published in 1925, although I  do have records here of the Hoppy Toad Oil Company.    BM: The who?    B: The Hoppy Toad Oil Company.    BM: Oh, yeah.    B: Here is some of the Hoppy Toad and here is the C.L. Freeland Oil Company.    BM: Yeah.    B: Does that bring back memories to you?    BM: That does, yeah. Well, Glen worked on this Hoppy Toad, dressed tools up there. I remember him talkin&amp;#039 ;  to me about it, and that was before I was--well, I was, had worked the oilfield a little but then since then I hadn&amp;#039 ; t. For a while I was--    B: I just, this log here that I have in my hand is a log of a well &amp;quot ; C.L.  Freeland Oil Company Mexi-Farm.&amp;quot ;  Now where would that be?    BM: The Mexi-Farm?    B: The Mexi-Farm Well Number One. Where would that be located?    BM: [Indecipherable.]    B: (reading) &amp;quot ; Township seventeen north, range nine east, section twenty-nine.&amp;quot ;     BM: Well--    B: Section twenty-nine.    MM: Bob, why don&amp;#039 ; t you question him about the rigs, that was something, you  know, ask him another [inaudible].    B: Now this, this picture here, is--that is one of the first rigs that operated,  the old cable tool rigs, is that right?    BM: Yeah, that&amp;#039 ; s right, I remember rigging up [indecipherable] in Kansas.    B: That was in Kansas.    BM: Yeah.    B: But that is--    BM: [Indecipherable] Charlie Lowe and dress [indecipherable] name is Ernie Moore.    B: Ernie Moore and Charlie Lowe.    BM: Yeah, you don&amp;#039 ; t want to leave somebody but he dressed tools for Charlie.    B: Now this Charlie--this Charlie Lowe, was he one of the people that  drilled in here, too?    BM: Oh, yeah.    B: You mentioned that a while ago.    BM: Yeah.    B: Could you tell me how the old cable tool rig operated with comparison of the [indecipherable] of today?    BM: Well, the [indecipherable], it drills much faster. The cable tools was much  slower. And they used what they called a rag line--that, uh, manila line--that&amp;#039 ; s  manila line that Charlie Lowe&amp;#039 ; s drillin&amp;#039 ;  with there. (interference in tape)  But they generally spun it in, the first of the hole with a rag line because  it&amp;#039 ; s much easier on the rig and it&amp;#039 ; s much easier on everything.    MM: [Inaudible.]    BM: We would kind of leash a wire line in a manila line when we first started,  we called that a cracker. And we drilled with a cracker at first because it was  easy on the rig. Oh, that old manila line just used to, just grunt and groan and  sing along with us--it was really nice to work with one of them. There wasn&amp;#039 ; t  many drillers in my day that knew how to run a rag line--uh, manila line.    B: Uh, was that a pretty complicated thing to do?    BM: Yeah, it was a little complicated, it is, but the manila line would stretch  out, you know, like a rope--that&amp;#039 ; s what it was, a rope line.    B: It was actually a tag line.    BM: Yeah.    B: You&amp;#039 ; d call it a tag line of today.    BM: Yeah. And it would--well, we&amp;#039 ; d drill about five or six feet by the rag line  and it&amp;#039 ; d be about nine feet by the time we got through because it&amp;#039 ; d stretch out.    B: It would stretch out four feet.    BM: Yeah, three or four feet.    B: Mmm-hmm.    MM: Ask him [inaudible].    B: Was it--especially when you first started the hole with that-a-way, was it  pretty hard to keep that hole straight?    BM: No, it was fairly easy, we&amp;#039 ; d rig it up and guide the stem and boards across and go close to the stem and then guide the stem.    B: You mentioned a while ago about dressing tools? How was the old tools dressed or sharpened or whatever you might do? How was that done?    BM: Well, dressin&amp;#039 ;  tools is, uh--a driller and a tool dresser work together on a  tower, and a tool dresser, he assisted the driller. The driller&amp;#039 ; s supposed to  know more than the tool dresser did, but lots of times they didn&amp;#039 ; t know as much. I dressed tools for about twelve years before I started drilling because it was much easier on me and no responsibility. Well, I guess where they got the name &amp;quot ; tool dresser,&amp;quot ;  when they dress a bit they&amp;#039 ; d put &amp;#039 ; em in a forge, they&amp;#039 ; d heat &amp;#039 ; em up to white heat and then dress &amp;#039 ; em out to gauge. They had a gauge that you&amp;#039 ; d dress &amp;#039 ; em out to.    B: You had a gauge that slipped over the end of that bit, is that right?    BM: Yeah, that&amp;#039 ; s right, that&amp;#039 ; s right. When a bit got in sand formation or after  drilling so long, it&amp;#039 ; d wear out and make the hole small so that the pipe  wouldn&amp;#039 ; t fall, so when it got out of gauge we had to pull the bit off and put it  in a forge and dress it, but they always had another bit they put on and we&amp;#039 ; d be drilling while the bit was heatin&amp;#039 ; .    B: What kind of point was on that?    BM: Well, we&amp;#039 ; d dress it to both sides and would come right out the gauge in a  side of a circle on the gauge [indecipherable] and we&amp;#039 ; d work it out the gauge  and pound the worn surface off and it was kind of a bevel on a point and a bottom.    B: It had a beveled point on it?    BM: Yeah. We used to have to dress it with--the big bits you&amp;#039 ; d used to have to  dress with sledgehammers. Then we got to where we used a ram--that ran off of a crank of machinery.    B: That made tool dressin&amp;#039 ;  a lot easier and a lot quicker.    BM: Oh, yeah, a lot easier.    B: A lot faster.    BM: Yeah.    B: All you had to do was heat it up to the white hot that you wanted it and take this ram and batter it out there like you wanted it.    BM: That&amp;#039 ; s right.    B: And if you got--    BM: I was pretty good on a ram. I was hittin&amp;#039 ;  &amp;#039 ; em too nice one day.    (both laugh)    BM: But they was much better.    B: The ram itself in later years came into quite a accomplishment, or quite a  labor-saving device than the old-time tool dressing.    BM: Yes! Yeah. We used to, when I was young, we started a twenty or  twenty-four-inch hole. As you can imagine them bits would be quite hot. You  stand up alongside of them you got cooked.    B: That&amp;#039 ; s right.    BM: So we used that ram to drive &amp;#039 ; em out the gauge.    B: Ram &amp;#039 ; em out there, flat end of it out the side you wanted it? If you got it  flared out too big, well then how did you work it down?    BM: Well, we was careful not to do that. When you got it too big you had to  pound it down with sledgehammers.    B: She wants to ask you a question now.    BM: Okay.    MM: What about that one? That picture?    B: What about that picture there?    BM: On that picture is a picture taken at El Dorado, Kansas.    MM: But it&amp;#039 ; s the same kind of drilling bit, too.    BM: I was on a--I worked up there one winter, that was at El Dorado.    B: That was at El Dorado, Kansas.    BM: Yeah.    B: This here is the old boiler that--    BM: That&amp;#039 ; s the boiler, that&amp;#039 ; s the boiler.    B: That is what, now then--you said this boiler, what part did this boiler play?    BM: That made steam to run the engine on! (laughs)    B: Oh, it was operated by an old steam engine?    BM: Oh, yeah! That was fired with oil and sometimes they fired it with gas. Gas was much better because it was cleaner.    B: It was cleaner than the oil?    BM: Yep. It carried about 120 pounds of steam and the boilers were rated  anywhere from thirty to forty-five horsepower boilers. That was the way they  rated them.    B: Well now, then, go just a little bit further. What happened, say you&amp;#039 ; re moved into an area that there wasn&amp;#039 ; t gas and there wasn&amp;#039 ; t any oil, how did you fire--what did you use to fire that--    BM: We used to fire with wood or coal. Whichever one they get, which was the cheapest.    B: If coal was cheaper, why you&amp;#039 ; d fired with coal.    BM: Yeah. They [indecipherable] fired with wood. But boy, that took a lot of  wood to heat that water up to where you get 120 pounds of steam.    B: What was this well here made out of?    BM: That derrick is made out of wood.    B: It&amp;#039 ; s an old wooden derrick.    BM: Old wooden derrick, right. It was about seventy-two feet tall.    B: What kind of wood was--BM: Pine.    B: Pine?    BM: Yeah.    B: That would be made out of two-inch stuff, three-inch stuff, or what?    BM: Oh, yeah, it was made out of two-inch stuff, the derrick was. But the big  timbers like the beam, which were the biggest parts, that and the main cell, the beams and Samson post, sat in the main cell. That was the biggest timber in the whole rig. And the walkin&amp;#039 ;  beam was next and they were slotted out and keyed with wooden keys--that was hardwood keys and drive it in with a sledgehammer They was dovetailed, the timbers was dovetailed to fit. That was built by rig builders.    B: Had to be a rig builder to do that?    BM: Yeah.    MM: [Inaudible.]    B: And now then, on this first well that worked your walkin&amp;#039 ;  beam that operated your bit, there was a big bullwheel on that, was there or was there not?    BM: Oh, yeah. The bullwheel, they would wind up the cable that the stem was to, and the walkin&amp;#039 ;  beam, after it got about, oh, it spun. You had a gangway at  about a hundred feet and that&amp;#039 ; d hook onto the walkin&amp;#039 ;  beam.    B: It would hook onto the walkin&amp;#039 ;  beam at about a hundred feet?    BM: Yeah. And this would go onto a crank that run to the belt, to the belt on  the bandwheel. And it hooked the [indecipherable] up to the timber down here, it had a whole--had a whole band of &amp;#039 ; em who put that on this crank to come through the bandwheel. And the engine run here in this engine house with about a twelve-inch belt that run over the bandwheel and operated the bandwheel and the crank that operated the walkin&amp;#039 ;  beam that the tools was on the end of it.    B: Now they had all this drilling, whenever they started drilling the wells  before electric came in here, they just drilled in daylight, did they or did  they not?    BM: No, we drilled night and day, twelve hour shifts.    B: What kind of light did you use at night?    BM: Oh, we had a generator that made electric light.    B: You made electric light with a generator that operated off of this steam?    BM: Yeah, on the steam. But the first, before they had the generator, we used  what they called the &amp;quot ; yellow gold.&amp;quot ;  That was an oil pot come up with two spouts and a piece of hemp in each one of &amp;#039 ; em and we&amp;#039 ; d light that to work by.    B: Worked by that smudge pot--    BM: Yeah.    B: --that old smudge pot at night, then?    BM: Yeah. Called that the &amp;quot ; yellow gold.&amp;quot ;     B: Was those smudge pots pretty dangerous? Workin&amp;#039 ;  at night?    BM: No, they wasn&amp;#039 ; t dangerous. You soon learned not to get too close to &amp;#039 ; em, you get yourself burned.    B: Well, after you got a well down, oh, down into the gas sands--    BM: Then it was dangerous.    B: Then these smudge pots was dangerous.    BM: That&amp;#039 ; s right, that&amp;#039 ; s right. But I don&amp;#039 ; t think they had &amp;#039 ; em in this--well,  they had derricks, they had to&amp;#039 ; ve been up there around Nowata where they wells is about 600 feet deep and they worked with a machine, [indecipherable] and [indecipherable], a machine like that.    B: About how long did it take to drill one of these wells?    BM: Here? In this area?    B: Yeah, in this area.    BM: Well, ya done well to drill one in about thirty-five days if they didn&amp;#039 ; t  have a fishing job losing tools.    B: Uh-oh, now then, how did that come about? How did that--    BM: Well, sometimes the lines would break, you know, and sometimes they would lose the tools by breaking the line and then they&amp;#039 ; d go in there and fish &amp;#039 ; em out.    B: What kind of a deal did they use to fish &amp;#039 ; em out with?    BM: Oh, Lord, they had a lot of fishin&amp;#039 ;  tools. The one thing that, if they had  the line on it, they had what they called a three-prong grab. It was a tool that  screwed onto the end of a stem and it had three long prongs on it with little  wickers that come up. Oh, they were big as, oh, couple inches big. And they&amp;#039 ; d  get ahold of the, try to get ahold of the line and pull them out.    B: How much, how deep where they, or have you ever helped fish out one?    