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Thread: Childhood Memories of OKC

  1. #151
    Prunepicker Guest

    Default Re: Childhood Memories of OKC

    Quote Originally Posted by mranderson View Post
    When we moved to Oklahoma City in 1960, there was a place called Katz where Mayfair Market is now. Plus, my mom shopped at both Spartan's and Atlantic. Spartan's was across from the fairgrounds, and Atlantic was in Economy Square. They merged, forming Spartan-Atlantic, then folded. And, yes. I remember Elmwood. We went there all the time.

    I bet there are a lot of southside natives that remember Dodson's.
    We thought Atlantic-Mills and Spartan were the greatest stores in the world. Jim's IGA was our grocery.

    I remember Dodson's very well. Was the grocery store on the corner called 'Big Value'? We were members of the Hillcrest C.C.

    Katz was there? I'm trying to see the sign. I think I'm only seeing the downtown store on the corner. I don't remember that part of Mayfair Village. J.C. Penny's, Rothschild's and B.C. Clarks were in that SW section of the center as was OTASCO.

    Are there any photos on the web of these areas?

    Prunepicker

  2. #152
    Prunepicker Guest

    Default Re: Childhood Memories of OKC

    Quote Originally Posted by writerranger View Post
    Hart's took the entire building where the tailor shop and Aladdin Books are today. It was a small cafeteria, mid-late 60's I believe.

    Mayfair Village was sold to an out-of-state investor last year. In fact, the investor is who recently refused to renew the lease of Mayfair Market (even at the Williams offer of double the rent!). They accepted the bid from CVS for the land. They will be tearing it down (permits already issued) and building yet another cookie-cutter CVS
    The barber shop has been there since 1958. It's the only original shop in the center. I still don't remember the cafeteria.

    I'm wondering if Gene Warr is still in charge of his properties. He's very old. That's the first time I ever remember a piece of his property being sold to anybody.

    Mayfair Village was in awful shape. When he put up that new facade around 1988 he hired the cheapest contractors he could find. The wiring was a rat's nest and not much better afterwards. It's a wonder the place hadn't burned to the ground.

    Prunepicker

  3. Default Re: Childhood Memories of OKC

    Quote Originally Posted by Prunepicker View Post
    The barber shop has been there since 1958. It's the only original shop in the center. I still don't remember the cafeteria.

    I'm wondering if Gene Warr is still in charge of his properties. He's very old. That's the first time I ever remember a piece of his property being sold to anybody.

    Mayfair Village was in awful shape. When he put up that new facade around 1988 he hired the cheapest contractors he could find. The wiring was a rat's nest and not much better afterwards. It's a wonder the place hadn't burned to the ground.

    Prunepicker
    The barber shop was always there, you are right. I am going to check the old Yellow Pages at the Downtown Library about some of these places. This discussion has raised my curiosity about my own memory. I know Katz was there at one point, and Hart's - I'm going to check that out. Otasco was in the SE corner with the garage doors facing May Avenue. I know that because my Grandfather worked there. As for the Warr family selling Mayfair Village - it was last April. Here's an article about Mayfair Village shutting down:

    Store's closing ends era seniors worry about losing community

    By Trisha Evans
    Business Writer


    Pat Miller isn't scared of very much anymore — age has a way of shattering timidity. But she is afraid of losing a community and way of life.

    She's not alone. Other seniors who live close and shop at Mayfair Market say they will be lost when the more than 50-year-old grocery closes next month.

    "There are people who are just devastated,” Miller said. "It's like losing an arm.”


    Many seniors now walk to the store and others don't feel safe driving on major streets to get to other stores, she said.

    Store co-owner Jeff Williams doesn't know who will serve the elderly residents who come to the market for carry-out service, small size and post office. The store also delivers groceries to several who are shut in, he said.


    But the decision is out of his hands. The land was leased to CVS. The building will be torn down and a pharmacy will be built.

    A California investor bought the family-owned Mayfair Village shopping center in April. Williams said he offered to pay double in rent, more than $10,000 a month, in order to keep the store. But his offer wasn't sweet enough.
    "We could have offered to triple our lease, but CVS would have still outbid us,” Williams said. "I'm sad. I hate it that we have to leave.”
    Drugstore wars?


