Tulsa 1923 summer fun
Note: I started on this back on August 20, 2023, meant for it to be a quick blog post, but got bogged down trying to locate some of the places mentioned. It's November 19, 2023, and chilly and rainy outside, but I took a few minutes to finish this up and publish it.
What did Tulsans do 100 years ago to escape the summer heat? Some answers can be found in a little clipping I saved during some research on Tulsa's streetcars and electric interurban railroads, from the June 25, 1923, Tulsa Tribune:
Picknickers Flock To Woodsy Places As Sol Hits HighMANY BEAUTY SPOTS NEAR CITY ARE POPULAR
The old picnic basket has been taken off the shelf and dusted in the last few days. New sets of paper plates and napkins have been procured, and a supply of tin cups to be tied on the basket handle.
For summer has come, with Old Sol himself emphasizing the fact every day, and the urge of the cooling breeze, sought in woods and by streams, is stirring the populace.
Every paved road leading out of Tulsa is lined with motor cars and picnic crowds in the afternoons and in almost every direction, a good spot for supper grounds can be found.
If swimming is to be combined with sandwiches, as is generally the case, "Katy" lake, near Alsuma, which is reached by driving out the Broken Arrow road to the big brick house, which is about half way, and then driving down the dirt road for several miles, is one of the most popular.
Owasso lake, which can be reached by pavement as far as the town itself, has always been an attractive place for swimmers, and Hominy Falls has occasionally been selected by those who do not mind a long drive.
Fishing parties generally choose the Verdigris river, and a stream two miles south of Leonard is drawing groups of boys and men for week-end trips. Shell creek dam, beyond Sand Springs, offers the best nearby fishing opportunities.
At Parthenia park is a swimming hole not far from town. It is reached by driving out the Sapulpa road to Oakhurst, then going across the O. U. R. tracks to the lake. Parthenia, and the Oakhurst Country clubs grounds, are usually chosen by picnic parties, too.
A pleasant spot for weiner roasts, and parties who like to climb, is at Lost City, which can be reached by driving out the Sand Springs road, across the bridge to Fisher, then climbing up the hill. Turkey Mountain, out the Red Fork road, is also good for climbing parties.
Mingo Creek is a spot easily reached by driving out Admiral to Lewis avenue, then going north two miles, then east to the creek. Sapulpa lake, on the other side of that city, is good for both swimming and picnicking.
Among places which can be easily reached by those who do not have cars, are Sand Springs park, which the Sand Springs interurban reaches and Sunset and Electric parks, on the Sapulpa interurban line. All three places have swimming pools, concessions, and other amusements.
So where were these places? I could easily do a deep dive on each place mentioned, but I'll limit myself to locating each:
Katy Lake: A classified item in the October 10, 1923, Tulsa World announcing that hunting at the lake was not allowed provides a better description of its location: S 1/2 SE 1/4 S23 T19N R13E. That's an 80 acre tract bounded today by 38th Street, 41st Street, 73rd East Ave, and Memorial. As you'd guess by the name, the lake abutted the old MK&T ("Katy") railroad between Tulsa and Broken Arrow. A story from April of that year announced that it would be renamed Rose Lake and expanded with a 90-foot dam impounding 18 acres, surrounded by pecan groves. News items from later in the year suggest that the Rose Lake name never caught on. A miniature brewery located near the lake was raided and destroyed in a July 1923 raid, but the Katy Lake owner, J. O. Whitman, wanted it known that it was not at his lake. (The accused brewer was named J. H. Stout.)
USGS maps from the early 20th century show a lake straddling the tracks at that spot; the Jenks quadrangle from 1953 shows a string of lakes running all the way to Memorial. Today there's a large, dry stormwater detention area with a channelized Fulton Creek running along its northern edge. As recently as 2003, there was still a lake in the area. The "Broken Arrow road" probably referred to Harvard Ave, which would later be part of Oklahoma Highway 51 and US 64, which ran from 15th to Harvard to 51st Street to Memorial. Traffic for Broken Arrow would head east on 71st from Memorial.