BM: Yeah, I&amp;#039 ; ve fished one out over at Yale about thirty to a hundred, and I  fished one out at Utah, was about two hundred feet. Now that was a fishin&amp;#039 ;  job. We was out there seventy-nine miles from any town, forty miles from any  neighbor, and they hauled the groceries out in trucks. We used what they called a Clark engine. That was operated by gasoline. Didn&amp;#039 ; t use a boiler there. That was all sand formation and sand would drill close and would sometimes stick the tools. And we stuck the tools about, oh, I guess about two hundred feet deep, and the sand and gypsum around &amp;#039 ; em and we couldn&amp;#039 ; t pull &amp;#039 ; em out. So we cut the line and filled the hole with tools--stems after stems--and put all forty sticks to drill by it first, with the small tools. We started a twenty-inch hole there. We drilled by it with the small tools and put all forty sticks of dynamite on it.    B: Forty sticks of dynamite?    BM: Yeah. [Indecipherable] put on twenty-five and I had fifteen left, and I said  to Charlie, I said--we was livin&amp;#039 ;  in a camp thar that had two small boys, and I  said, &amp;quot ; Before somebody gets hurt, let&amp;#039 ; s just put &amp;#039 ; em all on, instead of hidin&amp;#039 ;   &amp;#039 ; em some place, we&amp;#039 ; ll just put &amp;#039 ; em all on.&amp;quot ;  And we filled the hole full of tools  and pulled &amp;#039 ; em out. But it broke the beam and there wasn&amp;#039 ; t a piece of timber in that part of the country big enough to make a beam out of and they sent to  Florence, Colorado to get a piece of timber big enough to make a beam out of. And then once we got the beam out of it, ah, why, then we pulled &amp;#039 ; em out.    MM: [Inaudible.]    B: What is the difference between the early casing and the casings of today?    BM: Well the early days started a well with a wooden conductor.    B: A wooden conductor.    BM: Yeah. It was made like a pipe. If we started a twenty-inch hole we&amp;#039 ; d get  about a twenty-two-inch wooden conductor, and that was just about twenty feet long, and as we drilled we would put the wooden conductor in and then reduce the hole to a fifteen-inch hole, or eighteen, and go on from there.    B: Now, this wooden conductor that you&amp;#039 ; re speaking of, that would be what we would call today the surface pipe. Is that right?    BM: Yeah. That&amp;#039 ; s right.    B: The only thing in the early days, the surface pipe, or wooden conductor, it  was made out of wood but today it&amp;#039 ; s made out of steel.    BM: Made out of steel, that&amp;#039 ; s right.    MM: What kind of wood?    B: What kind of wood would they be made out of?    BM: That was made out of two-by-fours and two-by-sixes, about twenty feet long.    B: Oh, you made it yourself?    BM: No, they made--a company made it.    B: The company made it.    BM: Yeah. It was a company that made the conductors.    MM: What year did they quit using them?    B: What year did they quit using that wooden conductor?    BM: Oh, it was, I supposed, about nineteen, nineteen eighteen.    B: Then they went to the regular steel surface pipes.    BM: Steel surface pipes, right.    MM: [Inaudible.]    BM: You had to have something, you know, to keep the hole from caving in, and protect the drilling root. Stem.    MM: [Inaudible.]    B: What year--or do you know--what year did they go to the steel derricks  instead of the old wooden derricks?    BM: Well, they used wooden derricks up until, well, I guess they still use some of them now. But they got to where they make units out of steel and hardwood and turnbuckles and things like that they started in on that about, oh, about 1920.    MM: [Inaudible.]    B: What year did they do away with these derricks and go to the type that  they&amp;#039 ; re using out here now, what they call a grasshopper?    BM: Oh, that&amp;#039 ; s just been late years.    B: That&amp;#039 ; s been here in the later years?    BM: Yeah.    B: Say, from uh, 1960, then?    BM: Well--    B: Fifties or &amp;#039 ; 60s.    BM: &amp;#039 ; Bout that time.    B: What kind of wagon and teams did they use to get, to, uh, wait a minute, let me back up a minute. On puttin&amp;#039 ;  up one of these wells before you--you started drilling, how long did it ordinarily take you to put one of them up?    BM: A derrick?    B: Put up a derrick and get all set up to go to drillin&amp;#039 ; .    BM: Well we probably put up a derrick in about four days and then we would move the tools in, that&amp;#039 ; d take us about four days.    B: Now then, let&amp;#039 ; s say that again.    BM: I said it&amp;#039 ; d take about four days to build a rig. The rig builder&amp;#039 ; d do that,  there was a crew of about, generally about five men. And they worked hard. And fast. And they worked daylight. Then we would move our tools in, that&amp;#039 ; d take us about four days to rig up, to get ready to start. And then we&amp;#039 ; d start drilling in about four days.    B: You&amp;#039 ; d start then, it&amp;#039 ; d take roughly from the time they rig builders moved in  and everything was completed, ready to go to drilling, it&amp;#039 ; d take about twelve  days, is that right?    BM: Well, no, it didn&amp;#039 ; t take quite that long.    B: Ten to twelve days.    BM: If we didn&amp;#039 ; t start up in four days after we started rigging up, why, the  contractor would get on our tail!    (both laughing)    BM: But about four days. And we worked twelve hours a day and when we was rigging up, all four of us would go out the last day and finish rigging up and the driller and tool dresser would stay there and start, they&amp;#039 ; d work about  eighteen hours that day.    B: What was the pay during that time, Bob?    BM: Well, I was getting&amp;#039 ;  about eight, nine dollars a day.    B: Eight or nine dollars a day?    BM: Yeah.    B: Now today their wages&amp;#039 ; d be--    BM: Quite a bit more.    B: Yeah, I&amp;#039 ; d say, what--what would you say the wages would be today on a  modern-day rig?    BM: Well, I don&amp;#039 ; t know what they&amp;#039 ; re gettin&amp;#039 ;  now, but when I quit drilling, that  was about, oh, I was getting&amp;#039 ;  twelve, thirteen dollars a day, but I was only  workin&amp;#039 ;  eight hours. Well I started workin&amp;#039 ;  eight hours about, oh, about 1930.    B: You started workin&amp;#039 ;  eight hours a day runnin&amp;#039 ;  three shifts.    BM: Yeah.    B: Three eight-hour shifts, and of the eight hours you&amp;#039 ; d draw about twelve  dollars a day?    BM: Yeah. Ten to twelve.    B: Ten to twelve dollars a day.    BM: Yeah.    B: The drillers, what did the driller draw? Was that the driller&amp;#039 ; s--BM: The  driller&amp;#039 ; d draw two dollars or a dollar more than a tool dresser did.    B: Say the tool dresser drawed twelve dollars a day then the driller would draw  about fourteen dollars a day.    BM: Yeah.    B: What year did you start in working in the drilling business?    BM: Oh, 19-well, I first started in it as a kid, I was, I was sixteen years old.  I worked on a cleaning-up rig up around Little Fall. It was [indecipherable]  shallow stuff. And that was, oh, that was about 1912 or &amp;#039 ; 13. And then I got  fired because I was too little to dress bits, the contractor thought. But I had  a good driller by Charlie Lowe who&amp;#039 ; d drilled, and he was big and strong as an  ox. And he took a lot of work off of it. Well then, about, oh, about 1914, why I  started back again.    B: About 1914 you started back in again, into the oil pipe work.    BM: Yeah. I worked &amp;#039 ; til World War I and I went to the Navy, I was drawing  fourteen dollars a day working twelve hours over in Yale when I went to the Navy in 1918 for--well, I worked six months and drawed fifty dollars. Which was quite a comedown. (laughs)    B: That would be quite a cutback in pay.    BM: Yeah, it sure was. And I wondered if it was a good idea for me to quit a  fourteen-dollar job to go to--fourteen dollars a day--to go to war. But since  then I&amp;#039 ; ve been drawing a little pension, about sixty-two dollars, and I guess if  I live to be a hundred I&amp;#039 ; ll get the money back.    B: You&amp;#039 ; d probably have to live to be about a hundred and fifty!    BM: Yeah. (laughs) Which I don&amp;#039 ; t think I&amp;#039 ; ll [indecipherable].    B: What year did you--then after you came out of the Navy, did you go back in to the oil pipe--    BM: Oh, yeah, I was working for the Carter Oil Company then, and he--    B: Carter Oil Company?    BM: Yeah. Over in Yale. And the company had a plan that if you went into the  service, well when you come back they&amp;#039 ; d give you your same old job back. And I went for it.    B: You went right back to work for the same people that--    BM: Right back to work, and I recollect, yeah.    B: Then what year did you finally give up the oilfield, settle down and say &amp;quot ; to  heck with it?&amp;quot ;     BM: That&amp;#039 ; s when I starved to death!    B: That&amp;#039 ; s when you starved to death?    BM: Yeah! Oil business was pretty good but you worked maybe two or three months and the company shut down and you&amp;#039 ; d be off for a month or two. And it was hard to get a job. But I was pretty lucky, I was a good tool dresser, and was always able to go to work. Lots of tool dressers would be drunk or into a fight or something, but I was always able to go to work and generally had a job if anyone else did. I worked for Wilcox for, oh, about two years.    B: What year did you finally completely quit the oilfield and leave it alone?    BM: Let&amp;#039 ; s see, well I come out here in 1929, I&amp;#039 ; d been out of a job for about  thirty days, and damn near starved to death, and I&amp;#039 ; d had one job since then, I  worked about thirty days, and when that, well, when we--by that time I was quit, or--couldn&amp;#039 ; t get a job.    B: At about 19-and-29, then, is when you actually left the oilfield?    BM: About 1930.    B: About 1930 is when you actually left the oil--oil pipes for good.    BM: Yeah.    B: I believe that&amp;#039 ; s--    MM: [Inaudible.]    B: How important was that oil in this community?    BM: Well, it was not quite as important as it is now, we didn&amp;#039 ; t have to buy  foreign oil, and we had plenty of oil the fact of the matter is that there was  times when they cut the production of the wells down to where they were only  producing so much a day. They prorated.    MM: How much a barrel?    B: How much a barrel at the beginning, how much a barrel did that oil sell for?    BM: I think about two dollars a barrel.    B: About two dollars a barrel?    BM: Yeah.    B: What would you say it is today?    BM: Oh, I imagine about fifteen dollars.    B: I believe it&amp;#039 ; s more than that.    BM: You do, well, that&amp;#039 ; s probably worth it.    B: I would say, I would say about twenty-three to twenty-five dollars a barrel today.    BM: Yeah, well that depends on the grade of oil, of course, and the way gasoline is selling I expect it ought to be worth more than that!    B: Yeah, I would too! (laughs)    B: [Indecipherable], is there anything you wanna ask him? You got &amp;#039 ; im talkin.&amp;#039 ;     MM: [Inaudible.]    UW [Unidentified woman, Bob Moore&amp;#039 ; s wife]: Ask him out loud.    MM: What did they do for fun, them oilfield guys?    B: What did they do for fun, you oilfield boys workin&amp;#039 ;  out there in the  oilfield, what did you guys do for the fun? To have fun?    BM: Oh, we&amp;#039 ; d get--not me, but most of &amp;#039 ; em &amp;#039 ; d get drunk and get into a fight, and something like that. Play craps and play poker and run around with the women--    UW: When you stayed, lived around Yale?    BM: What?    UW: Lived around Yale and worked, what did you all do for fun there?    BM: When?    B: When you lived around Yale, what did you guys do for fun up there?    BM: Oh! I went to dancin&amp;#039 ;  about twice a week.    B: About twice&amp;#039 ; st a week??    BM: Yeah!    UW: They had square dancin&amp;#039 ; .    B: You mean them old feet got--    BM: Yeah! Listen, they couldn&amp;#039 ; t start a dance &amp;#039 ; til I got there!    B: Oh, oh!    BM: I was a dancer. I liked to dance.    UW: Tell them about how far you walked to work each night.    BM: Oh, sometimes we walked three miles &amp;#039 ; round [indecipherable]    B: You walked three miles?    BM: --horse, you get a horse and buggy and sometimes quick to get up when you couldn&amp;#039 ; t get over with a buggy and&amp;#039 ; d have to walk.    B: Did you ever call for any of these square dances?    BM: Oh, yeah!    B: What was some of the calls that you called?    BM: Oh, I called a hundred of them.    B: Call a little bit for me!    BM: Well, let&amp;#039 ; s see--how &amp;#039 ; bout &amp;quot ; Two Little Sisters?&amp;quot ;     B: That&amp;#039 ; s good! Let&amp;#039 ; s have it!    BM: (calling, clapping, and stomping in rhythm) Two little sisters form a ring/  dosey out and dosey in/ two little sisters ready again/ back to your partner and everybody sway/ two little sisters out to the right/ pick up one little sister  and three little sisters form a ring/ back to your partner and everybody sway/  four little sisters form a ring/ get back to your partner and everybody sway/  four little sisters form a ring/ back to your partner and everybody sway. That&amp;#039 ; s  one of &amp;#039 ; em.    B: That&amp;#039 ; s mighty good, Bob, mighty good.    UW: Bob and I have danced a million miles.    BM: That was when she would answer my callin&amp;#039 ; . She don&amp;#039 ; t do anything I tell her now. (laughs)    B: We&amp;#039 ; re gonna have another little get-together.    end of interview         audio   0 https://bristoworalhistory.org/ohms/viewer.php?cachefile=OHP-0002-01_Bob_Moore.xml OHP-0002-01_Bob_Moore.xml      </text>
