Is there anyone in Guthrie who offers tours of the city? I'd be interested in touring the old capitol building, the Masonic Temple, the tunnels, etc. if possible.
Anyone know anything?
Is there anyone in Guthrie who offers tours of the city? I'd be interested in touring the old capitol building, the Masonic Temple, the tunnels, etc. if possible.
Anyone know anything?
Not sure, but I grew up in Guthrie and would enjoy that tour.
Here is the url for the trolley:index
Last edited by Marko; 06-13-2007 at 06:38 AM. Reason: The tab just said "index"
Might want to look in here also: Shop Guthrie!
I think Kent Denham at Guthrie Bicycles offers rental bikes and tour maps. Super nice guy!
The masons will deny the tunnels exists. Good luck finding them.
There are tunnels in Guthrie?
There are tunnels in Guthrie. In other cities they are called storm sewers.
When they re-did the football stadium you could see the tunnel that ran north under the road. It was bricked up though. I have been told a lot of them have been either bricked up or concreted in due to instability. I think it would be neat to tour them.
Tunnels for what? Secret Mason stuff? What is the deal with the Masons anyway?
No, the tunnels were built in the pre-statehood era. Rumor has it, they were used for many things -- like getting the politicians from the capitol to the brothel unseen
A UCO prof wrote a book about them a short while back.
Jman, that bricked-up area under the road was formerly the visiting team's dressing room. Both teams had dressing rooms there, one on each side, until the mid-sixties when a new dressing room was constructed at the south end of the field. The visiting team still had to use the room under the street until the school system could afford to build another dressing room at the south end. The old rooms were then bricked closed because of safety issues. As I mentioned previously, the only tunnels in Guthrie are the storm sewers and figments of an active imagination.
Midtowner,
You can call the Guthrie Chamber of Commerce. I think there is a lady, Janine Handler, who is giving tours.
Well Marko if I hadnt walked this and seen it with my own eyes I wouldnt believe it either. I do not know the extent of the tunnels though.I do know one of the shops around the blue belle has a basement that there is a door facing south out of the basement but if the door is opened it goes nowhere because it was bricked up. An elder gentleman told me that it was because in the 60's the kids would get into the tunnels and break bottles and drink and smoke etc.... and parts of the ceiling started caving so the city came in and made everyone brick the access areas up due to stability issues. Sounds logical and if you read up on some of the history of the brothels etc,,,, they refer to underground walkways to get to the brothels and to the saloons.
its ashame that they are mostly bricked up though.
Since we love to talk about rumors, here's one for you. I heard the tunnels were used by gangters in the 20's to 40's and that we had a bad problem with the mafia back then. I read it in some book, I'll see if I can't dig it up.
Well it wasn't the sixties but I was one of those kids in the seventies! LOL! and I can guarantee you there is nothing to it. Cruzer was one of those kids in the sixties and like he said...
Also in the mid eighties, I and several others created a SOT in order to investigate the alleged tunnels under the Temple, here again, NOTHING.
The only tunnels under Guthrie are STORM DRAINS!
Well, except for the underground city the Chinese built back in the twenties...LOL!
The first rule of the Guthrie tunnels is that you don't talk about the Guthrie tunnels.
wow... poe reference, ftw. somebody paid attention in lit class. -M
Absolutely! One of my good friends has a carriage service there and here is the url to their website: Love is Carriages They are super people and very intertaining as well...(he used to work as a stunt driver in movies, I understand and can share some colorful stories with you...and I don't think that there is anyone that lives anywhere around there that knows as much about the local History than he does...you won't regret taking a tour with them, and tell them Bobbi said hi.
Too old NOT to care
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