    Williams and nearby residents both say the grocery store was caught in a competitive war between CVS and the Walgreens across the street.


    CVS officials say similar demographics drew them to the area, not their competitor. The company denies they are responsible for the grocery store going out of business.

    "The property became available and we took the opportunity,” CVS spokesman Mike DeAngelis said. "Economically, it's very hard for grocery stores to survive in that small a footprint.”


    Nonetheless, the issue is an emotional one.

    "There have been tears shed on the floor. Some of these people have worked here for 30 years,” Williams said. "I've got customers in their 80s and they've been shopping here their whole lives.”


    For 93-year-old Juanita Schwarberg the store is one-stop-shop. She banks at Union Bank next door and picks up stamps at the post office.

    Since she doesn't drive on highways anymore, her options are limited to the SuperTarget nearby, which doesn't have a full line of groceries and is too big, she said.

    "I'm just burned up about this,” she said. "We're losing all of our good grocery stores.”


    Longtime employees like Earla Miles are also disappointed, but many will commute to Del City or Choctaw to work in Williams' other stores.
    "I feel bad for the customers,” Miles said. "I know a lot of the customers. It's just hard to see it go.”


    Local residents recently organized two community meetings at Central Presbyterian Church to protest the decision and voice concerns with city officials and a CVS representative.


    "There's nothing CVS could have given us except a grocery store,” Miller said.


    She said residents want fresh meat and produce and to see familiar faces and neighbors in the aisles. A grocery store has a way of tying a community together, a community she said is already starting to unravel.

    "If we have to go elsewhere to get groceries, we'll probably go elsewhere for everything else,” she said. "It's destroyed the family neighborhood. We're lost no matter what.”


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  4. Default Re: Childhood Memories of OKC

    This thread sure makes me feel young.

  5. Default Re: Childhood Memories of OKC

    Here's the Oklahokman article relating to the Warr family selling 3 shopping centers, including Mayfair Village:

    Timing was right for family's sale of Mayfair Village
    April 28, 2006
    Richard Mize; Real Estate Editor


    A CALIFORNIA investor bought Mayfair Village, family-owned since developed in the 1950s, and two other high-profile shopping centers this week in a single $30.1-million deal.

    Mayfair Village had been in the hands of the Warr family - for whom the city of Warr Acres is named - since C.B. Warr developed it in the 1950s on both sides of May Avenue between NW 47 and NW 50.

    Mayfair Village fetched $13.5 million. Midland Plaza at Independence Avenue and Northwest Expressway brought $9.05 million. Market Place Shopping Center at 33rd Street and Boulevard in Edmond sold for $7.55 million.

    The sale of Mayfair Village to an out-of-state owner will come as a surprise to some, but it is a sign of the times.

    California money is worth so much more in Oklahoma that such deals have become commonplace. The buyer was Bernard Rosenson of Woodland Hills, Calif. He could not be reached for comment.

    "It was a good deal for the sellers. They got far more than what the replacement cost is. The cap rates are low, below market," said Paul Ravencraft, retail property specialist with Price Edwards & Co., which handled the deal.

    Capitalization rates measure a rental property's value by dividing net operating income by price. Cap rates are low in Oklahoma compared with the West Coast because property values here are comparatively low, making Oklahoma a good place to park capital leaving a higher-price market.

    The buyer had money coming out a 1031 tax-free exchange allowed under Section 1031 of the Internal Revenue Code. The law allows "like-kind" exchanges of investment property free of capital gains taxation under certain circumstances.

    "He had to place some money. There's just not that many of these kinds of deals to wrap your arms around," Ravencraft said, noting that the three-property transaction - involving three separate owners - was unusual.

    It was the right time to sell, said Kory Warr, whose grandfather C.B. developed Mayfair Village and whose father, Gene, led the family business in new directions during his tenure. Kory Warr said the sale represents another major shift in emphasis for the family business.