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                <text>Bob Moore</text>
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                <text>In this 1976 interview, Bob Moore discusses working as a tool dresser on oil rigs in the early 1900s in northern Oklahoma at a time prior to electricity, when rigs were built of wood, powered by a steam engine, and lighted at night by burning pots of crude oil. He also describes going to dances in Yale, Oklahoma in his spare time and calls a square dance named “Two Little Sisters” for the interviewer.</text>
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                  <text>Several interviews were done by Mary and Bob Mc Carty of people who grew up in the Pinehill area north of Bristow.  This collection is the Pinehill subset of the Bristow Oral Histories</text>
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              <text>    5.4    OHP-0002-04 George Krumme Bristow Quadrangle OHP-0002-04     Bristow Historical Society - Oral History Archive   Pinehill Bristow Historical Society, Inc.    natural gas, drilling, Hoppy Toad Oil Company,   George Krumme Bob McCarty MP3   1:|9(4)|20(13)|30(1)     0   https://bristoworalhistory.org/interviews/OHP-0002-04 Krumme, Geo.mp3  Other         audio          0 Drilling in Bristow Quadrangle   GK: According to Bulletin 759 by A.E. Fath of the Oklahoma Geolog-of the United States Geological Survey on the geology of the Bristow Quadrangle in Creek County, Oklahoma which was printed in 1925 but the work began on it-field work for it-began in 1915, the first well drilled in 17-93 was drilled in section 36 by Oklahoma Natural Gas Company.    Drilling of the second and third successful natural gas wells in the Bristow Quadrangle    A.E. Fath ; Bristow Quadrangle ; drilling ; Glen Freeman ; Hoppy Toad Oil Company ; Oklahoma Natural Gas Company   Drilling for natural gas in Bristow Quadrangle              https://pubs.usgs.gov/bul/0759/report.pdf Geology of the Bristow Quadrangle Creek County, Oklahoma        In this brief 1976 interview, George Krumme (1923-  ) discusses a 1925 United States Geological Survey geological report covering the “Bristow Quadrangle” oilfield area and early oilfield companies in the area.  BM: This is an interview with George Krumme from the oil company on the  location, the survey company, of the first well that was drilled in the Pinehill Community.    GK: According to Bulletin 759 by A.E. Fath of the Oklahoma Geolog--of the United  States Geological Survey on the geology of the Bristow Quadrangle in Creek  County, Oklahoma which was printed in 1925 but the work began on it--field work  for it--began in 1915, the first well drilled in 17-9 was drilled in section 36  by Oklahoma Natural Gas Company. They drilled--they found a gas stand at a depth  of 990 to 1,010 feet, which would be, I&amp;#039 ; m sure, the Cleveland sand, and they  encountered an initial flow of seven million cubic feet a day. They turned the  gas into their twelve-inch line which at that time ran through just south of  where that well would be and carried gas to Oklahoma City from the oilfields of  eastern Oklahoma. In 1917, the well was re-opened after having been shut down  for some time and at that time its open flow capacity was 350,000 cubic feet a  day and the rock pressure was 375 pounds. It was the second successful well in  the Bristow Quadrangle according to Fath.    pause in recording    GK: --Fath, in 1913, another well was drilled in 17-9 in section 29 and also in  1913 a well was drilled in section 33, 17-9. And unless I&amp;#039 ; m wrong, that well in  section thirte--33 was the well they called the &amp;quot ; Hoppy Toad Well&amp;quot ;  because it was  drilled by the Hoppy Toad Oil Company which was one of the companies of the  Freeland brothers. Glen Freeland worked on that well and my brothers--my brother  and I, my brother Harlan and I--are married to sisters. Their father, F.S.  Freeland, worked on that well in 1913 out on Wild Horse Prairie, just north of  highway 66, and was drilling on it and caught some--I forgot whether it was  typhoid or some ailment and didn&amp;#039 ; t finish completing the well. And he told us  about where the well is, I know exactly where it is, on the north side of the  road on Wild Horse Prairie. So those are the first three wells drilled according  to Fath.    end of interview         audio   0 https://bristoworalhistory.org/ohms/viewer.php?cachefile=OHP-0002-04_George_Krumme_Oct_1976.xml OHP-0002-04_George_Krumme_Oct_1976.xml      </text>
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between OHMS XML and the Omeka Record. This field does not impact the&#13;
OHMS / Omeka integration and is optional if you do not need to map the&#13;
“keywords” field in the OHMS XML to the corresponding Omeka record.</description>
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              <text>    5.4    OHP-0015-01 Ralph Kirchner at Bristow Rotary Club OHP-0015-001     Bristow Historical Society - Oral History Archive   Oil Drilling - The Early Years Bristow Historical Society, Inc.    oil drilling, Bristow Rotary Club, Ralph Kirchner,  Ralph R. &amp;quot ; Brick&amp;quot ;  Kirchner N/A MP3   1:|17(6)|27(6)|44(7)|61(15)|70(12)|80(2)|93(2)|106(2)|122(3)|135(2)|146(14)|158(2)|170(8)|178(6)|188(3)|198(9)|216(2)|226(13)|236(13)|245(13)|256(7)|266(10)|277(15)|285(7)|295(6)|308(7)|318(9)|327(1)|338(10)|349(10)|369(3)|382(11)|389(14)|401(8)|417(13)|425(15)|436(9)|450(12)|460(1)|473(4)|482(5)|496(16)|513(12)|524(14)     0   https://bristoworalhistory.org/interviews/OHP-0015-01 Kirchner, R.R. Rotary Club.mp3  Other         audio          0 Introduction of Ralph &amp;quot ; Brick&amp;quot ;  Kirchner   EM: We’ll have to be real quiet on this now.    (Pause in recording)    EM: [inaudible] He has attained the ripe of age of ninety-one. His father made the run in to Oklahoma territory in…1889?    BK: Ninety-three.    EM: Ninety-three, back here when the state [inaudible].    BK: That’s correct.    EM: Brick attended the Oklahoma A&amp;amp ; M College, for those of you who are not familiar with that, it’s now Oklahoma State University. Brick is also the dean of the Bristow District Rotary Government, having served since 1931 and 1932. There are many more facts about Brick Kirchner that I’d like to bring out is that Brick Kirchner is—or was, at one time—in the newspaper publishing business. Brick Kirchner owned half interest in a newspaper in Ada, Oklahoma. Having seen the error of his ways, he took his money out of the newpaper—     Guest speaker Ralph &amp;quot ; Brick&amp;quot ;  Kirchner is introduced by Ed Mackenson   Brick ; Bristow Rotary Club ; Congress ; Oklahoma A&amp;amp ; M College ; Ralph R. &amp;quot ; Brick&amp;quot ;  Kirchner   Introduction of Ralph &amp;quot ; Brick&amp;quot ;  Kirchner                       143 Ralph Kirchner Early Years   BK: [inaudible] No, I don’t care. Am I speaking into this? Okay. Mr. Steward, thank you very kindly for that very nice and very liberal education, and I’m happy that my [indecipherable] section is here, too.    (chuckling)    BK: And the [indecipherable] section’s been here for a long time. I thought, too, it was kind of odd, Doc Yourman got the program for Don Kitchens, and Don Kitchens couldn’t be here, so Ed McMillan—I mean, Ed Mackenson introduced me for Don Kitchens. Now that beats around the bush a little bit.    (laughter)     Ralph &amp;quot ; Brick&amp;quot ;  Kirchner speaks about his early years in college and in the military.    Army ; Ed Mackenson ; Gulf Oil Production ; Gypsy Oil Company ; J.D.Ward ; Oklahoma A&amp;amp ; M   Ralph Kirchner Early Years                       372 Ralph &amp;quot ; Brick&amp;quot ;  Kirchner sells real estate   BK: Now that’s something, too! And I went to Perry. That’s my old hometown. And Perry is—was about eighteen, twenty miles—about twenty miles, I guess—southeast of Garber, and Garber was really booming then. Plenty of production around there, but Garber was really booming of that fine, high-grade oil. And my dad was in the real estate business and he would buy royalties. So he and two other gentlemen that I knew bought royalty under the Wolf (ph) farm about two miles south of Garber. And my dad had told me, and so had Mr. Mauser (ph) that they would like to sell their interest if they could get $15,000 for it. So I thought that I’d use that as a starter and I went to Enid and I managed to sell that royalty—represented that I owned its individual interest and could deliver it for $22,500. And that’s quite a bit of profit. So I had to buy it first, so when I came home that evening I went to my banker, Mr. John Hanson (ph), the Bank of Commerce, and explained the deal to him and I said, I’d like to borrow the money from you to buy this. He said, Alright, I’ll do it. I’ll tell you how I’ll do it: I’ll do it for half of the profit.     (laughter)     Ralph &amp;quot ; Brick&amp;quot ;  Kirchner talks about buying and selling royalties in Oklahoma.   Enid ; Garber ; Mr Hanson ; Perry ; royalty   Ralph &amp;quot ; Brick&amp;quot ;  Kirchner sells real estate                       537 Ralph &amp;quot ; Brick&amp;quot ;  Kirchner goes into the oil business   So I was acquainted with Jim Sloane (ph). Jim was the tool pusher for the Roxanna Oil Company. And a tool pusher—that means he had charge of all their drilling tools, and hiring the men and so forth and operate the rigs. And so Jim and I decided to go into partnership and buy a string of tools, which we did. And Jim was fortunate enough to get his assistant pusher—to get his assistant pusher appointed to fill his position at the Roxanna. Here’s the deal: that enabled us to borrow from [indecipherable], this assistant, any tools that we didn’t have! So that made a nice deal for me, too.    Brick begins a partnership and starts Kirchner &amp;amp ;  Sloan, Inc.   Billings Petroleum Company ; doodlebug ; Jim Sloane ; Kirchner &amp;amp ;  Sloan, Inc ; oil ; Roxanna Oil Company ; tools ; Yukon   Ralph &amp;quot ; Brick&amp;quot ;  Kirchner goes into the oil business                       759 Getty Oil Company Contract   But by that time, it was necessary that we got our rig moved because we had a contract with the Getty Oil Company. The Getty Oil Company was owned by J. Paul Getty. This location was on a main (ph) six miles east of Billings. J. Paul owned the Getty Oil Company. His father, Colonel Getty, was the big dog Getty in the oil business at that time. He owned the Minnehoma Oil Company and had mass production in the Garber field. We drove this well for Mr. Getty and we had our bunkhouse there, and it was the cook shack also. Some of the crew stayed in the house and we cooked our meals there. And our meals was either hot dogs or hotcakes. Hotcakes for breakfast and hot dogs at the other two meals.    Ralph &amp;quot ; Brick&amp;quot ;  Kirchner drills for Getty Oil Company   Bank of Commerce ; drilling ; Getty Oil Company ; Hoover sand ; J. Paul Getty ; Kirchner &amp;amp ;  Sloane, Inc. ; Minnehoma Oil Company ; Mr. Hanson ; oil ; Santa Fe Station   Getty Oil Company Contract                       1005 Ralph &amp;quot ; Brick&amp;quot ;  Kirchner drills for J.D. Means   BK: Well, I have a lot written down here.     (laughter)    BK: Our next well, after Mr. Getty’s well, was for J.D. Means, and it was by the northeast offset to Mr. Getty’s. And while we were drilling that well for Mr. Means, Marland Oil Company was drilling in the northeast corner of the section and we were in the southeast corner of that same section. We made a small well for Mr. Means, but Mr. Getty—I mean, Mr. Marland, on his location up there, got a nice well and that was the discovery well for the great Oklahoma Three Sands pool. And incidentally the north offset to that, my dad had some royalty that he purchased under that, too, that offset—that well was dry. The east offset and for a mile and a half or two miles north and south, and a mile and a half wide, was the Garber field, and it was a dandy. [There are a] few wells producing there today.   