Oklahoma::History: June 2022 Archives
(339) Haskell State School of Agriculture | lost-colleges
One of six agricultural junior colleges authorized by the first Oklahoma legislature, but defunded in 1917, the campus sat at the east end of College Ave. in Broken Arrow, and the main building was used by the school district until demolition in 1989. The home of college president J. S. Esslinger, which also served as a girls' dormitory, stood on the SE corner of 5th and College until 2018. LostColleges.com covers 11 schools in Oklahoma and hundreds nationwide, describing the history of each school and the status of any brick and mortar remaining. Essays on the site describe the ripples of loss to a community emanating from the closure of a small college and the stages of decay of a campus's physical remnants. The site is curated by Paul Batesel, an emeritus professor of English at Mayville State University in North Dakota. His introductory essay describes his motivation and where he searches for information.
Before satellites, TV networks used coax cables and microwave links to relay programming from station to station across the country. This map shows lists TV stations in 1955 and shows the routes that programming followed. A trunk line snaked its way west, roughly parallel to I-70 to Kansas City, then followed the Kansas Turnpike to Wichita and I-35 to OKC and Dallas, with a branch from near Stillwater to Tulsa. At this time, Tulsa had two stations (KOTV 6, KVOO 2), while Muskogee's KTVX 8 would later move to Tulsa as KTUL, while Enid's KGEO 5 would move to Oklahoma City to become KOCO. But stations in Ada (KTEN) and Lawton (KSWO) would remain independent. The number of UHF stations (channels 14 and higher) are surprising.