    "Given where we are in the real estate market right now, and given the age and location of the property, we feel this sale represents our opportunity to get the most value out of this asset," he said. "The sale of Mayfair will enable us to reposition the company for the future by shifting our focus to value-creation through development rather than through management of mature properties.

    "God willing, we will reinvest the cash we take out of this deal in developments that will be stable and profitable in the long term."

    Asked whether it was difficult to sell the property his grandfather developed and his father maintained for so many years, Warr said, "Sentimentality is profitable only to greeting card companies."

    ---------------------

  6. #156

    Default Re: Childhood Memories of OKC

    Man, there are lots of things here brining up memories for me...

    I grew up in SW OKC, and Dodson's was the place to go for a fancy lunch after church, if my dad (who basically hated church) would let us go. I remember my standard lunch: veal cutlet, mashed potatoes with cream gravy, and chocolate ice-box pie. I can still remember the sound of the organist in the background as the smells from that serving line wafted over the dining area, and the "clink-clink-clink" of real silverware hitting real plates.

    One of the most fun memories I have of Dodson's as a kid...during the summertime, my mom and I would just about always go pick up her mom and we'd spend the day running around town. One day, we got a wild notion to go have some Dodson's chocolate ice-box pie, so we went there, bought an entire pie, took it back to my grandmother's house, and ate the whole cotton picking thing right there. It was a luscious and memorable indulgence as we sat at my grandmother's Duncan-Fife dining table in her too-small house and laughed out loud at our collective gluttony. What makes it all the funnier is that my grandmother could stand sideways and disappear; she never weighed more than 90 lbs as long as I knew her, and she ate every kind of food that would be considered "illegal" today while living into her late eighties.

    A standard summer morning for my mom and me would be to pile in the car, head to TG&Y where I'd sometimes grab a new package of Bugs Bunny comic books, a new set of View Master reels, Matchbox cars, or maybe a coloring book and crayons. We'd probably then head over to Sears on SW 44th to either pick up or return some sort of catalog order, usually clothes, and a wonderfully pleasant lady named (if memory serves) Mrs. Garnstead almost always waited on us. I'd stroll over to the sporting goods area where they always had Pong set up...and you could grab the scent of the nuts and popcorn coming from the candy center just down the corridor (not many people realize Sears used to have one).

    The TG&Y on 74th was as much an event as it was a place to shop. It was so huge; records at one end, furniture and TV's in the other, photo studio, snack bar, and pharmacy in the middle...just next to Jim's IGA. A grzzly old guy named Homer Brock owned the Radio Shack store that used to be in the east end of that center. A big storm rolled through one day in 1973 and blew down the Southern Hills Shopping Center sign - flat to the ground, the debris running parallel to Penn.

    I remember when Crossroads first went under construction, and the first early steel framework got blown away by a small tornado and had to be rebuilt, and I remember how cool it was for something like Crossroads to be so close to my house! And the "Le Mans Speedway" was just unreal with its bumper cars and pinball machines...Emmer Brothers spanned both floors on the west end just before you got to Penny's, Napoleon Nash was just outside of Dillard's, and John A. Brown opened where Macy's sits now....

    okay, okay, I'm blathering...lots of great memories coming back...

    -soonerdave

  7. #157

    Default Re: Childhood Memories of OKC

    What a fun read. I was on Foreman Scotty "with a cute pixie haircut." The ultimate was to be there on your birthday, you got to sit on Woody, the horse.

    I moved to OKC in 75 from Shawnee because "there was nothing to do".

    I worked at the TG&Y National office until they folded in 1985. Saw Iron Butterfly on Paseo and remember Alan Merrell Chev. and Linda Soundtrack.

  8. Default Re: Childhood Memories of OKC

    Quote Originally Posted by SoonerDave View Post
    okay, okay, I'm blathering...lots of great memories coming back...
    -soonerdave
    No, no, no! A lot of what is posted on this board is "blather," but I love to the nostalgia threads and read the memories of others early days in Oklahoma City. Did Dodson's use a xylophone to summon staff for people who needed help with their trays? SoonerDave, that was great stuff, thanks for sharing. You know, some of my great early memories also involved TG&Y in one way or another. I remember mostly being in the dime stores, and then when they opened their "TG&Y Family Centers" they seemed HUGE.