Ralph &amp;quot ; Brick&amp;quot ;  Kirchner drills for J.D. Means and discusses life in the oilfield    boarding house ; Bristow ; bunkhouse ; Caufield Oil Company ; Garber field ; J.D. Means ; John Phillips ; Krumme ; Marland Oil Company ; oil scouts ; Oklahoma Three Sands Pool ; Phillips Petroleum Company ; Red Fork ; rig   Ralph &amp;quot ; Brick&amp;quot ;  Kirchner drills for J.D. Means                       1408 Drilling in Slick, Oklahoma   Well, we got started at Slick. We were on fuel number one, and after we got a little below a hundred feet we went through the line and left the tools in the hole. We had about three feet of line—the line broke about three feet up above the tools. And those drilling lines, as most of you know, have six strands. They’re six to nineteen line, they’re called. There’s six—there’s three big strands and nineteen little strands in there. Well, we had the casing rolled down to get over the tools to pick ‘em out but I couldn’t get over it on account of that size of wire there. And we ran a light down the hole to see what condition it was, because you could look down there and see it with a light in there. And it was frazzled out, and I said, If that wire was cut off at the top of that socket, we could fish those tools out. And one of the men volunteered to go down and I thought, That’s a foolish trip. And we had [indecipherable] it’d break our company for sure. So I went down myself. And I put a felt hat on and filled it with waste up there because you could hear chunks go down there and hit the water around those tools and go ka-PLUNK and you didn’t know whether it was a big chunk or a little chunk or whether it was a rock or a piece of shale. Nevertheless, I went down and it wasn’t dangerous. However, we were drilling an 18” hole and right on top of the ground was cable tools you stomp, you know, and put a little water in the hole and stomp down there and bail out what you’ve mixed, that’s the way they drill with cable tools.   Ralph &amp;quot ; Brick&amp;quot ;  Kirchner discusses drilling near Slick, Oklahoma and for Caufield Oil Company on the Sewell Farm   Barney Sewell ; Caufield Oil Company ; control head ; drilling ; Dutcher ; eight-mile corner ; explosion ; oil ; Sewell ; Sewell Farm ; shell ; Slick   Drilling in Slick, Oklahoma and for Caufield Oil Company                       1872 Ralph &amp;quot ; Brick&amp;quot ;  Kirchner discusses Jim Sloane   BK: --he said, No sir, mister, [indecipherable], said, We done closed the rolls.     (laughter)    BK: [Indecipherable.] –my partner in Kirchner &amp;amp ;  Sloane, Inc. was Jim Sloane (ph). Jim wanted to continue drilling on a contract basis. I wanted production. So we dissolved partnership and dissolved the corporation and I got—and divided up the tools. We had two strings at that time. And I got a lease on the Henry Fisher farm south of here, and many of you are familiar with the Fishers and some of ‘em buy their eggs there, I imagine. But we drilled a well on it, I sold some interest in it for to raise a little money to drill it with and I sold Art Stone (ph) on the interest on those. And Art was out there the day we were to hit the sands. And I was in to fifteen-ten (ph) and it was looking good, and I sold Art Stone a ninety-sixth (ph) interest for $3,000 on the derrick floor there just by a shake of the hands—and that’s the way many, many deals were closed, just by a shake of the hands. And it wasn’t an hour until we’d hit—until we hit the sand. And when she started smoking gas we started out of the hole, but the oil beat the tools out of the hole. And did we feel good! And so we had the tanks up anticipating a well, and we had the tanks up so we got out of the hole and tools and closed that control head and turned it into the tanks and it was flowing into the tanks. And we went home that night, nice little fortune between the [indecipherable] bungalow. I figured, I think we’re rich. What in the world could we do now for our poor relatives?     Ralph &amp;quot ; Brick&amp;quot ;  Kirchner discusses Jim Sloane and how they dissolved the partnership   Art Stone ; Jim Sloane ; Kirchner &amp;amp ;  Sloane, Inc   Ralph &amp;quot ; Brick&amp;quot ;  Kirchner discusses Jim Sloane                       2063 Gotham Oil Company   BK: Let’s see. The next one—I moved from there over to [indecipherable] 15-10 for the Gotham Oil Company. The Gotham Oil Company was out of Washington, D.C. And M.M. Wyville (ph) was the major holder in the Gotham Oil Company. And M.M. Wyville (ph) was secretary to William Jennings Bryan when Bryan secretary of war under Woodrow Wilson, to give you a little line-up on that. We drove that well for, for Gotham and when she started smoking gas—we had the control head on—we turned it into the pit, turned the well into the pit in case it wouldn’t flow. And Mr. Wyville (ph) and I went to Bristow to order out the tanks. We did, we ordered out a full tank and two 250s. Tanks then were all folded tanks, they weren’t welded like they are today. But when we got the tanks set—the well’d flowed twice into the pits when we got back. When we got the tanks set we picked up 450 barrels of good oil out of the pits. And [indecipherable] wanted to drill the well six inches, and we tried to hit the string on six inches—six inches above the clamps—and clipped it to the clamps, and it didn’t change the motion at all. And when it drilled off, it came out of that hole. That well made 450 barrels. That was sixty-one years ago now, today. Sixty-one years ago and that well is still producing between seven and eight barrels in the Meisner sand.   Drilling for the Gotham Oil Company and discussion of Claude Freeland   Albert Kelly ; Claude Freeman ; Corporation Commission ; gauger ; George Fargo ; Gotham Oil Comapany ; Levan ; M.M. Wyville ; Poor Farm ; Prairie Oil and Gas ; William Jennings Bryan ; Woodrow Wilson   Claude Freeland ; Drilling for the Gotham Oil Company ; Prairie Oil and Gas                       2390 Bristow is a Boom Town   BK: Bristow was a—Bristow was a real boom town and my time’s about gone, but I wanted to tell you some of the things that aren’t here now that I saw here. We had three refineries here. A Bristow Refining Company out here on the Kelly farm here right at the north edge of town. Wilcox Refinery across the railroad track east of it. And then the Sun Company Oil Refinery up on the hill—one of the old [indecipherable] refineries. We have no refineries here now.    We used to have the Republic Supply Company here—that’s an oilfield supply company. Across the street was the Oil Well Supply Company. Then after that was the National Supply Company. A couple of blocks north and a half east was the—       Bristow was a &amp;quot ; real boom town&amp;quot ;  with many refineries and oil businesses.    American Tool Machine Company ; Bristow ; Bristow Pipe and Machine Company ; Bristow Refining Company ; Chester ; Cushing ; Ed Abraham ; National Supply Company ; Oil Well Supply Company ; Producer Supply Company ; refineries ; Republic Supply Company ; Sun Company Oil Refinery ; Wilcox Refinery   Discussion of Bristow as a boom town                         In this 1979 interview, Ralph R. “Brick” Kirchner (1893-1990) speaks extensively about the oil drilling industry in Bristow, Oklahoma in the early 1900s, business involvement with J. Paul Getty, anecdotes about Tom Slick, how people handled their new-found oil wealth, and restrictions upon Indians regarding the handling of their own finances.    EM: We&amp;#039 ; ll have to be real quiet on this now.    (Pause in recording)    EM: [inaudible] He has attained the ripe of age of ninety-one. His father made  the run in to Oklahoma territory in--1889?    BK: Ninety-three.    EM: Ninety-three, back here when the state [inaudible].    BK: That&amp;#039 ; s correct.    EM: Brick attended the Oklahoma A&amp;amp ; M College, for those of you who are not  familiar with that, it&amp;#039 ; s now Oklahoma State University. Brick is also the dean  of the Bristow District Rotary Government, having served since 1931 and 1932.  There are many more facts about Brick Kirchner that I&amp;#039 ; d like to bring out is  that Brick Kirchner is--or was, at one time--in the newspaper publishing  business. Brick Kirchner owned half interest in a newspaper in Ada, Oklahoma.  Having seen the error of his ways, he took his money out of the newpaper--     (laughter)    EM: Brick also has--I don&amp;#039 ; t know whether this is a distinction or--but Brick has  stood for public office. Brick ran for Congress in the fourth congressional  district on the Republican ticket and I think that&amp;#039 ; s the reason I got to  introduce you today, Brick, is because I ran on the Democratic ticket about  twenty years later.     (laughter)    EM: I asked him what year he ran, he couldn&amp;#039 ; t tell me. He said, What year did  you run? I said, I don&amp;#039 ; t remember either.     (laughter)    EM: Without any further accolades, I&amp;#039 ; d like to introduce to you, our dean of the  Bristow Rotary Club, Brick Kirchner.     (applause)    BK: [inaudible] No, I don&amp;#039 ; t care. Am I speaking into this? Okay. Mr. Steward,  thank you very kindly for that very nice and very liberal education, and I&amp;#039 ; m  happy that my [indecipherable] section is here, too.     (chuckling)    BK: And the [indecipherable] section&amp;#039 ; s been here for a long time. I thought,  too, it was kind of odd, Doc Yourman got the program for Don Kitchens, and Don  Kitchens couldn&amp;#039 ; t be here, so Ed McMillan--I mean, Ed Mackenson introduced me  for Don Kitchens. Now that beats around the bush a little bit.     (laughter)    BK: But I&amp;#039 ; m happy to be here, and I want to endeavor to give you some  interesting points about the life of a ninety-one-year--of a ninety-one-year-old oilman.    When I got out of school at Oklahoma A&amp;amp ; M, I went to work for the Gypsy Oil  Company in Tulsa. Gypsy Oil Company was the production department of the Gulf  Oil Corporation, and I was in the production department at seventy-five dollars  a month, if you please. Not bad! It wasn&amp;#039 ; t--I wasn&amp;#039 ; t there too long until I had  an opportunity for a better salary and I went to Collinsville for Mr. J.D. Ward  at a hundred-and-a-quarter a month, and then I was in tall cotton. I thought  that was something. I got my first production-- (pause) Well, I was with Mr.  Ward and he encouraged me, and then he said, You ought to get something for  yourself. So I acquired a lease on eighty acres east of Owasso, Oklahoma and I  sold it the superintendent of the Bartlesville Yanks (ph) Company, provided he  would drill a well and carry me into the tanks and first well. That he did. We  got a little well on the Bartlesville, around 7,800 feet and didn&amp;#039 ; t amount to  very much. So I was fortunate enough to sell the well and lease and get Mr.  Gardstock&amp;#039 ; s (ph) money back for him out of the deal. But nevertheless that  was--that was my first real introduction in it where I&amp;#039 ; d get a little grease on  my hands. That, that&amp;#039 ; s oil business.    I [indecipherable] to the Army from Collinsville, and my employer, Mr. Ward, got  me a deferment for a while, and then I volunteered in the Army for the--in the  F-A-C-O-T-S. That&amp;#039 ; s Field Artillery Central Offices Training School at Camp  Taylor, Louisville, Kentucky. I had letters from my employer that when I got out  of the Army that he had great things planned. But I had something planned, also.  I figured if I had made money for him buying and selling real estate and leases,  I certainly ought to be able to do it for myself. So I got my discharge from the  army and incidentally I got my discharge and my commission in the same envelope.     (laughter)    BK: Now that&amp;#039 ; s something, too! And I went to Perry. That&amp;#039 ; s my old hometown. And  Perry is--was about eighteen, twenty miles--about twenty miles, I  guess--southeast of Garber, and Garber was really booming then. Plenty of  production around there, but Garber was really booming of that fine, high-grade  oil. And my dad was in the real estate business and he would buy royalties. So  he and two other gentlemen that I knew bought royalty under the Wolf (ph) farm  about two miles south of Garber. And my dad had told me, and so had Mr. Mauser  (ph) that they would like to sell their interest if they could get $15,000 for  it. So I thought that I&amp;#039 ; d use that as a starter and I went to Enid and I managed  to sell that royalty--represented that I owned its individual interest and could  deliver it for $22,500. And that&amp;#039 ; s quite a bit of profit. So I had to buy it  first, so when I came home that evening I went to my banker, Mr. John Hanson  (ph), the Bank of Commerce, and explained the deal to him and I said, I&amp;#039 ; d like  to borrow the money from you to buy this. He said, Alright, I&amp;#039 ; ll do it. I&amp;#039 ; ll  tell you how I&amp;#039 ; ll do it: I&amp;#039 ; ll do it for half of the profit.     (laughter)    BK: Well, now, he didn&amp;#039 ; t hurt himself any--if seventy-five--that&amp;#039 ; s $3,750 is all  he was going to charge me for that $15,000 for about thirty days. And that was  our last--I was pleased that I could get the money so I told my dad and I went  home and I said, I&amp;#039 ; d like to buy your Wolf (ph) royalty. He said, You&amp;#039 ; d like to  buy my royalty? Now, how in the hell would you--could you buy it?     (laughter)    BK: Well, I couldn&amp;#039 ; t have that morning, but I--     (laughter)    BK: I could that evening because I had arranged for the credit! He said, Well,  I&amp;#039 ; ve decided I don&amp;#039 ; t want to sell mine. Now that was a shock to me, first. The  other gentlemen that I knew that had that like interest was in Amarillo. I  didn&amp;#039 ; t know whether he&amp;#039 ; d be in, so I did manage to acquire the interest of a  gentleman in Pawnee and I delivered it and I got my $22,500, Mr. Hanson (ph) got  $3,750 and I got $3,750 out of it, and I thought I had about half the money in  the world. Me, with $3,750 and owed no one! I felt mighty good. I wanted to put  that money to work.    So I was acquainted with Jim Sloane (ph). Jim was the tool pusher for the  Roxanna Oil Company. And a tool pusher--that means he had charge of all their  drilling tools, and hiring the men and so forth and operate the rigs. And so Jim  and I decided to go into partnership and buy a string of tools, which we did.  And Jim was fortunate enough to get his assistant pusher--to get his assistant  pusher appointed to fill his position at the Roxanna. Here&amp;#039 ; s the deal: that  enabled us to borrow from [indecipherable], this assistant, any tools that we  didn&amp;#039 ; t have! So that made a nice deal for me, too.    And we--we&amp;#039 ; d brought our rig up here north of Yukon, Oklahoma. And we moved it  up to Billings where we had a contract for the--for the Billings Petroleum  Company. Our company name was Kirchner &amp;amp ;  Sloan, Inc. And we had to have this  well started by September 5 to validate Billings Petroleum Company&amp;#039 ; s leases  there. So we rigged up and we run the socket out of the back window that you&amp;#039 ; re  familiar with, and screwed onto our big-holed stem to bring it into the rig, put  the bit on and starts spudding, and we got it up at about a forty-five-degree  angle and this thing broke square in two in the middle. We just pulled the top  half of it into the rig and spudded with half of a stem, no bit on it!     (laughter)    BK: Ran the driller, got a little mud out of the hole and dumped it in the  cesspit and the lease was validated. Then we were in business, we&amp;#039 ; d made good.     (laughter)    BK: We had finished that well for the Billings Petroleum Company--finished our  contract, I mean--we had no oil. That location that I drilled for them was made  by what was called then a doodlebug. A doodlebug were an oil smeller and this  doodlebug--this doodlebug or oil finder--he had two black whale bones about that  long and about a quarter inch square fastened together at the point with a  little bottle on it. And I found out later that little bottle had crude oil in  it, and it had crude oil that was produced in the area where he would work.  Well, he&amp;#039 ; d made that location, he said, Now there&amp;#039 ; s shallow gas along here, and  there&amp;#039 ; s deeper oil along here, so we&amp;#039 ; ll dig this location right where they  cross, we&amp;#039 ; ll have shallow and we can get the gas for fuel, &amp;#039 ; course everything  was steam then, and at--do future development on the lease. We completed our  contract-no oil, no gas, no nothing. And they paid it. But they wanted to go  deeper. That doodlebug knew there was oil down there, so we agreed to drill it  deeper at $7 a foot and they paid us over 100 feet. Drill it we did, we drilled  it 300 feet deeper and they paid us every hundred feet.    But by that time, it was necessary that we got our rig moved because we had a  contract with the Getty Oil Company. The Getty Oil Company was owned by J. Paul  Getty. This location was on a main (ph) six miles east of Billings. J. Paul  owned the Getty Oil Company. His father, Colonel Getty, was the big dog Getty in  the oil business at that time. He owned the Minnehoma Oil Company and had mass  production in the Garber field. We drove this well for Mr. Getty and we had our  bunkhouse there, and it was the cook shack also. Some of the crew stayed in the  house and we cooked our meals there. And our meals was either hot dogs or  hotcakes. Hotcakes for breakfast and hot dogs at the other two meals.    Mr. Getty came out when we were approaching what was to be the objective  sand--which was the Hoover sand--and he--I recall he had a little wax moustache,  short, that just stuck square off. And when he opened his coat he had a deputy  sheriff&amp;#039 ; s badge on his shirt. He wanted to get some Oklahoma tan to carry back  to L.A., so he would walk up and down the highway here up by the rig with his  hat off and his shirt unbuttoned to get a little tan. Well, he got the sunburn,  anyway! We made him a well at twenty-two-sixty.  Twenty-two-hundred-and-sixty-feet in the Hoover sand. Made about sixty barrels  of that lovely, high-grade oil.    And Mr. Hanson, with the present Bank of Commerce, he financed our operation all  the way. And I wanted to get the money for the well so I could pay Mr. Hanson  and stop that interest. I made out my bill immediately and took that and the log  and certificate and I went up to the rig the next morning. And Mr. Whitsun (ph),  J. Paul&amp;#039 ; s superintendent, said, Well, now, J. Paul won&amp;#039 ; t be out here. J. Paul&amp;#039 ; s  on his way to Los Angeles, and if you don&amp;#039 ; t catch him before he gets away,  you&amp;#039 ; re liable to be two months getting your money. I said, Where is he? And he  said, He&amp;#039 ; s at the Santa Fe station in Perry. And I hustled right in to the Santa  Fe station in Perry. And we had a few [indecipherable] and went in to the  waiting room and there was Mr. Getty, and we had a few pleasantries and then I  presented my bill and told him the bank and I needed the money. And he said, I&amp;#039 ; m  sorry, crookster, but I don&amp;#039 ; t have any checks on my bank. Well, I said, I can  fix that. And I stepped up to the ticket window and I got a blank check on the  Bank of Commerce at Perry, changed it to his bank in Los Angeles, and made  out--filled in the amount of the bill for Kirchner &amp;amp ;  Sloane, Inc. and presented  it to Mr. Getty, and he signed it. And we were happy.     (laughter)    BK: I waited around with him until his train came in and he left. And I haven&amp;#039 ; t  seen him from that day &amp;#039 ; til this. But he&amp;#039 ; s done alright, I understand.     (laughter)    BK: Richest man in the world. That was quite an experience. He was very  pleasant, and very nice.    (pause) (papers rustling)    BK: Well, I have a lot written down here.     (laughter)    BK: Our next well, after Mr. Getty&amp;#039 ; s well, was for J.D. Means, and it was by the  northeast offset to Mr. Getty&amp;#039 ; s. And while we were drilling that well for Mr.  Means, Marland Oil Company was drilling in the northeast corner of the section  and we were in the southeast corner of that same section. We made a small well  for Mr. Means, but Mr. Getty--I mean, Mr. Marland, on his location up there, got  a nice well and that was the discovery well for the great Oklahoma Three Sands  pool. And incidentally the north offset to that, my dad had some royalty that he  purchased under that, too, that offset--that well was dry. The east offset and  for a mile and a half or two miles north and south, and a mile and a half wide,  was the Garber field, and it was a dandy. [There are a] few wells producing  there today.    Now after we finished that well for Mr. Means, I loaded a flatcar. Loaded a  string of tool on a flatcar and started for Bristow. And I followed it--that  flatcar--in my automobile. And I found out that five bucks here and there in  some of these yards will get your car moved pretty fast. It worked in west Tulsa  that way--Red Fork, I mean, that way. And we got in to Bristow, there was no  trucking contractors then, everything was moved by teams. Most of it was most by  teams. So we got Doc Martin (ph), a teaming contractor here, to move us out to  Slick, eight miles east and two south of here, for the Caufield (ph) Oil  Company. They had claimed this block of acreage there, which acreage and wells  in production is now owned by the Krumme brothers. Harlan&amp;#039 ; s here today. By owned  by Harlan and George. And I loaded a 14x28 boxcar house for myself and I had the  deluxe job: I had a screened-in porch on each end of it and I had a sub-roof  over my roof, about eight inches up, where the sun couldn&amp;#039 ; t hit my--the roof of  our house directly and the air can circulate under there. So we thought that was  pretty deluxe for us. And I built a 14x40 bunkhouse there and I built it right  by the bathhouse, and near the boarding house, because all the leases then, if  they had any size and employed very many men, they had a bunkhouse and boarding  house and a warehouse, just as the Caufield (ph) Oil Company did.    I remember, we had a good boarding house there. And it happened that the  driller--a driller that worked for me was the husband of the lady that ran the  boarding house, and while I wasn&amp;#039 ; t using him on the rig, she was running him  around the country buying groceries for the boarding house! So I thought, Well,  he can&amp;#039 ; t be doing his work. I went down there about three o&amp;#039 ; clock one morning  and there he was, sound asleep on the driller&amp;#039 ; s stool, the tools just swinging,  motion very slow, just swinging, wasn&amp;#039 ; t even hitting bottom. So I didn&amp;#039 ; t wake  him up, I just wrote his check out because you would carry a time book and a  checkbook in your pocket then, and fire a man if you wanted to, because you  didn&amp;#039 ; t have to account for his social security or any other take-out. So I just  wrote his check out and put it in the headache box there at the rig and told his  tool dresser, who was awake, I said, Just call that to his attention when he  wakes up. I paid him off.    We had a lot of fine experiences out there at that time. I remember at that time  the companies--the larger companies--all had oil scouts. And I recall one in  particular that came to our rig to get information. They wanted to know how you  were coming so that they could buy leases if necessary. I remember one of the  Phillips boys--John I think was his name, John Phillips of Phillips Petroleum  Company. He wasn&amp;#039 ; t one of the rich ones, that was Waite and his--Waite Phillips  and his brother. And this boy, this Phillips, was about my age--around  twenty-six I was then. And he came to our rig scouting our rig to see how deep  we were, and if he could catch any--take any samples that we had there of sand  that we had encountered. And he got to be quite a big shot then.    At that time the companies furnished the rig, pipe, fuel, and water on the  location for a drilling well. They&amp;#039 ; d build a rig, and the rig was all wooden--no  steel rigs then, and they had a 250-barrel tank on both sides of the engine  house there for water, and they had water the tracked to the tank. It was filled  up, the 250-barrel wooden tank.    Well, we got started at Slick. We were on fuel number one, and after we got a  little below a hundred feet we went through the line and left the tools in the  hole. We had about three feet of line--the line broke about three feet up above  the tools. And those drilling lines, as most of you know, have six strands.  They&amp;#039 ; re six to nineteen line, they&amp;#039 ; re called. There&amp;#039 ; s six--there&amp;#039 ; s three big  strands and nineteen little strands in there. Well, we had the casing rolled  down to get over the tools to pick &amp;#039 ; em out but I couldn&amp;#039 ; t get over it on account  of that size of wire there. And we ran a light down the hole to see what  condition it was, because you could look down there and see it with a light in  there. And it was frazzled out, and I said, If that wire was cut off at the top  of that socket, we could fish those tools out. And one of the men volunteered to  go down and I thought, That&amp;#039 ; s a foolish trip. And we had [indecipherable] it&amp;#039 ; d  break our company for sure. So I went down myself. And I put a felt hat on and  filled it with waste up there because you could hear chunks go down there and  hit the water around those tools and go ka-PLUNK and you didn&amp;#039 ; t know whether it  was a big chunk or a little chunk or whether it was a rock or a piece of shale.  