DEWEY HOTEL MUSEUM FUNDRAISING BUFFET - podcast episode cover

DEWEY HOTEL MUSEUM FUNDRAISING BUFFET

Sep 12, 202314 min
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Good morning, good morning, good morning, and welcome, welcome, welcome, And it's time now for our community connection right here on Gay one, the one you trust, and we're gonna get a little bit of a history lesson today and we're gonna find out how to preserve a little bit of history here too, because we have Joe Sears and Ron Adams and both of them are here on behalf of the Dewey Hotel Museum. And welcome gentlemen. First

of all, thank you Tom, good more of you Donald. All right, Well, you know, Ron, I understand we got a little bit of a fundraiser for the hotel, but it's a very specific project, that's right. We're we're looking to try to raise about sixty thousand, sixty thousand, sixty five thousand dollars to paint the old Grand Old Lady of the Grand Prairie, the big Dewey Hotel where we do the Christmas paride from every years. Right now, now, Joe, that's a pretty what kind of paint

y'all use it? Well, they're Dewey Tel Museum is a National Register of Historic Places. Yeah, along with that come all kinds of stipulations to preserve these things. If if you're going to get grants to help preserve these things, that you have to follow their directions and they want it done precisely so that you know, it doesn't have to be done for another decade. So it is expensive. It's more much more expensive for a historical place. And

that's what we're looking at. You know, We've got thirty thirty one rooms with all the windows there's that have to be foamed and if there's any standing that takes place, it has to be done right. So expensive, Yeah, labor intense. Oh yeah, man, well you just imagine too. You gotta you gotta prime. It's great, primate and in paint, you know, yeah, I mean it's just not it's like any other house, you know. But the size of it is what makes a job, I

mean huge. And the shape. The shape. It's the first. It's a Victorian New England Victorian structure. It's the only structure of its kind in Oklahoma. It was the first structure to receive electricity in Indian Territory and it was going to be torn down in the mid sixties. I was a teenager getting ready to head off to college about that time, and they decided to turn it into a museum and they wouldn't tear it down, but a group

of Dewey citizens saved it. Yea, and thank goodness because it's it's really the cradle of a lot of our history in the area. Jake Bartles built it, and he was originally a New jerseyman who came to Kansas to test out the prairie. His family were big agricultural people, you know, and he went. He heard Kansas was very fertile. But while he was there in Kansas, the Civil War started and he joined the Union, and he was Kansas was a new neutral state. The Confederacy had told the five civilized

tribes, you're either with us or against us. You better join us because we're not going to tolerate an invasion from Kansas to Texas and Arkansas. So they placed troops up in here, and mister Bardell's was a part of the Union forces that came down here to work their nerve and just let them know

you don't have complete control of Indian territory. So this area here, interestingly, Highway sixty was called the California Highway, the California Yeah, and it hugged Kansas still does, but it kept the white people out of the middle of the Indian nations because there was really no law to protect white people. Those were Indian nations and you had no business being in there unless you were a US marshal. I think Texas Rangers were allowed to go in there.

And the laws that governed Indian territory were out of Fort Smith and the Hanging Judge, Judge Parker. It was tough times at Ridgemont highm Now you know why they call us the porch Stokers. Yeah, but there's a lot of history to the Dewey Hotel and Jake Bartle's and we just happened to be board members and working for the you know, we're of the generation the historic the Washington County Historical Society saved the old hotel back in the mid sixties. Yeah,

and it takes fundraising. So we're having a big buffet on October the seventh. Yea and Ron, where are we holding this thing? I'm sorry, where are we holding this buffet? All at the Barsville Masonic Lads? Oh, you know a lot of great meals have been half Yeah, and we've had and you know, of course I'm a I belong to the Masonic

laws. So we've helped a lot of nonprofit organizations with our breakfast that we've had out there, and uh, you know, that was something that we've always taken pride of being as charity, you know, and I'm glad that we've done so much to help the different organizations here in town. Well how much does it cost to slap on a bib and enjoy some good food? Well advanced tickets. We got him on himself for eight dollars and then at the door it's ten. And it's quite a feed for that much money.

My goodness, as that's a great proces. Yeah. Price the old fashioned Mika markets, the break caters, Yeah, we got the good we went first class. We're sure dead and uh boy, I mean we've got like Hammond beans and corn bread and bit red vegetable beak stews, chili chili. If you want a Freedo chili pie or a hot dog, we've even got that. I'm gonna line up for the Freedo pot. Yeah. And then we got the BlackBerry copper and Jerry copper yeah, and afforded cookies. Yeah.

And the community has come out, I mean, the merchants are we're having a silent auction. Now you don't have to be there to win, okay, but we're the lots of merchants are coming through and what they don't do a silent auction. They're giving rang money. And it's amazing how people want to help the old Dewey Hotel. And well, it's just it's one of the icons of the area. We can go to Dewey there it is, you know, and tourism. We know how important tourism is. You

guys see a lot of folks. Well, yeah, surprisingly, you know, I for a long time I wondered about that, and we looked at our register. There's people from all over the United States and even some foreign countries that I had a land from Turkey the other day. I sure did. Yeah. So you guys, you're talking about being ports talker. You guys are actually kind of guides there at the hotel. Yeah, but we got our rocking cheers out character. We're part of the character of that court.

