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xrayman
03-06-2005, 06:42 PM
I never knew that Wedgewood was on North May! What years??? I only remember Wedgewood on NW Expressway where the apartments are today. In fact, the "Lost River" ride dock (where you gave them your ticket and waited to get on) is still there. The bridge you walked across after paying is still there and on the farrr west side of the property you'll find HUGE stakes in the ground from anchoring the Tornado.

vineyardalto
03-06-2005, 10:22 PM
A few years ago, I emailed MetroTech which is on the site of the old Springlake Amusement Park grounds, and asked did they mind if old visitors to the park could come and walk around. A very nice man wrote back and said you could come anytime during business hours and walk the grounds and see some of the park's memorabilia. I believe they have one of the horses from the carousel and one of the cars from the Big Dipper on display in one of the buildings. The original outdoor light posts were retained, and the base of the Alpine Skyline could not be removed so they made it into a fountain.

carlinda50
03-09-2005, 06:29 PM
I never knew that Wedgewood was on North May! What years??? I only remember Wedgewood on NW Expressway where the apartments are today. In fact, the "Lost River" ride dock (where you gave them your ticket and waited to get on) is still there. The bridge you walked across after paying is still there and on the farrr west side of the property you'll find HUGE stakes in the ground from anchoring the Tornado.

This was between 1956 and 1958 when they moved out of the city limits to NW Expressway - You can do a yahoo search for Wedgewood Oklahoma and find a neat site with the park history and pics. There's a pic from the opening with my favorite robot, Bazark, there.

xrayman
03-09-2005, 07:08 PM
Wow ---- What a blast from the past! The Wedgewood History website is great!
http://www.picturemeonline.com/wedgewood/

Pete
04-09-2005, 06:00 PM
Have any of you nostalgic types explored the Oklahoman archives?

They charge (although I hear you can gain free access at OKC libraries) but you can sign up for as little as a day.

They have literally every paper since Day One on-line, and you can either just pull up a paper by date and page through it (everything is scanned, including ads -- looks just like the paper you'd buy at a newstand) or you can use various search tools.


I subsrcribed for a while and pulled tons of old ads and articles for a HS class reunion and for a similar thread on an OU board.


It's an amazing experience to 'leaf' through a digital version of the paper from any time this century.

Pete
04-13-2005, 12:10 PM
I just uploaded a bunch of old ads and photos of TG&Y, OTASCO, Foreman Scotty, etc.

They can be found in my member's gallery here:

http://www.okctalk.com/gallery/showgallery.php/cat/515


Let me know if anyone has any requests for items to be added and I'll do my best to do so.

Patrick
04-13-2005, 12:14 PM
Thanks malibu. I just approved your images. I love the images you uploaded. They bring back a lot of memories!

Pete
04-13-2005, 01:49 PM
Even though it wasn't that long ago, here is a great website with lots of Molly Murphy's pictures and nostalgia:

http://members.aol.com/stoneforst/stonemain/mollys.htm

Who could forget the 'salad car' made out of a red Jag?

The place was arguably the biggest restaurant sensation in the recent history of OKC, with multi-hour waits common for many years.

Doug Loudenback
05-06-2005, 02:15 PM
Great thread!

Let's talk about FOOD! Some of my favorite places in the late '50s, early '60s, were ...

Toddle House diner on NW 23rd, south side, west of Classen, near OCU. The BEST chocolate ice box pies EVER! Their hash browns were great, too, but I've never had a better chocolate ice box pie!

Beverly's Chicken In the Rough, the big one north of the state capitol. Loved it! It was by the old Park-O-Tell where we often stayed during high school debate trips when traveling to Okc from Lawton. Had some great shaving cream fights there, up and down the hallways!

And, of course, Glens (Glenns?) Hickory Inn on NW 10th ... anyone ever have a better steak? Cooked in open-pit flames, that's where I learned to love garlic on steaks, and lots of rare red beef!

Doug

mranderson
05-06-2005, 02:29 PM
Great thread!

Let's talk about FOOD! Some of my favorite places in the late '50s, early '60s, were ...

Toddle House diner on NW 23rd, south side, west of Classen, near OCU. The BEST chocolate ice box pies EVER! Their hash browns were great, too, but I've never had a better chocolate ice box pie!

Beverly's Chicken In the Rough, the big one north of the state capitol. Loved it! It was by the old Park-O-Tell where we often stayed during high school debate trips when traveling to Okc from Lawton. Had some great shaving cream fights there, up and down the hallways!

