View Full Version : Shepard Mall is not a Mall anymore !!
lt14life 07-26-2010, 03:27 PM Ok I had to go into Shepard Mall last week because Cox Comunications has setup an Office their, I had not been in this Mall since the Late 80's and you know it was really sad because their were alot of great stores their and I had alot of memories as well . remember Hubbards Western wear ? Furrs ? & alot more . Anybody else have favorite stores and good memories ??
papaOU 07-26-2010, 03:54 PM Ok I had to go into Shepard Mall last week because Cox Comunications has setup an Office their, I had not been in this Mall since the Late 80's and you know it was really sad because their were alot of great stores their and I had alot of memories as well . remember Hubbards Western wear ? Furrs ? & alot more . Anybody else have favorite stores and good memories ??
Used to go there with there and sing at Christmas time in Jr High.
gen70 07-26-2010, 05:46 PM I always hit El Charritos the Squire Shop and the theatre there back in the 70's early 80's.
Generals64 07-26-2010, 06:23 PM I remember Hubbard's Western wear but, wasn't another western wear store before that?....Bought my wife her Wedding present in Shepherd Mall.....she still has it...I don't think it fits anymore....(Shouldn't have said that right?).....That TG&Y store was the highest volume per Cubic Ft. in the TG&Y store chain.....
BBatesokc 07-26-2010, 07:42 PM My step dad was one of the lawyers that helped open the mall back in the 60's and he worked a deal to have his office there until the 80's. I remember hanging out there as a little kid after school, waiting for him to get done with work so we could go home. I must have seen 100 movies at the theatre and spent 100's of dollars in the arcade. My favorite store though was a small hobby store because I liked to build models and paint plastic army men. My favorite mall dinner was a hot dog and Orange Julius!
lt14life 07-26-2010, 08:45 PM Oh yes I remember the Hobby Store it was great and the Arcade was also fun. Also I dont remember what was before Hubbards western wear I thought that was all it had ever been. and yes the Movie theater was nice , I took a date their to see Close Encounters of the Third Kind .
ljbab728 07-26-2010, 11:14 PM One of my most vivid older memories of Shepherd Mall was going to the inaugural ball for Gov. Hall in 1971 which was held there. The entire central mall area was used. And I'm not trying to start a political thread so don't bother telling me your opinions of David Hall.
Thunder 07-27-2010, 04:51 AM Ahhh, you just made me remember! Yeah, I remember Furr's being there, but I didn't realize it was gone after all these years.
I was not born when David Hall was Governor. Was he a Republican?
Btw, it is still a mall... Just a different kind of mall. :-)
Kerry 07-27-2010, 07:39 AM It was the first place I saw live models in the store windows instead of manikins. A lot of cash must have been flowing throught there to pay people to stand and do nothing.
lt14life 07-27-2010, 11:54 AM One of my most vivid older memories of Shepherd Mall was going to the inaugural ball for Gov. Hall in 1971 which was held there. The entire central mall area was used. And I'm not trying to start a political thread so don't bother telling me your opinions of David Hall.
I Remember David Hall and that must have been pretty cool , I would liked to have been their.
lt14life 07-27-2010, 11:57 AM True, but I think I would call it an Office park before a Mall.
Generals64 07-27-2010, 07:10 PM My wife and i were at the Inaugural Ball for David Hall. Received a coin with his likeness on it as a souvenir. Still have the Coin.....Saw him on OETA the other night.....Still have the coin...........HMmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
Bigrayok 07-27-2010, 09:03 PM David Hall was a Democrat and was cool if you think going to prison for taking bribes is cool LOL. I used to like going to El Charrito/El Chico and the movies at Shepard Mall. My mom used to take me to JC Penney and Dillard's to shop for clothes. I liked Bonaparte's hamburgers and the clocks from different countries at the Bentley Hedges Travel Agency.