We can sure come up with some story too. Well. I tell tours when they come in that this lobby is pretty much what it originally looked like. But all the history that the hotel opened in nineteen hundred and all the history events that have taken place between nineteen hundred and now we're announced in that lobby and discussed in that lobby, and both sides of all three party,

the Whigs, the Republicans. It's always faced a controversy and discussion and it's still I am amazed at something will happen and the people the discussions of it in the lobby, and I sit there thinking this is what it's all about. For a hundred years, this old lobby has you heard our American history and discussed it pros and cons and probably kicked off the porch. We have a poker room up there where one is always going to ask about that.

They told me about that that time it came up there with the TV camera they had up there. Two men have been shot in that poker room, one and drug out to die on the law. But it was built as a poker room. There's an outside room and nobody goes into the poker room until somebody comes out. And there's lots of famous people from John Wayne Lodgers, and they've even got a bed at Beair in case the old boys would get hired. They let him take an that's right, They wouldn't let

them. Can't leave yet, you know. And then they got another private bedroom a pair that they had the backstairs for for the evening round. I guess you like you know nanny who helped build that hotel. She was a chief's daughter of the Delaware Nation. She was educated and had money and it was her land alotment. And when they bring up the idea of there being you know, hanky panky going on, you gotta remember this lady started the

first Baptist church in the area. Okay, I doubt seriously she tolerated the backstair. But then again other people will say, well, she was a business wal her and Jake well and then tulor their son Joe became I meant, really a prominent you know person two with starting to do around that he did, which became the third largest rodeo in the United States attached in North

America. Yeah, yeah, and just hard to mission. You look at those pictures up there that round up the fair grounds was huge and the number of people there was one picture there I think it's for forty some a thousand people come to that rodeo. They had forty thousand people over a three day period for three rodeo in one hotel. Yeah. Well the hotel was really exotic. They had they served a wild game. They had two bakeries going

twenty four hours a day. Oh my goodness for bread. They just they had a store up there that was like a Reezers store of it's from a pretty high end for Indian territory. And it used to be in Bartlesville. And the railroad didn't come through the Bartlesville area where where mister bartles wanted it to. So he just put his store on rollers and took it to do it. Yeah, took him eighty eight days. It stayed open, and I mean it was all intact. Yeah, we're talking about a two story

mercantile, that's right. Yeah. Wow, and used oxen and brought that thing up. That's what blows my mind. Well, but when he put that, he put the store down where the Tom Mix's Museum is now, and now he was half a block from the railroad stuff. Yeah, so he had one before Bartlesville did. But do you know that old dooy Is has its own entity. It's always been its own little town. It's not a part of Bartlesville. Oh, it's always it's always been its own little

special place. And at Christmas we celebrate the small town Christmas at the hotel. Santa comes and I love so fun. And you know, I made a mistake first time I was there. I asked the lead you at the front desk, I said, I got some equipment here, y'all got an elevator. School sir, this is a historic for my bad. Yeah, I think. What's so fun an when people bring their children, Yeah, and they see like their spit tunes, you know, you tell them what

it what it is, and then the chamber pots. Yeah, oh yeah, yeah, they just kid. They flip out on it, so they don't they have no idea that at one time people had to use chamber pots. There was no modern plumbing in the hotel there until the thirties. But somebody had every day, you know, clean and empty the chamber. Imagine that job. Yeah, I hope they gave her minimum. Way, my goodness, Well, we're getting kind of skinny on time. I want to

remind everybody that we do have the fundraiser here. It's for the painting for the hotel. Then because of its historic registration, it's going to be done in a specific way, so we need a race between fifty five and sixty thousand dollars and we're doing. Boy, you're gonna be serving a lot of meals at ten bucks up pop. Yeah, but if you get them early, it's only eight bucks. And we're going to do that out at the at what Sonic Lage Sonic lawge Fry, October the seventh. What time is

that? It's the evening. It's an evening five to eight eight. We figured we figured that was going to be our best time to have it. I'll be hungry by then. Yeah. Well and all of the there's a raffle during the fifty fifty, but all of it. You don't have to be there to win. That's a good part, Okay, good thing, and we've got to carry out. It's available to read and beans for a week. Math man or mister a Dan out there at prices beating. He knows how to fix it. Oh beach is good. Now, how do

we get the tickets? Do we just stop by the hotel? You can you can stop by the by the hotel and you also buy them online through our website which is wc HS dot org or through fakesbook. Do we hit do helptel museum that way, it's said up. Okay, so you do that way too, could yeah, we might easy could come. Yeah. And then there's there's a few of us that you know, do have some sales ability, you know, and we're kind of floating around town, you

know, sell them out of pocket, you know. Well, I'm gonna tell you they're gonna go fast at eight to ten dollars. Yea, and little guys you don't have to worry about that. But well, this is gonna be a lot of fun and it's gonna be you know, a great cause. And you know, fellas stop buy here an each whole time. You got a project. Okay, thank you, thank The door is always open, and we'll see you around Christmas started. Yeah, we'll be up

there for the parade. It might even be up there for Heritage Days. I think we put we go right there. Oh yeah, that's coming up the poorteen. We watch out for the cost next weekend. Oh we don't feed along word alright, take care

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