    ----------------

  9. #159

    Default Re: Childhood Memories of OKC

    writerranger, thanks for the encouragement

    I don't think Dodson's used a xylophone. I believe the lady at the end of the serving line who prepared your ticket (you didn't actually pay until you left) just rang a bell when someone needed assistance.

    No, there's never going to be anything like TG&Y again, although in the five-and-dime arena, Walgreens comes awfully close...it was really sad to see later management come in and try to make TG&Y something it wasn't, and it literally killed the entire chain. It was so, so sad. I worked at a TG&Y as a stock boy, and it's a miracle I didn't get fired for one stupid thing I did. I was pulling layaways, and one day I was told to go get an unfinished desk out of storage for a customer. I went to the storage area (a miserably hot place on the east end of the center, basically surrounded by just sheet metal and not one breath of air in it), found the desk, and took it back to a conveyor system to get it downstairs. Well, the desk was just barely more than a couple sheets of thin plywood stapled together, so when I put it on the conveyor and hit the switch, the belt tore the side of the desk off!!! I was horrified. Fortunately, the manager took pity on me and just had me get another one, and someone showed me how to load it properly...

    Heck, I had the good fortune of having been on Foreman Scotty TWICE. Magic Lasso, Buffalo Nickels, "Cannonball," just all too cool. Talk about the glory days of local television; it was awesome - the Circle 4 Ranch. Does anyone here remember going to the fairgrounds to get their Secret Decoder Cards from Foreman Scotty to send messages to bypass The Count? And the "Control Center" with "teletransporter" he built that I realize now, thirty years
    later, was supposed to look like the bridge of the Enterprise....he played all kinds of fun games - Polka Dot, The Friendship Wheel, and in fact I *still* have a Channel Master transistor radio I won from Foreman Scotty *and it still works perfectly*. Not many folks realize that Danny Williams, who played Xavier T. Willard (Willie), is also the brother of former WKY TV meteorologist Jim Williams.

    HoHo on KOCO was their answer to Bozo the Clown, and I got to see him in person once; what a sweet and gentle man he was. He never talked down to kids, never treated them like idiots (as most kid-oriented TV does these days) he just had fun showing their hand-crayoned pictures on camera, trading jokes with Pokey the Puppet, and talking to the dog named "Dog." He'd show cool movies on his "Tempus Levitator," and give away Tootsie Roll banks and cans of "Suga Duga," which was nothing more than flavored table sugar (banana, berry, and a few others come to mind). HoHo, played by a man named Ed Birchall, was about as opposite a contemporary kid-oriented TV personality as you can get.

    Channel 9 never really had any kid-themed shows, at least not that I remember. They always had Wayne Liles and Bill Hare early in the morning with their Evergreen Farm Report, and even though I had no clue what they were, I always knew the price of "Barrows and Gilts" (which I'm sure I spelled incorrectly), mixed in between Mr. Magoo cartoons.

    Shifting slightly away from TV, does anyone remember the Shakey's Pizza restaurants here in town? There used to be several. The one we used to frequent was over on S. Western, and they had the most marvelous pepperoni pizza anywhere - I've never tasted anything quite like it since. The atmosphere was awesome, with its blue-and-red-keyed rinky-tink player piano and dark-hewed tables and giant pitchers of soft drinks; man, it just didn't get any better than Shakey's. The remanants of an original Shakey's building is still around over on SE 29th in Del City, under the name of "Round Up Pizza."

    -soonerdave

  10. #160
    Prunepicker Guest

    Default Re: Childhood Memories of OKC

    Quote Originally Posted by SoonerDave View Post
    And the "Control Center" with "teletransporter" he built that I realize now, thirty years
    later, was supposed to look like the bridge of the Enterprise....
    I swear it was used during 3D Danny and that was in the 50's. 3D was over just after 1960.