Bigray in Ok
ljbab728 07-27-2010, 11:19 PM Am i remembering wrong or wasn't the Dillard's store originally a Kerr's? And for those wondering about David Hall being a Democrat or Republican they are probably too young to remember that Oklahoma had no Republican governors from statehood until Bellmon in 1962. We didn't know what Republicans were.
Tritone 07-27-2010, 11:35 PM Yes it was Kerr's before it was Dillard's Brown Duncan which then became simply Dillard's. Remembe when Shepard Mall's exterior had the various colors of glazed bricks?
papaOU 07-28-2010, 01:15 AM David Hall, Oklahoma,
He's for all Oklahoma,
He's what it takes to make our country strong;
David Hall, Oklahoma,
He's for all Oklahoma,
What Oklahoma needs is David Haaallllll......
Generals64 07-28-2010, 08:24 AM David Hall, Oklahoma,
He's for all Oklahoma,
He's what it takes to make our country strong;
David Hall, Oklahoma,
He's for all Oklahoma,
What Oklahoma needs is David Haaallllll......
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You didn't really just sing that did you????...You made it up...Correct????? Naw, David Hall just got caught....
osu cowboy 07-28-2010, 10:06 AM Great place to take a date to a movie. I bought the ugliest red sports coat ever at the Squire shop. CHHS either had our prom upstairs when I was a Jr(70) or I went w/girlfriend to KiYi's spring formal there, can't remember which. Hobby shop was great.
Generals64 07-28-2010, 10:50 AM When that Hobby Shop went out of business, I bought the last of their inventory. Don't remember the name of the shop however...Getting Old....
papaOU 07-28-2010, 03:03 PM Great place to take a date to a movie. I bought the ugliest red sports coat ever at the Squire shop. CHHS either had our prom upstairs when I was a Jr(70) or I went w/girlfriend to KiYi's spring formal there, can't remember which. Hobby shop was great.
We had our 1972 prom upstairs. Was that over J.C. Penny's? Can't remember what store was on that end. Know where the theater, TG&Y, El Charrito, and the hobby shop were, but that's about it. Never really went there that often.
AAC2005 07-28-2010, 03:53 PM A lot of cash must have been flowing through there to pay people to stand and do nothing.
Not to draw any correlation or conclusions, but has anyone mentioned that it's mostly State and Federal Agencies at Shepherd Mall, now...just sayin'...
:bright_id
PennyQuilts 07-28-2010, 04:59 PM My first job was at the theatre for minimum wage - $1.25 an hour. I thought I was RICH. The manager of the theatre was a toad looking man - extremely ugly, as was his wife - but their children were gorgeous. We never could figure it out. I loved the smell of that popcorn and learned to add and subtract in my head.
My best girlfriend and I would go over to El Charrito and split a Defeat (and eat chips and tortillas). We also always got an ice cream cone down on the east end. Sang there at Christmas.
Good times...
Generals64 07-28-2010, 05:29 PM My first job was at the theatre for minimum wage - $1.25 an hour. I thought I was RICH. The manager of the theatre was a toad looking man - extremely ugly, as was his wife - but their children were gorgeous. We never could figure it out. I loved the smell of that popcorn and learned to add and subtract in my head.
My best girlfriend and I would go over to El Charrito and split a Defeat (and eat chips and tortillas). We also always got an ice cream cone down on the east end. Sang there at Christmas.
Good times...
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Add and Subtract in your head???? that's what those cash registers were for....How many times did you burn your arm on the Popcorn kettle while testing the popcorn???? I think my arms is permanently scarred from that....Someone had to test the popcorn to make sure it was done right....right?????
PennyQuilts 07-28-2010, 05:43 PM ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Add and Subtract in your head???? that's what those cash registers were for....How many times did you burn your arm on the Popcorn kettle while testing the popcorn???? I think my arms is permanently scarred from that....Someone had to test the popcorn to make sure it was done right....right?????