And, of course, Glens (Glenns?) Hickory Inn on NW 10th ... anyone ever have a better steak? Cooked in open-pit flames, that's where I learned to love garlic on steaks, and lots of rare red beef!

Doug

Then there were the following. Kip's Big Boy, A&W, Coit's, the lunch counters at TG&Y and Jim's IGA, Underwood's BarBQue, among others.

Bradley
05-06-2005, 04:11 PM
Saw a fan of Count Gregor - He will be speaking at the monthly Oklahoma Film Society Meeting about Acting and How to Survive in Television from 1pm to 2:30pm. Amazingly, he has been a horror host for over fifty years!

If you'd like to meet him and hear his story, we meet inthe Epworth Outreach Center on the corner of NW 150th and Penn - Enter from NW 150th - Go through Main Entrance to Elevator - we are across from the elevator in the Halloway Room. Hope to see some of his fans there!

Bradley

mranderson
05-19-2005, 04:51 PM
Does anyone remember Beverly's Chicken in the Rough?

The late Mr. Osbourne's grand niece is a friend of mine, and that reminded me of how much an institution his places were.

I don't remember eating there, but he featured chicken without knives and forks. Basically like an indoor picnic.

Any information on this fine establishment would be appreciated. Memories, other stories.

Doug Loudenback
05-19-2005, 05:24 PM
Does anyone remember Beverly's Chicken in the Rough?
The late Mr. Osbourne's grand niece is a friend of mine, and that reminded me of how much an institution his places were. I don't remember eating there, but he featured chicken without knives and forks Basically like an indoor picnic. Any information on this fine establishment would be appreciated. Memories, other stories.
That's exactly what I spoke of above, when I said,
Beverly's Chicken In the Rough, the big one north of the state capitol. Loved it! It was by the old Park-O-Tell where we often stayed during high school debate trips when traveling to Okc from Lawton. Had some great shaving cream fights there, up and down the hallways!I've got some old postcard images, if you'd want to see them. They're not in my downtownOKC website since Beverly's wasn't downtown.

Doug

windowphobe
05-19-2005, 07:38 PM
One Beverly's - the Pancake Corner, on Northwest Expressway just west of Penn - remains open for breakfast and lunch. I've been known to drop in from time to time.

carlinda50
05-25-2005, 03:32 PM
Re: Beverly's - they had their own special dressing, it was white and a little like Ranch. I saw a recipe for it once and I would love to have it again. They even sold it in stores for awhile.

Crepes from Magic Pan would be nice, the peel and eat Shrimp that came in a huge bowl at Valgene's in Penn Square; El Charrito;Cherry's Drive-In. Best would be one of those combo meals from Kip's on N May that came with fries and a salad and hot fudge brownie dessert of some kind.

muzique808
06-09-2005, 01:15 PM
However, you are definitely an Oklahoma Cityan if...



What a list, okcpulse. I guess that makes me a local. Except I didn't know how often they mowed by the river!

I was born in 1969 at St. Anthony's and haven't lived more than 5 miles of it for most of my life.

Great thread and memories from all.

okcpulse
07-04-2005, 03:19 AM
Old Oklahoma City TV station line-up from an old TV Guide I found in my grandmother's magazine stack. TV Guide was from October 1985. I forgot they showed Knot's Landing at 8PM on KWTV 9 and Dukes of Hazard on KOKH-TV 25, and the Cosby Show on KTVY-TV 4 at 4:30PM. Here was the TV station line-up...

KTVY-4 (NBC) News 4 Signed off at 2AM
KOCO-5 (ABC) 5 Alive Signed off at 2AM
KWTV-9 (CBS) Newsline 9 Signed off at 2AM
KETA (OETA)-TV 13 (PBS) Signed off at 11:30PM
KOKH-TV 25 (Ind.) meaning no network affiliation
KGMC-TV 34 (Ind.)
KAUT-TV 43 (Ind.) All signed off at 12AM

KAUT-43 became KTLC-TV 43, a secondary PBS station in the early nineties and was actually a FOX affiliate for a short stint before FOX grabbed KOKH-TV 25. KGMC-TV 34 is now KOCB-34 (The WB).

bedgraynexl
09-11-2005, 12:14 PM
Wow, this is a great thread

Lets see... I was born at Baptist in 1975

Some of the things not mentioned yet for northsiders most likely

Johnnies Night

Fun Skate night

The old Northside Soccer Fields before Lake Hefner Parkway was built

When the Lake Hefner Water Tower was Red and White Check and it being rebuilt for 89 Olympic Festival.