    HoHo on KOCO was their answer to Bozo the Clown... he just had fun showing their hand-crayoned pictures on camera, trading jokes with Pokey the Puppet, and talking to the dog named "Dog."
    The dog's name was Queenie. I know who she was named after but swore to never tell.

    Channel 9 never really had any kid-themed shows...
    Weren't Kaptain Kangaroo (nat'l syndicate) and Miss Fran from Storyland (local) on 9?

    ...does anyone remember the Shakey's Pizza restaurants here in town?
    Shakey's was great. They had an all you can eat buffet with fried chicken. I'd stuff myself on pepperoni pizza and fried chicken. OH! And those potatoes! We went to the one on S. Western, too. I went to the one on N.W. 39th most often.

    Who played the organ at Dodson's?

    Prunepicker

  11. #161
    Prunepicker Guest

    Default Re: Childhood Memories of OKC

    Quote Originally Posted by SoonerDave View Post
    ..Sears on SW 44th to either pick up or return some sort of catalog order, usually clothes, and a wonderfully pleasant lady named (if memory serves) Mrs. Garnstead almost always waited on us.
    Ahh, the days when employees worked on commission. Not that most weren't nice people but if they treated you badly you'd ask for someone else and they'd lose $$$ on the sale. The good people almost always stayed. They could make good money.

    ...and you could grab the scent of the nuts and popcorn coming from the candy center just down the corridor (not many people realize Sears used to have one).
    The Sears on NW 23rd. We'd enter from the west doors and walk right into that smell. Chocolate Stars and Popcorn. I still smell it. THAT is a memory the wife and I talk about quite often.

    Prunepicker

  12. #162

    Default Re: Childhood Memories of OKC

    I remember
    - The Paul Mead insurance commercials
    - Shopping at Rothchilds, Anthony's, Sanger Harris, AMC, TG&Y, OTASCO, Gibson's
    - When we still had Dairy Queen and Taco Tico here
    - Taco Boy (I think the same place)/ Del Taco in Del City
    - the thrift store at about 12th and Janeway in Moore (had a funny name- don't remember what it was. I think the place closed in the late 80s.)


    And some things I wish I remembered-
    - was there a Fuddrucker's or something with a similar name somewhere on the southside?
    - What was where the Ford Center is, before the Ford Center was there?
    - What happened to Dave of Dave and Dan on KXY?

  13. Default Re: Childhood Memories of OKC

    Quote Originally Posted by Prunepicker View Post
    I swear it was used during 3D Danny and that was in the 50's. 3D was over just after 1960.



    The dog's name was Queenie. I know who she was named after but swore to never tell.



    Weren't Kaptain Kangaroo (nat'l syndicate) and Miss Fran from Storyland (local) on 9?


    Shakey's was great. They had an all you can eat buffet with fried chicken. I'd stuff myself on pepperoni pizza and fried chicken. OH! And those potatoes! We went to the one on S. Western, too. I went to the one on N.W. 39th most often.

    Who played the organ at Dodson's?

    Prunepicker
    3D Danny even predates me. Danny Williams did it from the day WKY first went on the air until sometime in the mid 50's. I do not remember watching it. I never missed Forman Scotty.

    Ho-Ho's dog was taught to not respond to her name. She would only go to him if he called her a d-o-g because she did not think she was a dog.

    I remember the last time I saw Ed Birchall. He was driving down my street on the way to a gig. A friend of mine and I had just overhauled an old lawn mower engine my dad had, and I put a long pipe where the muffler was. We had six incles of snow on the ground, and Ho-Ho stopped his car, an old Edsel, took our picture with the lawn mower and asked "you guys mowing the snow?"

    Yes. "Captain Kangaroo" and "Miss Fran From Storyland" were both on KWTV, channel 9.

    Soonerdave: Based on the description of your incident, I would guess you worked at TG&Y 411.

  14. #164
    Prunepicker Guest

    Default Re: Childhood Memories of OKC

    Quote Originally Posted by Millie View Post
    - was there a Fuddrucker's or something with a similar name somewhere on the southside?
    - What was where the 'place the Hornets play', before 'place the Hornets play' was there?
    There was a Fuddruckers.