Definitely got burned but I learned pretty fast - so no scars for me <vbg>.
lt14life 07-28-2010, 06:20 PM I Hope im not coming off as being mean here but I was wondering if anybody else remembered the guy that was always hanging out at the Mall. He was a short white man with dark hair and always wore a cowboy hat and smoked a cigar, he was mentally handicapped and also carried a walkie talkie and always tried to talk on it but their was never anybody on the other end. This was in the early and mid 80's.
Generals64 07-28-2010, 06:57 PM I Hope im not coming off as being mean here but I was wondering if anybody else remembered the guy that was always hanging out at the Mall. He was a short white man with dark hair and always wore a cowboy hat and smoked a cigar, he was mentally handicapped and also carried a walkie talkie and always tried to talk on it but their was never anybody on the other end. This was in the early and mid 80's.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ +++++++++++++++++++
I think that was "Prunepicker" and he was trying to get PapaOU to answer the other walkie talkie...
papaOU 07-28-2010, 08:47 PM I Hope im not coming off as being mean here but I was wondering if anybody else remembered the guy that was always hanging out at the Mall. He was a short white man with dark hair and always wore a cowboy hat and smoked a cigar, he was mentally handicapped and also carried a walkie talkie and always tried to talk on it but their was never anybody on the other end. This was in the early and mid 80's.
Was he not a security officer?
PennyQuilts 07-28-2010, 09:04 PM ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ +++++++++++++++++++
i think that was "prunepicker" and he was trying to get papaou to answer the other walkie talkie...
hahaha!!!!!!!
ljbab728 07-28-2010, 11:40 PM ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Add and Subtract in your head???? that's what those cash registers were for....How many times did you burn your arm on the Popcorn kettle while testing the popcorn???? I think my arms is permanently scarred from that....Someone had to test the popcorn to make sure it was done right....right?????
Surely you haven't forgotten when cash registers didn't do the addition and subtraction for you when making change. You had to know how to do it in your head.
RealJimbo 07-28-2010, 11:53 PM Surely you haven't forgotten when cash registers didn't do the addition and subtraction for you when making change. You had to know how to do it in your head.
No offense intended, but making change is a matter of counting. Start with the amount of the sale and count up to the amount tendered, using currency as your counting medium. Right Gen64?
RealJimbo 07-28-2010, 11:55 PM ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ +++++++++++++++++++
I think that was "Prunepicker" and he was trying to get PapaOU to answer the other walkie talkie...
Little Mike - He passed away a few years ago. He was famous in his time.
ljbab728 07-29-2010, 12:33 AM No offense intended, but making change is a matter of counting. Start with the amount of the sale and count up to the amount tendered, using currency as your counting medium. Right Gen64?
Are you disagreeing with me about something? If so, I can't tell what it is.
Prunepicker 07-29-2010, 12:38 AM Shepherd Mall hasn't been a mall for a long time. I remember
seeing the daughter for the first time. She was an absolutely
gorgeous brunette. She probably still is.
I was dumb.
lt14life 07-29-2010, 01:03 PM Ok so he was Little Mike ? Anyway he was a real nice guy and I just wondered if anybody new him. By the way what was he famous for ?
Our family moved to NW 24th and Villa in 1962, when Shepherd Mall was still Shepherd's field. I watched 'em build the mall from start to finish -- lots of fun for an 8-9-10 year old kid.
IIRC, the banquet facility was above Kerrs/DBD/Dillards; the space above Penneys was all storage. I don't remember a western wear store, but do (vaguely) remember the hobby shop. There was also a big sporting goods store (Millers?), Mr. Buck (men's clothing store), and two TG&Y stores. I saw 2001 at the theater when the film opened in '67(?).
On a more somber note, I remember the OCU student who commited suicide sometime in the early 70s by driving his car at high speed across the parking lots from Sears straight into Mr. Buck's. They put up planters after that to prevent it from happening again.
PennyQuilts 07-30-2010, 10:32 PM On a more somber note, I remember the OCU student who commited suicide sometime in the early 70s by driving his car at high speed across the parking lots from Sears straight into Mr. Buck's. They put up planters after that to prevent it from happening again.