The old Kiddie Pond by Lake Hefner

Officer Rossi on his motorcycle in the Village

First job sacking groceries at Quail Plaza IGA, formerly Puddin' Lane

Martin Nature Park, Omniplex, and Enterprise Square USA field Trips (how different they seem now)

Crystals Pizza, Shotgun Sam's Pizza, Hemi's Pizza (can you tell I like pizza)

carlinda50
09-18-2005, 10:59 PM
Re: OKC TV stations

Channel 4 was originally WKY and started broadcasting on June 9, 1949. Feds made Mr Gaylord choose between newspaper an TV station so OPUBCO had to sell station, it became KTVY before becoming KFOR.

Channel 9 KWTV ("World's Tallest Video") started broadcasting on Dec 20, 1953. Finished studio and new 1572 ft tower, 10/17/1954. It was, for 2 decades, the world's tallest man-made structure.

Channel 5 was originally an Enid station, KGEO (the owner was George somebody. Built a new tower near Crescent in 1957 to reach OKC better.
Station was bought by Cimarron Broadcasting, changed name to KOCO and moved to OKC. New station and tower at NW 50th and Portland opened in Nov 1958.

I also remember that Channel 25 operated briefly between '54 and '57 from the old Victoria theater. I don't remember the call letters. Does anyone?

mranderson
09-18-2005, 11:15 PM
KOCO's studios were on the northwest corner of NW 63 and Portland. Not NW 50 and Portland. They were there until the mid 80's and sold the building to Paul Crouch who is the founder of Trinity Broadcasting. He operated KTBO from there until building a new studio near the other stations (except KSBI). That building (NW 63) was recently demolished. A two story medical center is now under construction on the site.

"Channel 25" is and always has been KOKH which stands for Keep Our Kids Happy. It was owned by the Oklahoma City Public School system.

carlinda50
09-18-2005, 11:18 PM
I'll answer my own question - Channel 25 was KTVQ in 1955

carlinda50
09-18-2005, 11:22 PM
"KOCO's studios were on the northwest corner of NW 63 and Portland. Not NW 50 and Portland."

Sorry about that, you are absolutely right. I don't know why I said 50th. I seem to recall my parents taking us to a "Grand Opening" of that Channel 5 station at NW63rd & Portland.

Doug Loudenback
09-19-2005, 05:49 AM
Toddle House

I've mentioned it before but I didn't have more information. They had the best chocolate ice box pies in the world (or, at least, that part of it I knew of when I ate there in the late 50s, early 60s). The one I knew about was on NW 23 near OCU.

From Vanished Spendor, Vol 3, Item 507:

The “Toddle Houses” were a national chain of small cafes specializing in breakfast. Each tiny outlet was built to the same plan, and contained no tables, but merely a short counter with a row of stools. At one time there were three Oklahoma City locations: 1307 North Broadway, 329 Northwest Twenty-third, and 1221 North Walker. Former customers still remember the fluffy scrambled eggs prepared in a special way. Payment was on the honor system: customers deposited their checks with the correct amount in a box by the door on the way out. In business in Oklahoma City some thirty years, the Toddle Houses closed here in the 1960’s.

Here's the postcard, item 507, Vanished Splendor, Vol 3:
http://www.dougloudenback.com/misc/toddlehouse.jpg

writerranger
11-05-2005, 10:59 PM
Remember OKC ambulance service before AmCare and EMSA? There were numerous outfits that operated merely as transportation to the hospital. No paramedics, no nothing. There was a less than affectionate term used for these companies, but I'll not mention it in honor of good taste. Remember Pioneer Ambulance? They were run out of a house on Pioneer Street just West of May Avenue. They literally parked their ambulances in the front yard! Can anyone else remember the names of any of these ambulance services that served Oklahoma City?

mranderson
11-06-2005, 09:02 AM
Remember OKC ambulance service before AmCare and EMSA? There were numerous outfits that operated merely as transportation to the hospital. No paramedics, no nothing. There was a less than affectionate term used for these companies, but I'll not mention it in honor of good taste. Remember Pioneer Ambulance? They were run out of a house on Pioneer Street just West of May Avenue. They literally parked their ambulances in the front yard! Can anyone else remember the names of any of these ambulance services that served Oklahoma City?

There was Gold Cross and Turner on the southside, and Demuth had one in the Britton area.