The "big brick house" is probably the two-story house with the green tile roof that sat on a rise northeast of 41st and Harvard. A convenience store was built in front of it, it served as a day care or school for many years, and it was demolished after New Life Center moved to Broken Arrow and sold its building to Freeman Harris Funeral Home in 2001; Cornerstone Church is now located there. Newspapers say the home was built by an unnamed oil millionaire and was later an orphanage. Its final use was as Christian Day Care Center. The house was the original home of and then parsonage and classroom space for Bethany Lutheran Church in 1954, which built a Blaine Imel-designed sanctuary, which was sold to Bethel Temple in 1962. There is a news story from December 19, 1971, that brings together several fascinating threads of demographic displacement. The history of that plot of land and the churches connected with it deserves its own article.
Owasso lake: The 1936 Tulsa County highway map shows a lake south of 86th Street North and east of the Santa Fe tracks, with the tracks acting as a dam for a tributary of Ranch Creek. This lake is now part of Bailey Golf Ranch.
Hominy Falls: Presumably along Hominy Creek in Osage County. This creek was dammed to create Skiatook Lake. One news story describes it as 5 miles SW of Skiatook.
Verdigris river: The story gives no clue about the specific place on the Verdigris, but likely along one of the main roads east of Tulsa -- northeast of Catoosa at the mouth of Bird Creek, or between Catoosa and Inola.
stream two miles south of Leonard: This is likely Mountain Creek, near the current location of Lake Bixhoma.
Shell creek dam: Still in existence, about a mile north of the Tulsa County line and east of 177th West Ave, not far north of Anderson School. Shell Creek was a contender for a water supply for the City of Tulsa; instead Tulsa built lakes in the Ozark foothills along Spavinaw Creek and brought the water to Tulsa through a 60-mile pipeline.
Parthenia park: Now the western part of Camp Loughridge, originally a YWCA camp. The name survives as Lake Parthenia. The O.U.R. interurban is today's Tulsa Sapulpa Union Railroad. First Presbyterian Church bought the camp from the YWCA in 1959 and renamed it in 1961 to honor R. M. Loughridge, the Presbyterian missionary who conducted the first church service in Tulsa on the porch of J. M. Hall's store in August 1883.
Oakhurst Country club: Now the Oaks Country Club.
Lost City: Rock formations in the bluffs along the south bank of the Arkansas River across from Sand Springs. Directions in the story refer to the bridge (Highway 97) and Fisher, a community in the bottom lands along Highway 51. At this point there was no road connecting this area with west Tulsa along the south bank of the river.
Turkey Mountain: Described as out the Red Fork road, travel from Tulsa probably would have involved turning off the present-day Southwest Boulevard onto Union Avenue, then south two miles to 61st and east to the mountain, which would have been quite prominent from Red Fork.
Mingo Creek: The story recommends heading north of Admiral and Lewis two miles, then east, along present day Apache Street. This route was blocked by the Tulsa International Airport and the bomber plant as early as World War II, but the area is still accessible from Mingo Road.
Sapulpa lake: This may refer to Sapulpa reservoir, about four miles west of the center of town, or it may refer to a smaller lake on Euchee Creek just west of the city limits, north of the Frisco tracks and west of present-day Sahoma Lake road.
Sand Springs park: A very popular amusement park and zoo located on the Sand Springs interurban line at Sand Springs Lake. The lake is still there.
Sunset Park: Also known as Sunset Plunge, this swimming pool and amusement park opened as a pool on May 26, 1921, located on the Tulsa-Sapulpa interurban line 1/2 mile south of West Tulsa. In 1922, Sunset Plunge added a midway, dance pavilion, and a "wireless telephone receiving station." The 1923 Sanborn Map, Sheet 281, shows it on the east side of the Tulsa-Sapulpa Highway (Southwest Blvd), just north of the Fuller-Walter Addition to West Tulsa, just NE of the intersection of the highway and the north-south interurban right-of-way at Walters Station. In present day terms, that's a triangle of land just where Southwest Blvd bends southwest, the site of a large Holly Refinery building at 3333 Southwest Blvd. In May 1922, Tulsa Boy Scouts took the interurban from 4th & Boulder to Walter Junction near Sunset Plunge and hiked a 1/4 mile west up Red Fork Hill for a jamboree.
Electric Park: Opened just south of Red Fork between the Tulsa Sapulpa Highway and the interurban in April 1920. In 1927, it was under new ownership, which built a new swimming pool, a roller coaster named Zingo, and the Casa Loma ballroom; it was renamed Crystal City in 1928. Crystal City shopping center now occupies the site.
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