I remember when they put in the planters but didn't know the story behind it. That is sad.
I remember when they put in the planters but didn't know the story behind it. That is sad.
Yep. Obviously, it was well after midnight one night, when the parking lots were vacant. He started from around the Sears auto center and gunned it; drove straight into the wall behind Mr. Buck's on the N. side of the mall, just north of the corner where the mall turns from E-W to N-S. I seem to remember it happening in the early 70s, but may have been as early as '68 or '69.
Phoenix59 05-09-2011, 01:53 AM Lots of Shepherd Mall memories here. I also was a member of school choruses that used to sing there at Christmas. I took my first guitar lessons at Jenkins' Music Store. I fished for trout in the portable fishing pools that they used to have periodically. I had a very uncomfortable moment at the theater, sitting next to my mother watching The Godfather when I saw the first bare breasts I had ever seen in a movie. I used to take my girls there for corn dog on a stick in the mid-80s. Bought my first PC at a little computer store there in about 1990 -- an IBM XT clone, 1MB RAM, 32MB hard drive, and 4-color CGA video -- $1200!
yukong 05-09-2011, 11:25 AM Being BB37's little brother, I too remember seeing the mall being built. As a kid, we were mall rats before it was cool to be a mall rat. Spent countless hours wondering around that wonderful place. I loved the hobby shop. Bought many a thing there. Sang there every christmas with the school choir from Taft. Went there every day when they brought in the dolphin show and sat in the splash zone. They did that dolphin show every summer for years. It was so neat. Always went to the small TG&Y in the north wing. Loved to eat at El Charito/El Chico. To this day, when I hear a pneumatic impact wrench, it takes me back to those days listening to the JC Penney auto center. We were right across Villa from that auto center and I could see it from our front porch. All day every day...you could hear that distinctive sound. So, when I hear it now, I see that auto center in my minds eye. I would dare say, during summer vacation, I was in that mall every day except Sunday. Mainly because back then, most stores were closed on Sunday. As a little kid, I was always scared of the huge mouse trap on the front of a women's store in the north wing. And I remember the banquet facility above Dillards Brown Duncan.
And of course, the most mysterious thing was the Shepard sisters mansion on the island between the mall and Sears. That huge house and estate. The excavated the lot all around that house and so in the back, its lot sat at least 8-10 feet above the parking lot. As kids, it was the rumor that they sisters were crazy and that if a kid ever got into the place, they never came out. That lot had what was claimed to be the first two story house in OKC or Oklahoma, I don't remember. It is now on the Harn Homestead. But it was behind the mansion. The lot was covered with trees. It was just the coolest looking place. Anyway, one day a couple of friends and I climbed the hill, went under the 8 foot fence and looked around the place. We didn't get too close to the mansion, but we did go into that old, original two story house and went up stairs. It was just a junk house at that point. But we though it was cool. And we made it out alive. The sisters didn't find us. I would love to see a picture of that old mansion. Wish we had taken some.
Prunepicker 05-09-2011, 12:35 PM I took my first guitar lessons at Jenkins' Music Store.
Who was your teacher?
Achilleslastand 05-09-2011, 01:16 PM I believe the hobby shop was actually called "the hobby shop" if memory serves correctly. The used to have quite the collection of dioramas and assembled and painted models. Shame places like that are virtually non existent today.
rcjunkie 05-09-2011, 06:52 PM I Hope im not coming off as being mean here but I was wondering if anybody else remembered the guy that was always hanging out at the Mall. He was a short white man with dark hair and always wore a cowboy hat and smoked a cigar, he was mentally handicapped and also carried a walkie talkie and always tried to talk on it but their was never anybody on the other end. This was in the early and mid 80's.
He lived on NW 24 just W. of Villa, played semi-pro ball with his brother. He passed aways about 12 years ago.
