DEWEY HOTEL - podcast episode cover

DEWEY HOTEL

Nov 27, 202317 min
--:--
--:--
Download Metacast podcast app
Listen to this episode in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episode description

The podcaster did not provide a description for this episode.

Transcript

Good morning, good morning, morning. Welcome, welcome, welcome. It's time now for a community connection and doesn't get much more community than this. I always like having Ron and Joe in here because we talked to the Dewey Hotel. We talk all kinds of things. Yeah, but this is this is a big thing, you fella, this guy going on at the hotel. You got a tour going on the next couple of days, right, we do. The holidays are upon the hotel and the Dewey Hotel Museum.

Well, it's undergone a lot of hardship over the years, and like anything, it pops back from time to time. But the COVID really got us. Yeah, but we stayed open and we came up with new ways to have to fundraise and have fun to put the focus back on the big icon. Yeah. That all the history in this area hard hard to imagine. You know that that Jake and Nanny decided to be that hotel out in the middle of the prairie with no with no homes, nothing nothing around her.

It was just truly amazing. Well, it helps to have the Delaware Tribe of Indians land allotment. I tell people that Delaware money helped build that hotel and the land and her money and Jake Bartlew's money. And Jake bartles came here in eighteen seventy three, and he would have been a Civil War a Union man. He was a New Jersey guy and family big in agriculture, and someone said the prairie was very fertile. So he comes down to Kansas and tries it out, and the Civil War starts, and he joined the

Union. And he came down into this country for the first time because this was Confederate hell Lands, and the first time he'd seen this area, and he said, you know, this is really nice, rich river bottom country. But we went back to Kansas. He met his wife, Nanny, who was the Delaware and she was the daughter of the Delaware chief, journey Cake. And he was also a preacher, you know, and she started

the first Baptist church there in Dewey. I tell people she was a member of the BBB, and the guests will say, well, what's that. I'll say, that's the better Baptist Bureau. And I tell you, can you imagine what kind of stories between the ladies happened in Nanny's parlor? Oh yeah, Nanny held it all in the party there until the church was built. Ye. Well, she loved to play music, you know, I had had a beautiful shine back then, Yeah, she did. And then

she had a pie organ, yep. And it was just unbelievable. I meant, you know how she had brought people in and carried on, you know, their little church ladies. You know, well they said the parlor at the Dewey Hotel was one of the most popular places in the area to meet anything socially happening took play. Well, she was a refined lady to

begin with. She was well educated and had gone to a college finishing school and she and you know, back in the eighteen hundreds, women were not allowed to own a business or property, and that's something but the Cherokee Nation, you know, this was all Cherokee Country, and the Delaware were a part of that area. But the Cherokees changed all that. They said, our women are going to have the same rights as the states around us.

And so when they in the eighteen seventies, somewhere they rescinded that in Indian Territory, and she and Jake Bartles got married, came down here and built that hotel to accommodate a week business. Yea, and boy they did well. They get free seed to the area farmers and then they would bring him business in the spring. He practiced the old barter system. He was a

smart man. Yeah. The thing that really amazed me though, on the top of everything else, he had a business sense to bring his mercantile store. I'm talking about a two story building from the Canty River down in Barsville and drug it all the way up to Dewey on logs and oxen. Oh that's and put it right there where now, well the Toomics Museum is. But it was just amazing one structure. They didn't take it apart or anything. Oh, they just run together. Ye put it on a track.

Yeah. Now we think of these days, that's pretty quick drive up to Dewey up on one twenty three. Yeah, that's that. And then you you take away the car, you got the oxen and logs and roll in the house. Man that they had to take about the better part of a week, if not a mo took him eighty eight days to mediate open. The store stayed open as it moved, you know. And I what really surprised me was when when we found out uh was that Bill Johnstone and Keeler

actually worked for Jake and the Mercantile store. Oh, and asked what prompted them to come to Barsville to build the Johnstone Keeler store, And that's partially what made him mad. He said, you know, I'll just take my store to Dewey, and he did with him, but you know, very popular. He had eight three eight hour shifts of breadmaking at that store around the clock. And I guess if you if you want to bread, you bought it from the Pioneer General and as fresh as fresh could be. Oh

yeah, and butter that the fairly lived upstairs of the store. And when they got to Dewey, the hotel had just been completed, and they lived at the Dewey Hotel on the second floor. But that store was opened until

the nineteen fifties. And all of those railroad piles that he had helped build the track on to get the store up there, he put them down behind the new store where the Tom Mixed Museum is, and a lightning struck it in nineteen fifty set those railroad tiles on fire with all that oil in it, and it burned the store down. Nineteen fifty oh. But when it was opened it was a reasers of its day for Indian It had everything if you wanted to shop in the area, the women found you. What was

really funny too, was up in a hotel there. Actually you think it's a toy, but they got a little who's your cabinet that's not but maybe eighteen inches tall, and then they've got a cast ironed little bit of cast

iron stove. And I always thought they were toys, but then I later had an elderly person come in and said, no, those were display models for the traveling salesman, and that they would go around to the merchants, you know that had these mercantiles and would show them what they're what they looked like, and then they had a catalog that they could order anything you wanted, you know, and then ship it a railroad down to the store. That was pretty amazing. I mean, I think that they had that kind

of enterprise, you know, going you know, to bring in. The hotel was the place to eat on Sunday afternoons that everybody went to the Dewey Hotel to eat. It was like the del Monicos of Dodge City. And you know, we discovered that there were three hundred in the records. That shows three hundred people on holidays would eat there on a Sunday afternoon, and that meant there was a line outside, a lot of tobacco chewing and wait your turn for the turkey. Yeah. Story talent, Yeah, storyteller.