    The Continental Baking Company was where' the Hornets play' They baked Wonder Bread. Many times, maybe every year, they'd let loose a million balloons and the sky would look like a Wonder Bread loaf. Pretty cool.

    Prunepicker

  15. #165
    Prunepicker Guest

    Default Re: Childhood Memories of OKC

    Quote Originally Posted by mranderson View Post
    3D Danny even predates me. Danny Williams did it from the day WKY first went on the air until sometime in the mid 50's. I do not remember watching it. I never missed Forman Scotty.
    When we moved here from where they pick prunes, in 1958, I would watch it. It was one of the first shows I ever watched in Oklahoma. Foreman Scotty came on in 1960.

    Prunepicker

  16. #166

    Default Re: Childhood Memories of OKC

    was there a Fuddrucker's or something with a similar name somewhere on the southside?
    Absolutely. Actually, it came after a "fix-it-yourself" burger chain called Longneckers that opened up in the TG&Y parking lot. Fudd's was in the strip shopping mall on S Western where Taste of China is right now.

    Yes, mranderson, TGY 411 was where I worked....bit of irony there about the man who hired me back then - he and I are now both deacons at our church.

    Miss Fran's storytime was strictly a Sunday-only thing on Channel 9, wasn't it? Foreman Scotty and HoHo were five-day-a-week things that both stations really poured some effort into...that's why I didn't really think much about them, particularly since Captain Kangaroo was a CBS entity.

    Dunn's Dairy Queens were all over town way back when, and I sure miss them. Sad thing is that they all started deteriorating rather conspicuously in later years, and there was really only one worth visiting. The last one I know of in the central Oklahoma area was in Norman on Main Street, but it was closed and torn down over a year ago. I have NO place to get my Oreo Blizzards, although DQ's are plentiful in Texas..

    Both of the Sears stores had candy counters. Thet Sears on 44th also had a coffee shop on the south end, and it actually also had light sandwiches and snacks. Heck, that was back when Sears sold heavy furniture like dining room sets with hutches and side tables. There also used to be an Allstate booth on the left just as you entered through the west side of the store.

    The "Control Center" that Foreman Scotty used had the "teletransporter" in the middle - just a door with a couple of dials and a needle that would move from one end to the other. To the right was a set of "control screens" that listed things Foreman Scotty could show, including "Laurel and Hardy" movies, "Cartoons," and a couple other things that escape me at the moment. As I think back, it was pretty darned sophisticated (well, maybe not exactly the right word) for a local TV station.

    One other thing comes to mind - anyone remember the "Stars and Stripes" show that used to be held at the Myriad and broadcast nationwide on NBC on or about July 4th? Bob Hope hosted it, and would typically bring in a *bunch* of big name stars of that era. We actually got tickets to see it live once or twice, and it was a heck of an event.

    -soonerdave

  17. #167
    Prunepicker Guest

    Default Re: Childhood Memories of OKC

    Yes, mranderson, TGY 411 was where I worked....bit of irony there about the man who hired me back then - he and I are now both deacons at our church.
    The Mercer's had a jewelry store there. Bobby Mercer, **** Yankee, was their son, wasn't he?

    Miss Fran's storytime was strictly a Sunday-only thing on Channel 9, wasn't it?
    Miss Fran was M-F and came on @7:50am. She may have been on Sunday am but I would have been in church at that time.

    One other thing comes to mind - anyone remember the "Stars and Stripes" show that used to be held at the Myriad and broadcast nationwide on NBC on or about July 4th? Bob Hope hosted it, and would typically bring in a *bunch* of big name stars of that era. We actually got tickets to see it live once or twice, and it was a heck of an event.
    I remember when the park was dedicated. Bob Hope was at that event. It was a big deal. A friend and I went to the park later that night and after everyone had left. There were a million places to hide at that lake.

    Prunepicker

  18. #168

    Default Re: Childhood Memories of OKC

    Quote Originally Posted by SoonerDave View Post
    Absolutely. Actually, it came after a "fix-it-yourself" burger chain called Longneckers that opened up in the TG&Y parking lot. Fudd's was in the strip shopping mall on S Western where Taste of China is right now.

