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Tuesday, 27th July
I get up at 7am to make trip notes as Im starting to get a bit behind. Susan joins me at 7:45. Having showered and otherwise prepared ourselves for the day, we head for View Acre Baptist Church at Berryhill to allow Susan to vote in the primaries. [For those not familiar with the US electoral system, this is where individuals choose from the General Election candidates nominated by their preferred party.] Duty done, we swing by Sweetie Pies in Sand Springs to pick up the lens cap we inadvertently left there a couple of days ago, before moving on to Ollies Station at Red Fork, for breakfast.
Situated on Route 66 as it passes through Tulsa, and just a couple of miles from Susans house, Ollies is a railroad-themed mom and pop style café; one of many visited by John Lasseter and the Disney Pixar crew on their Michael Wallis led scouting junkets for Cars.
Red Fork is also the site of Tulsas first oil well.
Following some brisk retail stops at Atwoods (a local firm of some 50 years with a typically fascinating history) and Wal-Mart, we make our way to Sonic Drive-In for drinks. [Now a national chain, Sonic has both its roots and its headquarters in Oklahoma. It still uses carhops.]
We order drinks Limeade (made with fresh limes), Cherry Limeade (fresh limes and cherries) and a Tropical Fruit Smoothie (low-fat yoghurt and fresh fruit pieces including pineapole, mango and banana) using the gift card which Sister Sally gave to Susan as an Easter gift (with the intention that we would make good use of it on our travels).
Tuesday, 27th July
I get up at 7am to make trip notes as Im starting to get a bit behind. Susan joins me at 7:45. Having showered and otherwise prepared ourselves for the day, we head for View Acre Baptist Church at Berryhill to allow Susan to vote in the primaries. [For those not familiar with the US electoral system, this is where individuals choose from the General Election candidates nominated by their preferred party.] Duty done, we swing by Sweetie Pies in Sand Springs to pick up the lens cap we inadvertently left there a couple of days ago, before moving on to Ollies Station at Red Fork, for breakfast.
Situated on Route 66 as it passes through Tulsa, and just a couple of miles from Susans house, Ollies is a railroad-themed mom and pop style café; one of many visited by John Lasseter and the Disney Pixar crew on their Michael Wallis led scouting junkets for Cars.
"Ten running trains, from G-scale to Z-scale, run the length of the dining room through scale model cities and towns. Our walls and shelves abound with railroad memorabilia. Ollie's is located in old downtown Redfork on a corner that's been here since 1894. Railroads, oil wells, and the famous Route 66 all merge at Redfork Corner to give young and old a touch of history and some of the best food in Oklahoma.








Red Fork is also the site of Tulsas first oil well.

Following some brisk retail stops at Atwoods (a local firm of some 50 years with a typically fascinating history) and Wal-Mart, we make our way to Sonic Drive-In for drinks. [Now a national chain, Sonic has both its roots and its headquarters in Oklahoma. It still uses carhops.]
Following World War II, Troy N Smith Sr, Sonic's founder, returned to his hometown of Shawnee, Oklahoma where he became employed as a milkman before deciding to work delivering bread because it wasnt as heavy. He soon purchased the little Cottage Café in Shawnee and, before long, opened a restaurant, Troy's Pan Full of Chicken, on the edge of Shawnee. In 1953, he added a small root-beer stand, the Top Hat Drive-In, to the property.
After realising that the stand was averaging $700 a week in the sale of root beer, hamburgers and hot dogs, Smith decided to focus on the more profitable drive-in and scrapped plans to expand the restaurant into a fancier steakhouse.
Originally, Top Hat customers would park their automobiles anywhere on the gravel parking lot and walk up to place their orders. However, on a trip to Louisiana, Smith saw a drive-in that used speakers for ordering. He reckoned that he could increase his sales if he could control the parking and have the customers order from speakers at their cars. Carhops would then deliver the food to the customers.
Smith borrowed several automobiles from a friend who owned a used car lot, to establish a layout for controlled parking. He also had some so-called "jukebox boys" come in and wire an intercom system in the parking lot. Sales tripled immediately and his little root-beer stand was a huge success.
Charles Woodrow Pappe, an entrepreneur, stopped by chance at the Shawnee drive-in and was very impressed. He got out of his car and began to take measurements of the stalls, trying to determine why they were not all the same size, assuming that it was an essential ingredient of the business plan. Smith came out and introduced himself and explained that the stalls were different sizes simply because different-sized automobiles had been used when he laid out everything. The two men hit it off and, in 1956, negotiated the first franchise location in Woodward, Oklahoma. By 1958, two more drive-ins were built in Enid and Stillwater, Oklahoma.
Upon learning that the Top Hat name was already trademarked, Smith and Pappe changed the name to Sonic. The new name worked with their existing slogan "Service with the Speed of Sound". After the name change, the first Sonic sign was installed at the former Top-Hat Drive-In located in Shawnee. Because the first Sonic sign was installed there, the Shawnee location has been considered to be the first Sonic Drive-In. The original sign can still be seen in Shawnee.
We order drinks Limeade (made with fresh limes), Cherry Limeade (fresh limes and cherries) and a Tropical Fruit Smoothie (low-fat yoghurt and fresh fruit pieces including pineapole, mango and banana) using the gift card which Sister Sally gave to Susan as an Easter gift (with the intention that we would make good use of it on our travels).