Nevertheless, I went down and it wasn&amp;#039 ; t dangerous. However, we were drilling an  18&amp;quot ;  hole and right on top of the ground was cable tools you stomp, you know, and  put a little water in the hole and stomp down there and bail out what you&amp;#039 ; ve  mixed, that&amp;#039 ; s the way they drill with cable tools.    I went down there and [indecipherable] to it, but they let a lantern down on a  string so I could see what I was doing and I had a hammer and a sharp chisel and  they let me down on derrick line around me so I could stretch out a little bit  and sliver myself any time where I didn&amp;#039 ; t figure there was much hazard to it.  But I chipped those strands off of there and I [indecipherable] they pulled me  out of the hole. However, they did drop the line that had the lantern on it, and  it went on down the hole. And then we let the casing roll down over it and put  the slips over it and gosh, it came with no difficulty at all getting the tools  out once we got over them.    But on the next well that I drilled with was for the Caufield (ph) Oil Company  and it was the variant north offset to this first well. And we got to the  well--I mean, got to the sand around 2,700 in the Dutcher--and the Dutcher over  in the Slick area was black oil around thirty-four to thirty-six gradients (ph).  And when the--we&amp;#039 ; d shoot a well, they shot all of them over there, when they&amp;#039 ; d  shoot on &amp;#039 ; em, when they&amp;#039 ; d shoot a well, they would load the oil--the well with  oil on top of the shot right up to where it was running over the control head  because if they didn&amp;#039 ; t fill it clear full they&amp;#039 ; d--when that shot went off it  would break the pipe at the top of the fluid. And we tried it once just filling  it up into the control head and it broke the control head! So after that, we ran  it over. Well, when that shot goes off, it blows that hole full of oil in the  air, and that&amp;#039 ; s why it was such a beautiful sight over there. When you come out  from Bristow, top that hill by the eight-mile corner--every drilling well was  clean, white pine just about the color of that piece of paper, and the producing  wells were black because they had been shot, and were all covered with oil. And  we used steam for fuel and every drilling well there was that white, crisp steam  and it was a beautiful sight. Well that&amp;#039 ; s the drilling well--that fuel drilled  up pretty rapidly.    Now that-- (pause) Oh, yes, I&amp;#039 ; m on the Sewell (ph) farm there--I mean, yeah.  Barney Sewell&amp;#039 ; s (ph) farm, that&amp;#039 ; s where this well was. Second well that I  drilled for Caufield (ph). And they were putting the shot in. We drilled the  well and we were gonna shoot it. We used shots before--did sixty quarts of  liquid nitroglycerin: glycerin shells around four inches in diameter and about  five feet long. And you would hang it onto the hook there that would stay hooked  as long as there was any tension on the line. And you had to be in there when  the shooter was there, some of the crew did. And I&amp;#039 ; m telling you right: when  that shooter gets that shell--that glycerin can up there--and poured it down in  there, when that hit the bottom of that shell, I mean, it just kind of sets the  hair on you a little.     (laughter)    BK: It looked scary to me! Well, we had a little more gas in that Sewell (ph)  than we did in the fuel, and we were putting the last shell in. We got down in  the hole a ways and the shooter--the shooter operated the reel that lets the  shell down the hole--and his line went slack, which showed that that shell was  coming up the hole. And it had unhitched! That gas with [indecipherable] gas in  there is gonna blow that--have a good chance to blow that shell out of the hole.  And it started going pretty good. The shooter hollered, Catch that shell! And I  said, Hell on earth.     (laughter)    You catch your own shell if you want--     (laughter)    And I did like he did, and all the rest of them: I ran!     (laughter)    And sure enough, the shell came out of the hole and blew the Caufield (ph) Oil  Company&amp;#039 ; s rig down. Clear down. None of us were hurt, fortunately, and that  wasn&amp;#039 ; t so bad, except for the delay in production and the dollars that it cost  to replace this rig. It didn&amp;#039 ; t hurt my tools any. And-- because those shots will  go off naturally in seventy-two hours at that depth and in that area. In  seventy-two hours that shot will go off by itself due to the heat and pressure  on it. And that&amp;#039 ; s what happened on this well of [indecipherable] out there.    (Break in recording)    BK: --he said, No sir, mister, [indecipherable], said, We done closed the rolls.     (laughter)    BK: [Indecipherable.] --my partner in Kirchner &amp;amp ;  Sloane, Inc. was Jim Sloane  (ph). Jim wanted to continue drilling on a contract basis. I wanted production.  So we dissolved partnership and dissolved the corporation and I got--and divided  up the tools. We had two strings at that time. And I got a lease on the Henry  Fisher farm south of here, and many of you are familiar with the Fishers and  some of &amp;#039 ; em buy their eggs there, I imagine. But we drilled a well on it, I sold  some interest in it for to raise a little money to drill it with and I sold Art  Stone (ph) on the interest on those. And Art was out there the day we were to  hit the sands. And I was in to fifteen-ten (ph) and it was looking good, and I  sold Art Stone a ninety-sixth (ph) interest for $3,000 on the derrick floor  there just by a shake of the hands--and that&amp;#039 ; s the way many, many deals were  closed, just by a shake of the hands. And it wasn&amp;#039 ; t an hour until we&amp;#039 ; d  hit--until we hit the sand. And when she started smoking gas we started out of  the hole, but the oil beat the tools out of the hole. And did we feel good! And  so we had the tanks up anticipating a well, and we had the tanks up so we got  out of the hole and tools and closed that control head and turned it into the  tanks and it was flowing into the tanks. And we went home that night, nice  little fortune between the [indecipherable] bungalow. I figured, I think we&amp;#039 ; re  rich. What in the world could we do now for our poor relatives?     (laughing)    BK: And I went out the next morning: Lo and behold, there&amp;#039 ; s a hundred and  thirty-six barrels in the tank and eighteen hundred feet of water in the hole  and the well had stopped flowing.     (laughing)    BK: And, well, we put tubing rods in it and produced it for a while, but it  would never pay off. I think I was the only one that got my money back out of  the deal on it, and that was on account of that $3,000 I got offered by Art Stone.     (laughing)    BK: Let&amp;#039 ; s see. The next one--I moved from there over to [indecipherable] 15-10  for the Gotham Oil Company. The Gotham Oil Company was out of Washington, D.C.  And M.M. Wyville (ph) was the major holder in the Gotham Oil Company. And M.M.  Wyville (ph) was secretary to William Jennings Bryan when Bryan secretary of war  under Woodrow Wilson, to give you a little line-up on that. We drove that well  for, for Gotham and when she started smoking gas--we had the control head on--we  turned it into the pit, turned the well into the pit in case it wouldn&amp;#039 ; t flow.  And Mr. Wyville (ph) and I went to Bristow to order out the tanks. We did, we  ordered out a full tank and two 250s. Tanks then were all folded tanks, they  weren&amp;#039 ; t welded like they are today. But when we got the tanks set--the well&amp;#039 ; d  flowed twice into the pits when we got back. When we got the tanks set we picked  up 450 barrels of good oil out of the pits. And [indecipherable] wanted to drill  the well six inches, and we tried to hit the string on six inches--six inches  above the clamps--and clipped it to the clamps, and it didn&amp;#039 ; t change the motion  at all. And when it drilled off, it came out of that hole. That well made 450  barrels. That was sixty-one years ago now, today. Sixty-one years ago and that  well is still producing between seven and eight barrels in the Meisner sand.    George Fargo (ph), who was superintendent for the P-O-N-G, Prairie Oil and Gas,  he wouldn&amp;#039 ; t believe it that we&amp;#039 ; d only drilled it that far in. When he--he  drilled the offset for his company and he drilled it in two feet. His well was  plugged in a year and a half, he got it in the water too far! And this one, I  think--this one makes water now, but it still produces between seven and eight  barrels. And I drilled a seven-hundred-foot well there and we pumped the water  into that, that Boomer (ph) sand, I think it is.    Let&amp;#039 ; s see now. (pages rustling) Man, alive. Well, some of you&amp;#039 ; ll want to know  how we--how do you get your money for your oil? When you got a tankful, you call  the gauger, he comes out and gives you a written--gives your tank top and the  bottom and then peeks at it to see how much b.s. and water there is in it and if  there&amp;#039 ; s too much of that basic sediment and water in there, why the gauger&amp;#039 ; ll  say, Clean your tank, like they told us on this ticket here.     (laughter)    BK: It says, Clean tank. And they gave you a ticket for each tank and they would  pay you on about the twenty-sixth of the month--the twenty-sixth of the  following month. Rotary is much faster than drilling with cable tools, so Claude  Freeland--which some of you know, he built that home first--home west of the  Presbyterian Church here in Bristow. Claude Freeland drilled a well out in the  Poor Farm area, which was discovered--the Poor Farm area was discovered by  Albert Kelly, Levan&amp;#039 ; s dad--discovered the Poor Farm pool. Claude Freeland had a  well that had started off with 10,000 barrels a day of this black Dutcher oil. A  grand well. Carter had the offset. They wanted some of that, so they moved a  rotary in. That&amp;#039 ; s the first rotary that was in this country, on that offset. And  they drilled it down there, set by to drill the hole dry and drilled the sand  and made ten million in gas. No oil. They let it blow wide open in the air  thinking that it would blow onto oil. But it didn&amp;#039 ; t. You can&amp;#039 ; t blow one open  that way today, the Corporation Commission&amp;#039 ; ll be on ya--you got to shut that  well in. If you don&amp;#039 ; t they&amp;#039 ; ll shut it in for ya and charge ya. (noise) Pardon me.    And, well--this well of Claude&amp;#039 ; s--and Claude would ride with me out to the rig  once in a while and we&amp;#039 ; d visit--he told me about that particular well. He said,  That well made a million dollars&amp;#039 ;  worth of oil in sixty-seven days and never  made another barrel of oil. Not a million barrels&amp;#039 ;  full, a million dollars&amp;#039 ;   worth. And I imagine then that oil was worth about $2.45 a barrel. That&amp;#039 ; d be  nice to have in the family, believe me.     (laughter)    BK: Bristow was a--Bristow was a real boom town and my time&amp;#039 ; s about gone, but I  wanted to tell you some of the things that aren&amp;#039 ; t here now that I saw here. We  had three refineries here. A Bristow Refining Company out here on the Kelly farm  here right at the north edge of town. Wilcox Refinery across the railroad track  east of it. And then the Sun Company Oil Refinery up on the hill--one of the old  [indecipherable] refineries. We have no refineries here now.    We used to have the Republic Supply Company here--that&amp;#039 ; s an oilfield supply  company. Across the street was the Oil Well Supply Company. Then after that was  the National Supply Company. A couple of blocks north and a half east was the--    UM: Producer.    BK: Producer Supply Company. The [indecipherable] was here. Also the American  Tool Machine Company and the Bristow Pipe and Machine Company run by Mr.  