Yes. We have come a long way since the day they just stuffed them and ran.

davido
11-12-2005, 07:15 PM
I was born at Baptist Memorial in 1966, we lived around 51st and sapulpa, and moved to 16th and rockwell, I remember having a black friend at the apartment around 1968 or 69 and everyone jumping out of the pool because a little black child wanted to go swimming, also milk was delivered and in glass bottles as well as paper cartons, a two yr old could walk to the 7-11 by themself and parents not have to worry about kidnapping, also, mrs Shmidts (sp) shoes at 23rd and meridian they had animal chairs for the kids to sit in while they fitted you for shoes, shakeys pizza,we moved to piedmont in 1970 and if you wanted to go to town you had to drive all the way to portland to be in the city, TG&Y OTASCO. 39th was the cruise strip from portland to yukon......anyone remember Nicolosi's Italian resturant, that was my aunt and uncles place for 40 yrs.

okcerintul
11-14-2005, 05:46 PM
I'll answer my own question - Channel 25 was KTVQ in 1955

I don't know if this has been mentioned, but KTVQ 25 was OKC's first ABC affiliate when KOCO (then KGEO) was still in Enid.

okcerintul
11-14-2005, 06:00 PM
I was born at Baptist Memorial in 1966, we lived around 51st and sapulpa, and moved to 16th and rockwell, I remember having a black friend at the apartment around 1968 or 69 and everyone jumping out of the pool because a little black child wanted to go swimming, also milk was delivered and in glass bottles as well as paper cartons, a two yr old could walk to the 7-11 by themself and parents not have to worry about kidnapping, also, mrs Shmidts (sp) shoes at 23rd and meridian they had animal chairs for the kids to sit in while they fitted you for shoes, shakeys pizza,we moved to piedmont in 1970 and if you wanted to go to town you had to drive all the way to portland to be in the city, TG&Y OTASCO. 39th was the cruise strip from portland to yukon......anyone remember Nicolosi's Italian resturant, that was my aunt and uncles place for 40 yrs.


Okay, let's see...

I was born at St. Anthony's in 1978. Lived for the first 7 or so years in south OKC near 44th and I-35. This meant lots of time spent at Crossroads Mall, TG&Y, Food World, Malibu Grand Prix, and the Onion Barrell.

Took me awhile to dig this up, but someone sent me this email awhile back...

You were a child of the 80's in OKC if...

...you thought Crossroads Mall rocked and Penn Square was a dump

...you would actually go to Shepherd Mall to shop

...you'd rather listen to KOFM instead of KJ-103

...you watched Count Gregore host scary movies on Saturday nights

...you knew what hand gesture to give if you saw a 5 Alive camera (and I don't mean the middle finger)

...you remember the U.S. Olympic Festival coming to town

...you remember when Star Elementary exploded

...you remember that the first guy to go "postal" did so in Edmond

...you know who Linda Soundtrack is

...you drove through Bricktown with your doors locked, and there was no reason to stop there

...you remember Dannysday

Prunepicker
11-25-2005, 05:31 PM
I must be the same age as mranderson and Joe Schmoe. Everything they mention is a memory from the past.

Maybe someone can help or direct me to a good place to look. I'm curious as to how many of the subdivisions in OKC got their name. For instance how did Knob Hill and Capital Hill get their name? I know that Mesta Park was named after Anton Classen's daughter, Mesta. Then there are some of the parks in the city area. Who was Stiles? Who was Woodson? Wheeler? (insert name) Park...? Ok, I know who Will Rogers park is named after and ditto for Wiley Post.

The older I get the more interested I am in the city's history.

Lastly, how do I reply to a post? I just guessed but would like to know how to use this site. I hope this post gets where it's supposed to.

BTW Ho Ho was at my 10th birthday party!

Prunepicker

Patrick
11-25-2005, 06:03 PM
Hey Prunepicker, welcome to OKCTalk! Look like you already made a post! :) To make posts, just click on Post Reply. To Post new threads, click on Start Thread.

Capitol Hill got it's name, because originally, it was thought that the Capitol building would be built in that location. The location was later changed to the current location.

Captain David Stiles commanded a company of the U.S. 10th Infantry at the (then called) Oklahoma Station, to keep the peace before and after the Run.

Joseph Wheeler was born near Augusta, Georgia on September 10, 1836. He graduated from West Point in 1859, but resigned his commission in the U. S. Army to join the Confederate forces in 1861. His skill and energy earned him the rank of Lieutenant General and Commander of the Confederate cavalry in the western theater.