Snowman 05-09-2011, 07:13 PM http://www.deadmalls.com/malls/shepherd_mall.html
DEADMALLS.COM FEATURE:
SHEPHERD MALL: OKLAHOMA CITY, OK
Kent Ahrens' Commentary:
Posted April 25, 2005 (user submitted)
Shepherd Mall sits on NW 23rd St between Penn and Villa. At one time, this was the place. Now, it's a place. However, unlike many dead malls, Shepherd Mall is experiencing a renaissance, but not as a shopping center. My memories of Shepherd Mall are relatively few as I spent very little time there. However, I do remember it as having a T G & Y (later McCrory's) as an anchor and a Gold Mine video arcade.
Shepherd Mall is a relatively small mall. However, prior to the mid-80's, it was in the center of town and had very little competition. Oklahoma City has the distinction of being America's largest city in terms of land area. So, malls are relatively far apart. Penn Square Mall, just two to three miles north at Penn and Northwest Expressway, was Shepherd's nearest competition, and it struggled for quite some time.
Penn Square, however, had a plan. It completely reinvented itself and remodeled to become a class A mall. It became larger than Shepherd Mall, fancier than Shepherd Mall, and stores couldn't get there soon enough. Also, 50 Penn Place sits just across the street from Penn Square and has even more shopping, most of it the "ritzy" type shops. By the late 80's, the corner of Penn and Northwest Expressway became a shopper's paradise in Oklahoma City. Shepherd Mall and Penn Square Mall simply could not co-exist that close together.
Also, the rapid growth of Edmond and far north Oklahoma City put Shepherd Mall's relatively central location at a major disadvantage. Quail Springs Mall, more than 10 miles north of Shepherd Mall on Memorial between May and Penn, became their place to shop. As housing prices in Oklahoma City dropped, more and more people flocked north leaving Shepherd Mall in an increasingly blue collar area.
As Shepherd Mall's tenants began to leave, foot traffic also declined. Parking lot spaces became easier to find, and, finally, Shepherd Mall became a ghost town. However, that did not last long. On April 19, 1995, Oklahoma City was changed when Timothy McVeigh drove up to the Alfred P Murrah Federal Building and detonated a fertilizer bomb in the back of a Ryder truck killing 168 people. The Oklahoma City bombing is probably what saved the life of Shepherd Mall. When you drive by today, the parking lot is packed, but there are no shoppers.
The various divisions of the government began to separate out their locations after the bombing. Shepherd Mall's central location was attractive to state, county and federal government, and government offices began opening there. The Social Security Administration, which was virtually wiped out in the bombing, has its offices in Shepherd Mall as well as a memorial to its employees who were killed in the bombing. The mall today boasts a few federal government offices and many state, city and county offices. It also has a charter high school and a call center for a major corporation. On the business side, there aren't many businesses left, though the mall still solicits them in the few open spaces it has. There is a Subway and a few restaurants that cater to the employees and students at the mall. Those restaurants have seen mixed results. Jaramillo's Mexican Restaurant recently closed while most other restaurants close for the day at 3 PM. Subway has regular Subway hours and is probably the only area that is open after 5 PM. Shepherd Mall is about as dead as it gets for shoppers, but it's a classic case of a dead mall success story as it now has another use.
metro 05-09-2011, 08:20 PM Ok I had to go into Shepard Mall last week because Cox Comunications has setup an Office their, I had not been in this Mall since the Late 80's and you know it was really sad because their were alot of great stores their and I had alot of memories as well . remember Hubbards Western wear ? Furrs ? & alot more . Anybody else have favorite stores and good memories ??
No offense, but it hasn't been a real mall in 2 decades. Do you get out much, lots has changed in OKC since then. If not been out much, we could suggest lots of places to make sure to visit and see the transformation.
Martin 05-10-2011, 08:42 AM no offense, metro, but you're harping on a post made nearly a year ago. do you get around this forum much? if not, we could suggest lots of threads for you to visit. -M
Thunder 05-10-2011, 09:06 AM Shepard Mall is still a mall. Not quite retail mall anymore, but obviously a business mall with very little retail, such as gift shops (if any is still there).
jn1780 05-10-2011, 02:38 PM Has the old Farmers Insurance space been filled yet?
