UKDEB
Moderator Emeritus
- Joined
- Jul 7, 2000
- Messages
- 11,840
I seldom post on the boards these days, so I hope you'll indulge me in what is a pretty selfish exercise. An explanation is warranted as to why I'm resuming reports of a trip we took more than 4 years ago. For posterity's sake, I'd always intended to record the details of our first Oklahoma trip in their entirety. For reasons I won't bore you with, I hit a minor obstacle when I reached this point and what should have been a temporary hiatus became a gaping chasm. My motivation has been roused by the promise of a third trip in 2015. Most importantly, our very good friend and trip host has begged me to finish them on many, many occasions. She got so desperate that she told me it was all she wanted for her birthday. In 2012!
Index of previous instalments
Sunday, 1st August, 2010
[Yesterday saw us driving Route 66 from Tulsa to Oklahoma City, with an overnight stay in the capitals regenerated Bricktown area on the eastern edge of Downtown.]
Im sound asleep when the alarm goes off at 7:15 and, unusually for me, its a real effort to drag myself out of bed. Even so, were ready to meet Susan for our complimentary breakfast at the pre-arranged time of 8:30. Its a buffet which includes eggs, pancakes and waffles all freshly prepared to order.
With a big dinner planned this evening and the unexpected bounty of free breakfast, well no longer be needing our scheduled lunch stop so some juggling of the itinerary is in order. With Irma's Burger Shack no longer in play, the geography lends itself to bringing this afternoon's activities forward. The free trolley wed planned to use today doesnt start running until 10am, so we walk the three blocks up, three across to the Museum of Art only to discover that it doesnt open until noon on Sundays. Susan and I had both been meticulous in checking information of this type at the planning stage and had formulated the itinerary accordingly, but it hadnt occurred to either of us to record the details. A quick look at the information we have to hand reveals that the National Memorial Museum a couple of blocks away has an even later opening time of 1pm. The National Cowboy Hall of Fame isnt within walking distance, but opens at 10am, so we have little choice but to head back to the hotel and pick up the car. Still, its been a very pleasant stroll.
Its a short, straight-forward drive to The National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum in northeast OKCs Adventure District.
This is a magnificent 4,000-square-foot space with seven exhibition galleries housing more than 28,000 Western and American Indian pieces reflecting the spiritual, social, economic and cultural influences embodied in American Indian art. The grounds of the 18-acre site include a series of outdoor sculptures nestled among trees, flowers, ponds and running streams, creating a beautifully tranquil and utterly pleasant outdoor setting.
Museum Entrance
Welcome Sundown by Hollis Williford
Code Of The West by Herb Mignery
What we didnt realise at the time was that this sculpture had been dedicated just a week before our visit.
End Of The Trail by James Earl Frazer
The monumental, 18' plaster sculpture was created for San Francisco's 1915 Panama-Pacific International Exposition and received the exposition's Gold Medal for sculpture. Although Fraser hoped his masterpiece would be cast in bronze and placed on Presidio Point overlooking San Francisco Bay, material restrictions during the First World War made the project impossible. Instead, in 1920, the city of Visalia, California, obtained the discarded statue and placed it in Mooney Park, where it remained, in a gradually deteriorating condition, for 48 years. In 1968, the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum acquired this original plaster statue, restored it to its original magnificence, and made it a focal point of the museum.
The design of the housing allows the statue to reflect the varying colors of dawn, sunrise, mid-day, dusk, and sunset
Index of previous instalments
Sunday, 1st August, 2010
[Yesterday saw us driving Route 66 from Tulsa to Oklahoma City, with an overnight stay in the capitals regenerated Bricktown area on the eastern edge of Downtown.]
Im sound asleep when the alarm goes off at 7:15 and, unusually for me, its a real effort to drag myself out of bed. Even so, were ready to meet Susan for our complimentary breakfast at the pre-arranged time of 8:30. Its a buffet which includes eggs, pancakes and waffles all freshly prepared to order.

With a big dinner planned this evening and the unexpected bounty of free breakfast, well no longer be needing our scheduled lunch stop so some juggling of the itinerary is in order. With Irma's Burger Shack no longer in play, the geography lends itself to bringing this afternoon's activities forward. The free trolley wed planned to use today doesnt start running until 10am, so we walk the three blocks up, three across to the Museum of Art only to discover that it doesnt open until noon on Sundays. Susan and I had both been meticulous in checking information of this type at the planning stage and had formulated the itinerary accordingly, but it hadnt occurred to either of us to record the details. A quick look at the information we have to hand reveals that the National Memorial Museum a couple of blocks away has an even later opening time of 1pm. The National Cowboy Hall of Fame isnt within walking distance, but opens at 10am, so we have little choice but to head back to the hotel and pick up the car. Still, its been a very pleasant stroll.







Its a short, straight-forward drive to The National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum in northeast OKCs Adventure District.
From the museums website:
The National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum is Americas premier institution of Western history, art and culture. Founded in 1955, the museum in Oklahoma City collects, preserves and exhibits an internationally renowned collection of Western art and artifacts while sponsoring dynamic educational programs and ground-breaking scholarly research to stimulate interest in the enduring legacy of our American West. More than 10 million visitors from around the world have sought out this unique museum to gain better understanding of the West: a region and a history that permeates our national culture.
This is a magnificent 4,000-square-foot space with seven exhibition galleries housing more than 28,000 Western and American Indian pieces reflecting the spiritual, social, economic and cultural influences embodied in American Indian art. The grounds of the 18-acre site include a series of outdoor sculptures nestled among trees, flowers, ponds and running streams, creating a beautifully tranquil and utterly pleasant outdoor setting.
Museum Entrance


Welcome Sundown by Hollis Williford

Code Of The West by Herb Mignery
What we didnt realise at the time was that this sculpture had been dedicated just a week before our visit.

End Of The Trail by James Earl Frazer
The monumental, 18' plaster sculpture was created for San Francisco's 1915 Panama-Pacific International Exposition and received the exposition's Gold Medal for sculpture. Although Fraser hoped his masterpiece would be cast in bronze and placed on Presidio Point overlooking San Francisco Bay, material restrictions during the First World War made the project impossible. Instead, in 1920, the city of Visalia, California, obtained the discarded statue and placed it in Mooney Park, where it remained, in a gradually deteriorating condition, for 48 years. In 1968, the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum acquired this original plaster statue, restored it to its original magnificence, and made it a focal point of the museum.



The design of the housing allows the statue to reflect the varying colors of dawn, sunrise, mid-day, dusk, and sunset