Only 28 at the end of the war, Wheeler became a planter and lawyer in Alabama. From there he was elected for several terms in Congress where he was an outspoken advocate of reconciliation between the North and South.

When the Spanish-American War broke out, he returned to the U. S. Army as a Major-General. He retired in 1901 as a Brigadier-General. Wheeler died on January 25, 1906



I believe Woodson is named after Paige Woodson. Not sure who he was exactly, but the old school over off NE 4th St was named after him.

Prunepicker
11-26-2005, 03:47 PM
Patrick,
Posting is easier than I thought. Thanks for your help.

Where did you find all this wonderful information? Is there a book or a library source? I've heard the story about Capital Hill but I haven't seen it in print.

Do you know when Wheeler came to Okalhoma City? I read in the Daily Oklahoman a few weeks ago about Stiles park possibly being the oldest park in the city. However, there are no documents to verify it.

When I was a kid Dad would drop us off in Capital Hill and we'd go to one of the theaters, i.e. Knob Hill, Yale, or Redskin.

Prunepicker

P.S. Is there an option I can activate that will reduce the size of the signatures or possibly turn off the html so they'll only be in plain text?

Doug Loudenback
11-26-2005, 04:17 PM
Prunepicker? How is it that you DO that? :tiphat:

Sorry. Devil made me do it!

Lots of web resources exist for researching Oklahoma City. My own pages deliberately focus on "downtown" Oklahoma City which consist more of images than verbal historic detail, though that type of detail is mixed in now and then at the particular images that I have located additional resources (e.g., Braniff building or Colcord building). There's always more to learn, and none of us know all there is to know.

As far as Capitol Hill (capitOl, not capitAl) is concerned, here's a nice aritcle about that from the Metropolitan Library System: http://webinfo2.mls.lib.ok.us/okimages/okimages.asp?WCI=ViewEssay&WCU=000000027. Many other "text" articles are located there ... look over the website and you'll get how to look for such articles.

BTW, very often, specific links to the Metropolitan Library System pages within OTHER website's website's pages, like this one, or in my own, don't get you immediately there ... so ... if the targeted page doesn't open "on 1st click", after the general page opens, click your "Refresh" button and the targeted page should then open).

At my own website, which is mirrored here at OkcTalk, if you want "vintage" downtown OKC stuff, click either http://www.dougloudenback.com/downtown/vintage/vintage.htm if you want a "vintage" introduction, or here, if you want to work from a map of downtown Okc: http://www.dougloudenback.com/downtown/vintage/oldmap.htm

The OKC Metropolitan Library's historic stuff starts here: http://webinfo2.mls.lib.ok.us/okimages/okimages.asp?WCI=BeginSearch ... be sure to notice that, in addition to images, references exist to topical articles there ... it's a very good resource ... the articles there are nicely written and fascinating, if you like Okc history ... and they are not limited to "downtown" as my pages are.

Maybe this will help get you started on researching the fascinating history of Oklahoma City!

Prunepicker
11-26-2005, 11:03 PM
Doug,
Thanks for the help. I don't know why I spelled Capitol Hill with an 'a'. Good grief. I'll get looking.
Prunepicker

Prunepicker
11-26-2005, 11:09 PM
Hey,
While searching how to edit my account I just found in the options a way to turn off the signatures. It's much better now.
Prunepicker

Kerry
01-18-2006, 06:37 PM
One name - Linda Soundtrack.

I was pretty young but everyone in my family hated her commercials although they didn't bother me. Then again - I was 8.

FRISKY
10-31-2007, 08:58 PM
How about those Southwest Ford commercials. “That’s Incredible…no that’s Southwest Ford.” The original pitchman (can’t remember his name) was killed in a plane crash and he was replaced by another man who stayed with it for a long time...

The "pitchman" was Curt Scwartz. He died in a Delta crash at DFW in 1985.


Hello folks! This is my first post on this board. I hope you will forgive me for bumping this old thread…

I arrived at this site while searching for a 1985 Southwest Ford commercial “The High Plains Drifter, drifting into SW Ford” that showed an ultralight airplane landing in the parking lot. I was assisting Gene Bledsoe owner of the Hang-Glider Ultralight Shop and one of my best friends to film the commercial.