Filifan 05-10-2011, 06:25 PM Originally Posted by lt14life
Ok I had to go into Shepard Mall last week because Cox Comunications has setup an Office their, I had not been in this Mall since the Late 80's and you know it was really sad because their were alot of great stores their and I had alot of memories as well
No offense, but it hasn't been a real mall in 2 decades. Do you get out much, lots has changed in OKC since then. If not been out much, we could suggest lots of places to make sure to visit and see the transformation.
The late 80's was 2 decades ago
Phoenix59 05-15-2011, 06:33 AM Who was your teacher?
God, I have no idea. We're talking about sometime around 1971 or so. It's been a while. :cool18:
Snowman 05-15-2011, 02:26 PM Has the old Farmers Insurance space been filled yet?
The top floor is about 75% full and the rest being remodeled which looks like a requirement for a lease, the bottom floor is completely empty.
sherrid1970 05-19-2011, 08:31 AM his name was George, we called him Cowboy. He thought he was mall security and the mall let him think that..........wow, how times has changed...... now they would just cart him away. he lived with his parents and they dropped him off every morning for "work". now.......question for you....my husband and I were up talking 80's for hours and got stuck on this........ we're missing a store..... Mccrory's.....then footlocker, Oak tree.....a few in between then ?????..... it was a teenish cool clothing store really similar to Oak tree........ anyone know the name???
Achilleslastand 05-19-2011, 03:37 PM I can picture the store but the name escapes me.......
capt_john_97 06-03-2011, 07:44 PM Okay am I crazy? Didnt Bob Tayar have a Bonaparte's in there early 70's maybe. I loved going to "The Hobby Shop" After they closed I went to Game Shop at Northpark then on 23rd and Meridian. I used to date a girl that worked in the JC Penney's at Shepard Mall. When I made it back from Desert Storm she was there and that was my first stop!
bluedogok 06-03-2011, 07:54 PM There was a Bonaparte's in there that I remember.
capt_john_97 06-03-2011, 10:06 PM yay!! I'm not crazy!!
Prunepicker 06-03-2011, 10:59 PM Bonaparte's was at the west entrance of the mall.
Willb 09-26-2013, 11:52 AM I think it was in '69 or '70, when I was little, we used to go out there and look around. If my sister and I behaved ourselves, we'd get to go to the ice cream store, near the restrooms and mall offices.
I took my wife out there a few years ago, to look around at the place (she had never been there), and she needed to use restoom. While I was waiting for her, another lady came out, and I said: "Well, I guess I'm about 30 years too late for an ice cream, huh?"
Prunepicker 09-26-2013, 06:49 PM There was a Bonaparte's in there that I remember.
The real (LOL) Bonaparte's was on 39th Expressway. It was part of
my Friday night cruise. It was on par with the Charcoal Oven.
rezman 09-26-2013, 10:00 PM ""On a more somber note, I remember the OCU student who commited suicide sometime in the early 70s by driving his car at high speed across the parking lots from Sears straight into Mr. Buck's. They put up planters after that to prevent it from happening again.[/QUOTE]""
I remember that as well. It was actually on the west side of the mall. The person was driving a Mustang and came in on Villa side of the Mall and hit the wall.
MWCGuy 09-30-2013, 02:00 AM Shepard will always have special memories for me. That was the first time I remember seeing Santa Christmas 1981. I asked for a Tyco Train Set and it was there Christmas Morning.
When I went to visit my grandparents, we went to church every Sunday at St. Francis of Assisi on NW 18th. After church, it was lunch at El Chico and shopping at Shepard Mall and Sears. One of my favorite things about Sears was the old fashioned candy counters their stores used to have. I remember the smell of roasted peanuts and popcorn. Occasionally my grandparents would stop by and and buy few pounds of chocolates, taffy and mints for their candy dishes. Good Times.
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