    -soonerdave
    Longneckers- I bet that's what I'm thinking of. I once asked my mother if she knew what the hamburger place was and she said Fuddruckers but I didn't remember it as a Fuddruckers. I guess we're both right.

  19. Default Re: Childhood Memories of OKC

    Quote Originally Posted by Prunepicker View Post
    The Mercer's had a jewelry store there. Bobby Mercer, **** Yankee, was their son, wasn't he?



    Miss Fran was M-F and came on @7:50am. She may have been on Sunday am but I would have been in church at that time.



    I remember when the park was dedicated. Bob Hope was at that event. It was a big deal. A friend and I went to the park later that night and after everyone had left. There were a million places to hide at that lake.

    Prunepicker
    Yes. I went to school with Bobby's brother, Randy, and knew Bobby fairly well then. BTW: Both of his parents are dead now. I think his mom died of cancer and his dad committed suicide. Either that or it was the other way around. Also. I usually do not correct spelling, however, this is an excption. They spell their last name M-u-r-c-e-r.

  20. #170

    Default Re: Childhood Memories of OKC

    Quote Originally Posted by Prunepicker View Post
    Re Stars and Stripes

    I remember when the park was dedicated. Bob Hope was at that event. It was a big deal. A friend and I went to the park later that night and after everyone had left. There were a million places to hide at that lake.

    Prunepicker
    Well, I'm not talking about the dedication of the Stars and Stripes park. I'm talking about an annual July 4th celebration television event that was called the "Stars and Stripes Show." It was taped at the Myriad earlier in the year, but run on or about July 4th...

    -soonerdave

  21. #171
    Prunepicker Guest

    Default Re: Childhood Memories of OKC

    Quote Originally Posted by SoonerDave View Post
    Well, I'm not talking about the dedication of the Stars and Stripes park. I'm talking about an annual July 4th celebration television event that was called the "Stars and Stripes Show." It was taped at the Myriad earlier in the year, but run on or about July 4th...

    -soonerdave
    OHHHHHH. Duh! That's different. I just remember Bob Hope was at the dedication of Stars and Stripes Park and that there was a big show, too. I guess the dedication was at the Myriad. It could have been the Fairgrounds Arena. Maybe the "Stars and Stripes Show" was the predecessor or spin off of the dedication.

    Prunepicker

  22. Default Re: Childhood Memories of OKC

    Quote Originally Posted by Prunepicker View Post
    OHHHHHH. Duh! That's different. I just remember Bob Hope was at the dedication of Stars and Stripes Park and that there was a big show, too. I guess the dedication was at the Myriad. It could have been the Fairgrounds Arena. Maybe the "Stars and Stripes Show" was the predecessor or spin off of the dedication.

    Prunepicker
    The park was as a result of the "Stars and Stripes Show." The city was so greatful to Bob Hope and NBC for choosing Oklahoma City to host it, they decided to honor him with the park. It is too bad is has deterorated since then.

  23. #173
    Prunepicker Guest

    Default Re: Childhood Memories of OKC

    Quote Originally Posted by mranderson View Post
    The park was as a result of the "Stars and Stripes Show." The city was so greatful to Bob Hope and NBC for choosing Oklahoma City to host it, they decided to honor him with the park. It is too bad is has deterorated since then.
    That's very interesting. Was the park built in 1970?

    Prunepicker

  24. #174

    Default Re: Childhood Memories of OKC

    this thread delivers. being born in '77, i remember the very last vestiges of many of these places and have often heard my folks and older brothers recount stories.

    Quote Originally Posted by prunepicker
    who played the organ at dodson's?
    i'm pretty sure it was joe dodson himself... -M

  25. Default Re: Childhood Memories of OKC

    Quote Originally Posted by Prunepicker View Post
    That's very interesting. Was the park built in 1970?

    Prunepicker
    To be honest. I do not remember what year it was built. However, it was around that timeframe.

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