I can’t forget our conversation with Mr. Schwartz as the film crew was building the commercial from several different cuts of video they had filmed earlier in the day. Mr. Schwartz asked if we flew those “things” all the time, to which we replied, “Yes, it’s a lot of fun. Want to try it?” His response was, “You guys are crazy. You won’t ever catch me flying in one of those things. I won’t fly in anything smaller that a 747.” His statement was ironic because he was killed a few weeks later in the Aug. 2 crash of Delta Flight 191 in Dallas.

metro
11-01-2007, 08:46 AM
Enterprise Square USA, aren't they still around too? I could of swore I drove by there a year or so ago and was surprised they are still around. Isn't it in Edmond? If they're still open they sure don't do any advertising. They should take advantage of OKC's renaissance if they are.

Martin
11-01-2007, 08:49 AM
enterprise square has been closed for nearly ten years. the building still exists, and i believe that oc now uses it as administration offices.

-M

naash1a
06-03-2008, 10:27 PM
No one so far has mentioned the railroad bridge over western that was the target of all the graffiti at homecoming. An artsy friend of mine and her pals scraped off paint and made jewelry out of the layers before it was torn down.

~The Spirit of Oklahoma song was also sung by Scott Springfield of Yukon.

Tall Paul jingle brought me to this site during a surf session! Anyone have a link or a place where the jingle can be downloaded as the BC Clark Jingle?

BC Clark is proudly pressed onto my Ipod! Along with the commercial!

FRISKY
06-04-2008, 02:02 AM
The old Northside Soccer Fields before Lake Hefner Parkway was builtThere were a couple of gun ranges located north and east of Hefner lake before the soccer fields were built.

solitude
06-04-2008, 02:11 AM
There were a couple of gun ranges located north and east of Hefner lake before the soccer fields were built.

Was that the same place where they had some big national skeet shooting competitions?

FRISKY
06-04-2008, 02:28 AM
Was that the same place where they had some big national skeet shooting competitions?Yes it was. I forgot all about that. It was a very nice skeet range, but shut down when they started building houses on the land to the east.

Prunepicker
06-04-2008, 01:48 PM
No one so far has mentioned the railroad bridge over western that was the target of all the graffiti at homecoming. An artsy friend of mine and her pals scraped off paint and made jewelry out of the layers before it was torn down.

It seems to me that the bridge was not destroyed but saved. Wasn't it used as a public grafitti art during a downtown arts festival in the late 80's?

Prunepicker

Chefdavies
06-04-2008, 01:57 PM
I also grew up in edmond. Born in 77. I remember my lil neighborhood (the trails), when nothing was around. My baby sitter road her horse to my house. There was nothing but a field where "trails north" is now. We use to shoot off model rockets there. I remember going to the playless cashways every saturday. I remember when "steve's rib" was just a wooden shack outside the then safeway, then moved inside, then moved into their own place in the strip next to the homeland, and now to their new location. I remember being able to "cruise" and "hangout" on broadway. My spot was the godfathers. I remember "pumps" on broadway, or when there was a MacDonalds on broadway. I remember having to decide whether to stay at North or wait a year and go to Santa Fe. Glad I stayed at north. Oh so many memories.

naash1a
06-05-2008, 05:55 PM
Movie theatre have come to mind.

The May Theater on 16th & May, Now an antiques store. Saw Purple Rain there!
The Continental, now a church or was after being a theater
MacArthur Park 4, next door to Big Eds. Is Big Eds still there?

I read the mention of Linda Soundtrack but never her son SLUGGO!

Combined with the it's not Christmas till B.C. Clark hits the air thread...What about the OTASCO commercials with "Hi! I'm Timothy! See this and more exciting toys at Otasco!"

Any one remember the straight out of a mystery novel story when they drained the duck pond at Lake Hefner and found the car with the body from the 50's?

Read in one of the listings above about the movie TWISTER. The props department from the movie came to my grandmothers garage sale in Guthrie and bought a few things. One being an old oak toilet seat! Alas we have not been able to spot it on screen.

I am an in-betweener...School in Guthrie k-6 then moved to OKC , A big miss of mine is the 89'er day parade. Remember the buzz when it was broadcast live with Bob Eubanks was the M.C.

Naash1a <-- (me) Is an Okie native now living in Las Vegas.

naash1a
06-05-2008, 05:59 PM
Movie theatres have come to mind.

The May Theater on 16th & May, Now an antiques store. Saw Purple Rain there!
The Continental, now a church or was after being a theater
MacArthur Park 4, next door to Big Eds. Is Big Eds still there?

I read the mention of Linda Soundtrack but never her son SLUGGO!

Combined with the it's not Christmas till B.C. Clark hits the air thread...What about the OTASCO commercials with "Hi! I'm Timothy! See this and more exciting toys at Otasco!"