Cushing. Mr. Cushing had a son, Chester--when you&amp;#039 ; d go in there for any fishing  tools, old Chester--you&amp;#039 ; d tell him what you want, Chester&amp;#039 ; d say, Oh hell you  don&amp;#039 ; t want that, you want to have this, show&amp;#039 ; d me this or that. But after  Chester got to drilling for himself he found out that the people that knew  pretty well what they wanted when they went in there. And Chester drilled a well  for himself just about a quarter of a mile south of this new project on south  Chestnut and a quarter west up on the hill. He drilled it with cable tools &amp;#039 ; til  the [indecipherable] broke sand, made a little, well, and his wife dressed tools  for him on that well. Drilled it in daylight, and his wife dressed tools. That&amp;#039 ; s something.    I only want to give you interesting things, I think.    Out northwest of town we had some big wells. I recall one that was drilled on  the Abraham, the Ed Abraham farm out there and it got away and went into the air  and the wind was right that it blew oil from that well into Bristow and spotted  clothes that were on the line, and oil spots on your car. Three miles away!    (papers rustling) That&amp;#039 ; s all of it.     (laughter)    UM: [Inaudible.]    BK: No, I don&amp;#039 ; t want to shoot the breeze all afternoon. I&amp;#039 ; m too [indecipherable]  have to go, it&amp;#039 ; s time to go on and [indecipherable] around here. Well let&amp;#039 ; s see  if there&amp;#039 ; s anything else that I think you, you can&amp;#039 ; t live without.     (laughter)    Yes, I tell you what it is! Bristow was a boom town, the streets were full and  the sidewalks were full, in fact I&amp;#039 ; ve seen teams lined from Slick two miles  north to the eight-mile corner of a morning. Just teams loaded out with pipe and  rig stuff. And people would like to see--individuals would like to see people  mill up and down those sidewalks, and some of them would park their car at a  point of vantage and walk home, and then walk back downtown and get in their car  in view of the people walking up and down the streets and sidewalks because it  was that interesting. That&amp;#039 ; s the Bristow that a lot of you have never known.  Thank ya.     (applause)    Tape ends.         audio   0 https://bristoworalhistory.org/ohms/viewer.php?cachefile=OHP-0015-01_Kirchner,_R_R_Rotary_Club.xml OHP-0015-01_Kirchner,_R_R_Rotary_Club.xml      </text>
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                <text>Ralph R. "Brick" Kirchner</text>
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                <text>In this 1979 interview, Ralph R. “Brick” Kirchner (1893-1990) speaks extensively about the oil drilling industry in Bristow, Oklahoma in the early 1900s, business involvement with J. Paul Getty, anecdotes about Tom Slick, how people handled their new-found oil wealth, and restrictions upon Indians regarding the handling of their own finances.</text>
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                  <text>Several interviews were done by Mary and Bob Mc Carty of people who grew up in the Pinehill area north of Bristow.  This collection is the Pinehill subset of the Bristow Oral Histories</text>
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              <text>    5.4    OHP-0008-03 Clarence &amp;quot ; Boyd&amp;quot ;  Myers OHP-0008-01     Bristow Historical Society - Oral History Archive   Pinehill Histories Bristow Historical Society, Inc.    Clarence &amp;quot ; Boyd&amp;quot ;  Myers Robert L. "Bob" McCarty MP3   1:|13(4)|39(15)|61(1)|87(2)|112(5)|135(1)|155(11)|174(13)|190(8)|211(3)|226(10)|238(14)|254(7)|288(6)|300(8)|326(7)|345(11)|363(5)|413(8)|433(5)|456(14)|488(2)     0   https://bristoworalhistory.org/interviews/OHP-0008-01 Myers, Clarence.mp3  Other         audio          0 Boyd Myers Family History   BMC: This is an interview with Boyd Myers [indecipherable] 10/13/76, time 7:15.    BM: That aggravates me every time I think of that—I think the government gave six thousand dollars to that plant down in Texas. And they say it’s gonna be covered with water.    BMC: Boyd, on the Pinehill community, to your knowledge when did your dad  come into that country?    BM: You asked me that on the phone, I think it was 1908, I’m not sure.     Boyd Myers talks of his family history in the Pinehill community   Bernice ; Boyd ; Boyd Myers ; Bristow ; Burl ; Fay ; Kelly ; Mule Ellen ; Naomi ; Nellie May Blythe ; Pinehill ; Ray ; train ; Virgil   Boyd Myers ; family history ; Pinehill Community                       232 School Days   BMC: To your knowledge, your mother never did go to school there at Pinehill, did she?    BM: Oh, I definitely don’t think she did.     BMC: How many of you children went to school there at Pinehill?    BM: I guess all nine of us did.    BMC: Do you remember your first teacher?     Memories of school and fairs in the Pinehill community   canning ; cattle ; crops ; Effie Curtis ; elections ; fairs ; pie suppers ; Pinehill School ; sewing ; township fair   cattle ; crops ; fairs ; school                       454 Oil wells, hunting, and school memories   BMC: It was on a smaller scale. Well, do you remember hearing say when the first oil well was drilled in that community?    BM: No, that was mentioned a while ago. I don’t remember where the first well was drilled.    BMC: How old was you when you saw the first well in operation?    BM: Well, Bob, most of the wells around there was gas wells.  I can remember that they would drill for oil and probably get gas [indecipherable] and they didn’t have any way to cap these wells in like they do now and that gas would roar, come right down the creek and sound like it was close to the house as we were from the creek. And they would blow like that for days before they’d get stopped.     Memories of the first oil well, hunting, and school friends and graduation   hunting ; Milton Snow ; oil ; oil well ; Olive ; Olive High School   oil wells ; Olive High School                       705 Work after high school and trying tobacco   BM: Well, I went the summer of 1933, after I graduated, I went to the wheat harvest in Kansas. I worked for a dollar and a quarter a day and that wasn’t an eight-hour day, that was from daylight to dark.    BMC: That was from sunup, daylight, ‘til dark.    BM: And we ate four meals a day. And then later on I came to Tulsa in 1936 and I begged to get a job making thirty-five cents a day. That a seven-day-a-week job, no overtime. I was born at the wrong time.    BMC: Anything that you can think of that you’d want to add?   Discussion of working after high school graduation, more school memories, and trying tobacco for the first time   Beechnut tobacco ; Earnest Rhinehardt ; Floyd Wilson ; Kansas ; light bread ; syrup bucket ; wheat harvest   trying tobacco ; working in wheat harvest                       935 Farming and a new table   BMC: When was the first time that you saw one of the old sorghum mills?    BM: Well, now, that wasn’t a cane country right in there so I really don’t remember—seemed like Smith Bruce had one, I believe. Pulled it with a mule, I believe, I’m not too sure of that.    BMC: I know there was quite a bit of sorghum cane, I expect about—    MM: What did your dad raise out there? What did he raise on his farm?    BM: In the agricultural line?       Farming memories and the making of a table from a walnut tree   corn ; cotton ; grain ; Smith Bruce ; sorghum ; soybeans ; Winkey Creek Bridge   Farming ; tables ; walnut                       1126 Motorcycles and College   BMC: What year—I know that what all [indecipherable] I know that Burl and his first wife made certain trips to California on [indecipherable]. What year did you boys start riding motorcycles?    BM: Well, I’d have to do some figuring. I was sixteen when I got my first one. Burl started prior to that, so thirteen to sixteen would be—    MM: Twenty-nine.    BMC: Twenty-eight or ’29.    BM: That’s about it. But Burl started probably in ’24 or ’25.     Memories of riding motorcycles and college   Bristow ; Business College ; California ; college ; Edmond ; Junior College ; motocycles   college ; Riding Motorcycles                         In this 1976 interview, Clarence “Boyd” Myers (1913-1979) discusses his father’s arrival in the Pinehill Community, his siblings, the Pinehill School and his classmates, early agriculture and cattle, oil drilling in the community, social events such as pie suppers, his early adulthood working in Kansas during the wheat harvest, and the first time he ever tried chewing tobacco.  BMC: This is an interview with Boyd Myers [indecipherable] 10/13/76, time 7:15.    BM: That aggravates me every time I think of that--I think the government gave  six thousand dollars to that plant down in Texas. And they say it&amp;#039 ; s gonna be  covered with water.    BMC: Boyd, on the Pinehill community, to your knowledge when did your dad1 come  into that country?    BM: You asked me that on the phone, I think it was 1908, I&amp;#039 ; m not sure.    BMC: Now we&amp;#039 ; re on tape. How many brothers came in there with him? How many came  in there with him with the Myers family? Do you--    BM: He came alone.    BMC: He came alone?    BM: He came in on the train, I remember time and time again he told me that he  had $7.50 in his pocket when he got in Bristow.    BM: When he settled in there, he settled there on the old home place? Or did he  settle some place else and then buy the old home place up here?    MM: [Inaudible.]    BM: I don&amp;#039 ; t know.    BMC: Did you ever hear him say what the first place that he lived?    BM: I don&amp;#039 ; t remember.    MM: [Inaudible.]    BM: You got that tape on now?    BMC: Yep.    BM: Let me tell you something that it wouldn&amp;#039 ; t hurt for this to be taped: You  know his nickname was Mule Ellen (ph), did you ever hear that?    BMC: Yep, I did.    BM: Well, he got the name right there at that school. He was showing off for the  girls there, and he rode that mule around that school building and I guess he  done everything to--    MM: That sounds like your dad.    BM: --that you&amp;#039 ; d expect a mule to do, and they all laughed and carried on &amp;#039 ; cause  the mule didn&amp;#039 ; t behave too well, and that&amp;#039 ; s where he got the name Mule Ellen (ph).    BMC: What year, Boyd, was your dad and mother married?    BM: I don&amp;#039 ; t know that, either. Well, Verna&amp;#039 ; d (ph) have that in the Bible, she&amp;#039 ; s  got the old Bible.    MM: We gone and talked to her on--    BMC: I talked to her about forty-five minutes last night. Do--your mother and  dad&amp;#039 ; s marriage, how many children were there? I know the answer to it, but--    BM: Nine.    BMC: Nine. There was--names were what?    BM: Burl, Virgil, Bernice, Boyd, Kelly, Ray, Fay, and (inaudible).    BMC: And Naomi.    MM: You forgot Naomi.    BM: I skipped one, didn&amp;#039 ; t I? Naomi was just younger than Kelly, right.    BMC: Right.    MM: He needs your mother&amp;#039 ; s maiden name.    BMC: Your mother&amp;#039 ; s maiden name was--    BM: Nellie May2.    BMC: Nellie May Blythe.    BM: B-L-Y-T-H-E. Most people called them &amp;quot ; Bly,&amp;quot ;  B-L-Y, but it&amp;#039 ; s B-L-Y-T-H-E.    MM: (inaudible)    BMC: To your knowledge, your mother never did go to school there at Pinehill,  did she?    BM: Oh, I definitely don&amp;#039 ; t think she did.    BMC: How many of you children went to school there at Pinehill?    BM: I guess all nine of us did.    BMC: Do you remember your first teacher?    BM: Yes, Effie Curtis (ph). She whopped me about every day.    MM: (laughing)    BMC: You must&amp;#039 ; ve been an ornery little stinker.    UW: [Inaudible.]    BM: Don&amp;#039 ; t tell Mike this.    UW: --more like our grandson.    BMC: What all activities--to your knowledge, what all activity was the school  used for?    BM: Other than the ABC&amp;#039 ; s, you mean?    BMC: Other than the ABC&amp;#039 ; s, other than school purposes. What all was the school  used for? What was all the schoolhouse used for, besides the ABC learning?    BM: Well, I can remember the pie suppers, I can remember the fairs that I  mentioned, and I can remember the elections, and the voting precinct, well  elections, I mentioned that.    UW: Church.    BM: It was used for church, also.    BMC: And singing groups.    UW: [Inaudible.]    BM: Well, church is all I remember.    BMC: You said something on--you said fairs. I want you to confirm what I already  have: What type of fair was this?    BM: It&amp;#039 ; s what they called a township fair. It was a small community fair.    BMC: At this fair, what all was exhibited?    BM: Oh, just home products like you would at the county fairs, only on a small scale.    BMC: Did you ever take anything to these county fairs?    BM: I definitely did.    BMC: What did you take?    BM: Cattle and crops that we grew on the farm.    BMC: Did you personally, did you ever win anything at these fairs?    BM: Oh, I don&amp;#039 ; t recall but I&amp;#039 ; m sure we did.    BMC: To your knowledge, who was the judges at these fairs?    