Before we came up with the porchstalkers. Well, you guys been going strong for a while. Well we in bellish here and there, but you know, but we have a big activity coming up we wanted to talk about. It's we're getting ready to have the Dewey Christmas Tree Lighting sixth annual. Well, it's we're celebrating the small town Christmas. Dewey is just you know,

I was reading the other day where Dewey was. I saw the headline that said Dewey voted the third safest city in Oklahoma, and I guess it's back in the nineteen twenties, and what made it safe was the very fact that it was so isolated and friendly. It's what gave way to the cement factory

coming there. They had an airplane factory that lasted well, it was in nineteen fifteen, going strong all through World War One and an FDR was Secretary of the Navy, and he's the one that finally told the right brother the one that was left. The right brothers kept suing anyone who made an aeroplane until they pay royalties. An FDR said, they're making them in Europe.

You're holding backgress progress. We need this for the war effort. And Dewey was right in the middle of that, and so it lasted up until the early twenties and airplane factory in Dewey. So it's always been a little prosperous little town centered around that beautiful Victorian hotel. Well you know what another thing made it he was that you had Tom Mixes your night watchman there. Yeah, yeah, I wonder he. Uh. Hollywood decided that he would make

a good actor, you know, Western actor. Uh. And just it seems so funny though to look back at at all they talked not I mean, it wasn't talking, but it was a silent movie. Well, his first film was made outside of Dewey at Blue Mountain. That was film. Yeah there. Yeah, see we've been making movies for a long time around here. Yeah. Yeah, if we have now it's we need the money more than ever now. Yeah, well, we had a few. We had a few outlaws too. Oh yeah. Bonnie and Clyde often wondered if

they ever stayed there. Well, you know, let me know, Jake probably told him. They said, now you better not rob my bank. Well, we know outlaws played poker there on the third floor of the hotel. EMMITTT. Dalton, Uh, he from the Dame the Dalton. He's the only survivor of the Dalton game. When he got out of prison, he married a Martlesville woman, I think her name was Johnson, and she was totally fascinated with outlaws and and Emmett just fell head over heels for her.

And Emmett has played poker up there. She's buried in Dewey. But you know interesting the outlaws, this was outlaw country. Henry Wells the outlaw that was hired by Frank Phillips to kind of keep outlaws happy around his rim. Oh yeah, well, I was just waiting recently where Wells uh filed the plan that pretty boy Floyd was planning to kidnap Frank Phillips did that wild

eye. It's it's documented. And Wells, whether he made it up or not, he alerted the Wooler rock Rach hands that this is being planned. And of course I think he helped instigate the Outlaws and Kaltheave's reunion, which is still going on. But you know, it must have been awfully hard on the ridge back in the twenties to be living out there in the old sage of that beautiful wretch wide open. But yeah, well served his purpose very well. But I had never heard that about pretty boy Floyd before.

We just recently had a big breakfast to help out with the pain job on the Dewey Hotel. How did that go? Well, we made a little that's good, real good. Well, I'll tell you that price catering now, oh man, they're good. I mean he has got it down. It pattented well. And his fundraisers. He understands the community effort and what a fundraiser is all about. Yeah, it's not always making money as being

a good community person. That's right. The money we made on that fundraiser, the important thing is it raised awareness of the hotel, our need to keep that old building painting. There's so many restrictions. It's a historic National Historic Register. You got to fit to a narrow set of guidelines. You do and with the idea that it saves the taxpayers money down the line by keeping it in good shape, you don't have to do it as often.

It all makes sense, but it's still fifty five thousand dollars to pay the building. Yea, an old one hundred and twenty three year old building. Yeah, but you know it'll be around for another one hundred and twenty three

years in on Conger Wood. Well, you know it was fascinating to me is that I had learned that originally the foundation on that hotel was sandstone blocks, and they some years ago, it's not been all that long, they did a whole complete new concrete stemwall around the whole dog on perimeter of the hotel, and a lot of those stones they used and put out near where this poor slab are. Yeah. Yeah, and we made it. We come up with the idea that we wanted to put in some new flag poles,

so we used the stones to make its outer yeah. Yeah, and it looks good too. Yeah. It really turned out to be a nice project. And you know, an outfront in that flag where those flags are, we have a red Oklahoma state flag. A lot of people don't realize Oklahoma's first flag was a beautiful red with a white star in the number forty six in the middle for the forty six state. Well, one of the board members of Dewey, Virginia Chew. Well, she's an old timer up

there and she knows so much history. She says. Yes, Joe, she says, And they finally changed it because they thought it was just a little too cog so they turns out good. Yeah, we got about a minute left here, guys that said, we're gonna do something this summer with some picking and grinning and having some fun. We're planning a guitar pick this summer featuring musicians from the area. And that's where everybody sings, sings a

song, about eight musicians. They sing a couple of songs each and they has a moderator and it's just a big event in Nashville, and there's so many musicians around here. We're planning one and we're planning to ask you to be a part of it. Tom, I'm in yeah. But before we go, Tom, we need to say Next Thursday, November the thirtieth, from six to eight is the Dewey Christmas Lighting and Santa Claus starring rod Anams. Santa Claus is going to be featured. This is the Santa's inside.

Families start lining up at six o'clock. Santa's only there from six to eight, but it's a beautiful place to come and see Santa in the Old Hotel and we've got it all organized the family, nice decorated, nicely decorated Victorian and it don't miss out on your if you've got the little ones, come to Dewey and visit Santa in the Old Hotel from six to eight November the

thirtieth, next Thursday. Alrighty, that sounds great. And gentlemen, good luck this weekend here because you guys are on you guys are on stage or on the porch, you should say, don't you talking on all day to day? All right, take care of ladies and gentlemen. We got news coming up in just a few

Transcript source: Provided by creator in RSS feed: download file
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android