Any one remember the straight out of a mystery novel story when they drained the duck pond at Lake Hefner and found the car with the body from the 50's?

Read in one of the listings above about the movie TWISTER. The props department from the movie came to my grandmothers garage sale in Guthrie and bought a few things. One being an old oak toilet seat! Alas, we have not been able to spot it on screen.

I am an in-betweener...School in Guthrie k-6 then moved to OKC , A big miss of mine is the 89'er day parade. Remember the buzz when it was broadcast live with Bob Eubanks as the M.C.

Naash1a <-- (me) Is an Okie native now living in Las Vegas.

Prunepicker
06-05-2008, 07:57 PM
Any one remember the straight out of a mystery novel story when they drained the duck pond at Lake Hefner and found the car with the body from the 50's?



The duck pond mystery was from something that happened @ the mid 60's. The Cadillac was an early 60's. 1963 comes to mind.

Prunepicker

veritas
06-05-2008, 08:01 PM
I also grew up in edmond. Born in 77. I remember my lil neighborhood (the trails), when nothing was around. My baby sitter road her horse to my house. There was nothing but a field where "trails north" is now. We use to shoot off model rockets there. I remember going to the playless cashways every saturday. I remember when "steve's rib" was just a wooden shack outside the then safeway, then moved inside, then moved into their own place in the strip next to the homeland, and now to their new location. I remember being able to "cruise" and "hangout" on broadway. My spot was the godfathers. I remember "pumps" on broadway, or when there was a MacDonalds on broadway. I remember having to decide whether to stay at North or wait a year and go to Santa Fe. Glad I stayed at north. Oh so many memories.

Grew up in Edmond too. You brought back some memories. I remember going on bike rides with my dad in the late 80's. If you went west on 15th past Santa Fe too far you were in the country. I also remember the Braum's in that area that got struck by lightening at 15th and Santa Fe and burned down.

For that matter, I remember seeing the '86 tornado go through Kelly Park (watched it out my dad's car window as we rushed to a storm shelter in downtown Edmond) right behind where the Braum's was.

Played soccer at the soccer fields off of Danforth and remember the dirt roads throughout the complex.

I was the crown bearer boy (6 years old at the time) for the 1987 Edmond Memorial Homecoming and I remember seeing what seemed like hundreds of high school students hanging out at 2nd street and Broadway by the old Safeway parking lot after the homecoming parade.

Good times.

yukong
06-05-2008, 08:34 PM
naasha1:

The continental is gone. they tore it down a few months ago. I hated to see it go. that was the coolest theatre when it opened. That screen was huge and wrapped around the sides.

the_Mont
06-05-2008, 09:47 PM
I was born at Hillcrest in Tulsa in 1981. We moved to Dallas soon after, but my mom and brother and I moved back to Oklahoma City in 1990.

I remember sitting on the old bleachers at All Sports Stadiums (that's what it was called, right) watching the 89ers. First game I ever went to they gave away mini wooden bats to all the kids. Baaaad idea!

I used to love going to Blazers' games at the "incomparable" Myriad. See if you remember these names- Simoni, Perry, Filiatrault (sp?), Smokin' Joe, Dupont, Boudreau, St. Jacque (and his huge underbite), Gomes, etc. Who did the YMCA at the second intermission, and remeber that Dancing Puck on the outdated Jumbotron? Easily the best game in town during the mid '90s. Jiminy Christmas!

I used to love to go to Spaghetti Wharehouse every year on my birthday. It was my favorite place! And those huge meatballs...

Anybody remember before the food court at Quail Springs Mall before they added the AMC Cinema? The current sitting area was non-existent. In it's place was a garden (at least it was supposed to be a garden), and a huge ground to ceiling glass wall occupied where the front of the theater is currently located. First movie I saw at AMC 24 was "You've Got Mail." I remember it was the place to be on Friday/Saturday nights in high school.

Remember the drag racing down 39th? Do they still do that?

I remember when Oklahoma City's only ice rink was Iceland in Bethany. What a dump. We played high school hockey there my senior year. Now we have Blazers Ice Centre and Arctic Edge (which just built a second rink on it's west side). Iceland was turned into an antique wharehouse a few years ago.

Anybody listen to 95X?

solitude
06-05-2008, 09:56 PM
naasha1:

The continental is gone. they tore it down a few months ago. I hated to see it go. that was the coolest theatre when it opened. That screen was huge and wrapped around the sides.