BM: I don&amp;#039 ; t remember.    MM: [Indecipherable] Dowdy was judge at the--    BM: I think he did, but I don&amp;#039 ; t remember.    MM: What did the women show at the fair?    BM: Well, they had their sewing and canning and just like they would at the  larger fairs, only it was on a smaller scale.    BMC: It was on a smaller scale. Well, do you remember hearing say when the first  oil well was drilled in that community?    BM: No, that was mentioned a while ago. I don&amp;#039 ; t remember where the first well  was drilled.    BMC: How old was you when you saw the first well in operation?    BM: Well, Bob, most of the wells around there was gas wells. I can remember that  they would drill for oil and probably get gas [indecipherable] and they didn&amp;#039 ; t  have any way to cap these wells in like they do now and that gas would roar,  come right down the creek and sound like it was close to the house as we were  from the creek. And they would blow like that for days before they&amp;#039 ; d get stopped.    BMC: Well they can&amp;#039 ; t cap those--    MM: Did you ask him about the [indecipherable]    BMC: Whenever you were growing up, what game was there in that part--in that  community? For hunting purposes?    BM: Oh, rabbits and squirrels. We&amp;#039 ; d try to trap skunks and opossum and maybe go  opossum hunting at night. And fish, we&amp;#039 ; d go down there and catch these little  catfish about that big. But we didn&amp;#039 ; t have much time for that, dad kept us busy  all the time.    BMC: Oh, I know.    MM: [Inaudible.]    BMC: And your schooling there in Pinehill, do you remember the kids that  graduated with you from the eighth grade?    BM: Yes, I do. Milton Snow (ph).    BMC: Would you name the ones that graduated from the eighth grade with you?    BM: Name all of them?    BMC: If you can.    BM: Well he&amp;#039 ; s definitely one of them, and I can&amp;#039 ; t--I don&amp;#039 ; t remember the rest of them.    BMC: What year was that?    BM: Well that little old [indecipherable] and I was five when they started, I  was born in 1913.    BMC: Well, that would put you in school about 1918.    MM: [Inaudible.]    BMC: And that would put you roughly graduating from Pinehill school in either  &amp;#039 ; 26 or &amp;#039 ; 27.    BM: Well, you figure eight years from the time I started, that&amp;#039 ; d been &amp;#039 ; 28.    BMC: Let&amp;#039 ; s check back here and make sure that that&amp;#039 ; s right. Check back here on  1918, see what, what&amp;#039 ; s on the school rolls in 1918. (sound of pages flipping)    BM: I say it&amp;#039 ; d be &amp;#039 ; 27.    BMC: What year, Boyd, did you leave that community? (sound of pages flipping)    BM: Well, I went to high school at Bristow for three years, then I missed a year  and wound up at Olive and graduated from high school.    BMC: You graduated from Olive High School? Then after you graduated from high  school you went into what type of business?    BM: Well, I went the summer of 1933, after I graduated, I went to the wheat  harvest in Kansas. I worked for a dollar and a quarter a day and that wasn&amp;#039 ; t an  eight-hour day, that was from daylight to dark.    BMC: That was from sunup, daylight, &amp;#039 ; til dark.    BM: And we ate four meals a day. And then later on I came to Tulsa in 1936 and I  begged to get a job making thirty-five cents a day. That a seven-day-a-week job,  no overtime. I was born at the wrong time.    BMC: Anything that you can think of that you&amp;#039 ; d want to add?    MM: Did he steal any watermelons?    BMC: What, honey?    MM: Did you ever steal any watermelons?    BM: Not any more than I could eat.    MM: Who raised the best watermelons?    BM: I really don&amp;#039 ; t know. No, we didn&amp;#039 ; t--I can truthfully say I don&amp;#039 ; t remember us  stealing watermelons.    MM: Did you ever steal any chickens?    BM: Oh, no, no.    MM: You didn&amp;#039 ; t go on any of them chicken roasts?    BM: No, never did. I&amp;#039 ; ve tried to carry two watermelons on a horse and if you  think that isn&amp;#039 ; t fun--and the horse steps on a watermelon.    MM: Who was the best girl, who was your girlfriend while you was going to school?    BM: Oh, I liked all the girls. But you know, I didn&amp;#039 ; t know there was a  difference between boys and girls &amp;#039 ; til I was about six!    BMC: About six you found out--    MM: [Inaudible.]    BMC: Yeah, tell me about that, that boy [indecipherable] little bit better than  that, he found out about three, I think.    MM: Did you ever put any girls&amp;#039 ;  pigtails in the inkwell?    BMC: Some mischief, what mischief did you get in at school?    MM: And I&amp;#039 ; m sure he must&amp;#039 ; ve done some--    BM: Well, I don&amp;#039 ; t know whether you&amp;#039 ; d call this mischief or not but I don&amp;#039 ; t mind  telling it, I told you this--they had those outdoor houses at that time, and we  was out there one day and that&amp;#039 ; s when I was five years old, that was my first  year at school, and Earnest Rhinehardt (ph) and Floyd Wilson (ph) came up there.  And they had some Beechnut tobacco and they insisted that I take a chew of  tobacco. Well, I didn&amp;#039 ; t want it but they insisted and I started to--well, I put  it in my mouth, I couldn&amp;#039 ; t hide it, it burned my mouth. I started to spit it out  and they said, &amp;quot ; Don&amp;#039 ; t spit it out!&amp;quot ;  They said, &amp;quot ; It&amp;#039 ; ll get sweet after a while.&amp;quot ;   Well I don&amp;#039 ; t know whether it got sweet or not, but I started going in circles.  And I had the biggest piece of vanilla cake in my gallon bucket that I carried  my lunch in, and I couldn&amp;#039 ; t no more eat that cake than I could fly. Oh, it made  me sick.    MM: What kind of bucket? Syrup bucket or a lard bucket?    BM: Syrup, it was a syrup bucket.    MM: What&amp;#039 ; d you carry in lunches, we&amp;#039 ; ve never asked anybody. What&amp;#039 ; d they put in  your lunches? Biscuits? Probably biscuits.    BM: Mom made a lot of light bread. I imagine it was light bread sandwiches.    MM: What&amp;#039 ; d you put on &amp;#039 ; em?    BM: Well, I remember one thing was peanut butter and jelly.    MM: Your dad always killed a lot of hogs so you had plenty of meat.    BMC: Boyd, when was the first time--    MM: Probably sausage sandwich, that I would imagine.    BMC: When was the first time that you saw one of the old sorghum mills?    BM: Well, now, that wasn&amp;#039 ; t a cane country right in there so I really don&amp;#039 ; t  remember--seemed like Smith Bruce had one, I believe. Pulled it with a mule, I  believe, I&amp;#039 ; m not too sure of that.    BMC: I know there was quite a bit of sorghum cane, I expect about--    MM: What did your dad raise out there? What did he raise on his farm?    BM: In the agricultural line?    MM: What did he raise, uh-huh, something besides kids? (laughs)    BMC: In the agricultural line, what all did Alex3 raise?    BM: Well, the money crop, if there was any money, was cotton. And corn and small  grain. But in the later years they tried to grow soybeans--and grow &amp;#039 ; em but they  didn&amp;#039 ; t have any way to harvest them.    MM: Your mother was good at canning and stuff.    BM: Oh, mom worked all the time. She would churn this old-type churn and be  reading the Bible or some other book at the same time.    BMC: I can&amp;#039 ; t think of anything else.    MM: Oh what about that--who made that table and chairs, and talk about how that  was made up, your mother [indecipherable]. Somebody told me that you  [indecipherable] something you made, a dining room set.    BM: Oh, that&amp;#039 ; s after we got into high school. Fay and Ray made the chairs, I  think Kelly made the table.    MM: Tell us about that.    BM: Well, this was mom&amp;#039 ; s idea again. Money was very scarce, we didn&amp;#039 ; t have any  money. Lot of times we&amp;#039 ; d be Sunday&amp;#039 ; d roll around and they&amp;#039 ; d all go to town and I  wouldn&amp;#039 ; t even go to town. Why should I go to town, I didn&amp;#039 ; t have any money. So  this big nice walnut tree was down there close to Winkey Creek Bridge and mom  suggested we cut that tree and cure it and use it in the school--at Bristow High  School. So that&amp;#039 ; s where the table and chairs went.    MM: Tell us about--    BMC: That&amp;#039 ; s what table and chairs--    MM: I know, but I want to know what kind of table, I want him to tell us about it--    BM: Well they was walnut.    MM: Walnut?    BM: Walnut dining table.    MM: How many sit the table, how many chairs?    BM: Well I believe there was six chairs, isn&amp;#039 ; t that right?    UW: Did Bernice have those? Didn&amp;#039 ; t she have those?    BM: No, Fay and Ray made the chairs. And Kelly made the table.    UW: Well I know--who has them, though? I know who made them but who has them?    BM: Well [inaudible].    BMC: In later years--    BM: Bernie has them now.    BMC: Bernie has them now.    BM: Right.    BMC: Is that right?    MM: I&amp;#039 ; ve heard about those, that they were things of outstanding beauty, like art.    BM: Well, I&amp;#039 ; ll show you what I made for [indecipherable].    MM: Okay, what did you make?    BMC: Uh--    BM: I made a chifforobe out of solid oak.    MM: Cut it off the property again?    BM: No, no, I did not.    BMC: What year--I know that what all [indecipherable] I know that Burl and his  first wife made certain trips to California on [indecipherable]. What year did  you boys start riding motorcycles?    BM: Well, I&amp;#039 ; d have to do some figuring. I was sixteen when I got my first one.  Burl started prior to that, so thirteen to sixteen would be--    MM: Twenty-nine.    BMC: Twenty-eight or &amp;#039 ; 29.    BM: That&amp;#039 ; s about it. But Burl started probably in &amp;#039 ; 24 or &amp;#039 ; 25.    BMC: And how many of you boys at the present time, how many boys still ride  those motorcycles?    BM: Fay rides as a hobby.    MM: Kelly? Does he ride?    UW: Burl still rides [indecipherable].    BMC: Well that time I talked to Burl, he was, he was talkin&amp;#039 ;  about hunting,  hunting deer.    BM: Well he sold his motorcycle and I doubt whether he rides now or not.    MM: Kelly probably rides to games--    BM: Well I&amp;#039 ; m sure Kelly rides with his kids.    BMC: Well is Kelly, is he still in the trick riding business?    BM: Oh, no, no. Kelly got banged up and then he, he wouldn&amp;#039 ; t look at a  motorcycle until the kids got of age and then he got back into it again. But no  trick riding or anything like that.    BMC: Just normal, just normal everyday riding.    MM: Well the kids your age, all of you kids are better than average educated.  How many of you went to college?    BM: Well, I don&amp;#039 ; t know whether we&amp;#039 ; re better than average. We, we finished high  school and Kelly went a little bit to the junior college there in Bristow.    UW: Brooke (ph) went on to business college.    BM: Yeah, she went to business college.    UW: And Bernice--    BM: Well, now, she went to Edmond.    UW: She was--    BM: --to teacher&amp;#039 ; s college.    UW: --engineering--    BM: But she probably wouldn&amp;#039 ; t even want to hear about that. She started, and  would go a while and then have to teach and then go back again and have to teach  on account of finances--    UW: I think it&amp;#039 ; s commendable that people can do that--    BMC: Yes, I agree, but I really think that--    MM: I think, I think, I know that they did better than average--    UW: It&amp;#039 ; s hard to do, but they, you know, she did it.    BM: Well, mom was the driver along that line. She always encouraged education.  And believe it or not, they wanted to send me on to engineering school, but I  couldn&amp;#039 ; t--I couldn&amp;#039 ; t stand for them to be working at home and me be off to school.    UW: [Inaudible.]    end of interview         audio   0 https://bristoworalhistory.org/ohms/viewer.php?cachefile=OHP-0008-01_Myers_Clarence.xml OHP-0008-01_Myers_Clarence.xml      </text>
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                <text>Clarence "Boyd" Myers</text>
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                <text>In this 1976 interview, Clarence “Boyd” Myers (1913-1979) discusses his father’s arrival in the Pinehill Community, his siblings, the Pinehill School and his classmates, early agriculture and cattle, oil drilling in the community, social events such as pie suppers, his early adulthood working in Kansas during the wheat harvest, and the first time he ever tried chewing tobacco.</text>
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                <text>1973-10-13</text>
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