Great theater. naasha1 said the Continental was a church after its days as a theater were over. Actually, she's thinking of the Westwood on 23rd street, the Continental was never a church.

bornhere
06-05-2008, 10:26 PM
Is it just my imagination, or was there a chain of BBQ restaurants here at one time called Underwood's? That may have been some other place I lived.

Update: Never mind. I Googled it... it was someplace else.

But does anyone remember "Jimmy Jo's New Old-Fashioned Spaghetti Warehouse in the Cedar City Shopping Center"?

naash1a
06-05-2008, 10:42 PM
Great theater. naasha1 said the Continental was a church after its days as a theater were over. Actually, she's thinking of the Westwood on 23rd street, the Continental was never a church.

Uhm er aaaahh Just to clear up here Naash1a is a boy! :tiphat:

yukong
06-05-2008, 10:42 PM
Yes...there was an Underwood's BBQ in OKC. One was over on N. Penn. North of 23rd. Was great BBQ.

Prunepicker
06-05-2008, 11:47 PM
naasha1:

The continental is gone. they tore it down a few months ago. I hated to see it go. that was the coolest theatre when it opened. That screen was huge and wrapped around the sides.

You probably remember seeing movies in Pan-a-Vision or Vista Vision. They were shot for a wide screen and the curve eliminated distortion at the edge of the screen. The cinema experience was far better than what we put up with today.

sigh...

Prunepicker

Prunepicker
06-05-2008, 11:49 PM
Is it just my imagination, or was there a chain of BBQ restaurants here at one time called Underwood's?

There was one on S.W. 59th on the north side of the street near Western.

Prunepicker

zuluwarrior0760
06-06-2008, 04:33 AM
The duck pond mystery was from something that happened @ the mid 60's. The Cadillac was an early 60's. 1963 comes to mind.

Prunepicker

During construction of the Hefner Parkway, a culvert under a walking path was widened, causing the duck pond on the south side of hefner to drain, revealing the roof of a car. People notified authorities, they pulled it out and two skeletons were inside the mud filled car. This was 1990. The car was a 1963 Cadillac Fleetwood.

They traced the tag to a Robert G. Elston, whose wife, Margery Elston and his daughter 18 year old Melinda Elston had been missing since Nov 21, 1963. It didn't make big news in OKC because of something that happened in Dallas the next day.

The FBI thought the husband might have done away with her because she had just inherited big money. He took out a 2000.00 reward ad in the paper. His daughter the article said walked with a limp and spoke with a lisp, she was blonde and about 5'4, the mother was 5'5" with curly brown hair. She left her glasses at home took the daughter and they went to a store and to a friend's house in Nichols Hills. She was wearing 4,000.00 in Jewelry and had $700 in cash.

When they found the car, the husband was still alive and was notified in Arizona where he lived with his second wife. He was in his late 70's at that time.
He was relieved but couldn't come back due to poor health of his wife.
Their daughter came to OKC and buried the two after a wake at Hahn Cook Funeral Home.

The case was the oldest on the books in Warr Acres where they lived at the time.
There was alcohol in the car, but who knows if she was drunk. Sounds as if she just ran off the road into the pond......they actually drug parts of the lake, but not the little pond, back in 1963......

Oklahoman archives are great......

bornhere
06-06-2008, 09:39 AM
Yes...there was an Underwood's BBQ in OKC. One was over on N. Penn. North of 23rd. Was great BBQ.

Well, that would have put it right in my neighborhood. I Googled Underwood's after I made that post, discovered it was a chain in several other cities, and thought I must have remembered it from elsewhere.

It was founded in Brownwood, TX, btw, where it is still in business today.

jawgie
06-06-2008, 12:40 PM
I was just thinking about the China House restaurant in the Lakeside shopping center on north May. (wish I could find Chicken Fried Rice like theirs in town) Draggin' Quiks and Hollies
Being "dropped" when you went steady
Jump City
Johnnie's hamburgers on Britton
Orange Julius drive in
Football games at Taft Stadium
Goin out to the "caves" and being scared silly
Wedgewood
My Mustang
Going to the Blue Goose when I wasn't old enough
Wow we had fun back in the day!!!

Prunepicker
06-06-2008, 02:32 PM
Jump City

Goin out to the "caves" and being scared silly

Going to the Blue Goose when I wasn't old enough


What was Jump City?

Where were the "caves"?

I lived down the street from the Blue Goose. You could see it from the porch.

Prunepicker