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"Take me back to Tulsa, I'm too young to marry..." - Bob Wills, George Strait, Asleep at the Wheel, and many others |
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Blue Dome Station |
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Metro Diner, 2006 |
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Oasis Motel, 11th Street |
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Desert Hills Motel, 11th Street |
TULSA, OKLAHOMA. With
a population close to 400,000, and a modest but respectable skyline, I
rank Tulsa as one of the "big city" stops on Route 66, along with
Chicago, St. Louis, Oklahoma City, Albuquerque, and Los Angeles. Cyrus
Avery, the "Father of Route 66," was from Tulsa, so here is where it all
began. Mr. Avery owned a gas station, a restaurant, and a tourist court
in Tulsa, went to Washington in 1925 to help establish the Federal
Highway System, which included Route 66, then ran the new road right by
his businesses. What a country!
Tulsa was the "Oil Capital of the World" in the early part of the 20th
century, and since Art Deco was "in" at the time, much of the local
architecture reflects that style, right down to the churches. The old brick building with the blue top at the corner of
Second Street and Elgin was built in 1925, adding to this abundance of Art
Deco. Originally the Blue Dome Service Station,
it started out selling the builder's own
Chastain oil products, became a Tydol Gas Station for a time and later
became a Gulf. It had Route 66 traffic for a few years, but the station
was bypassed when the old road was rerouted away from downtown to 11th Street, in 1933. It
relied on city customers until about 1950, when the gas station turned
into a bar. I'm not sure what the building is used for today, though
I've heard there is an artist's studio under the blue dome.
The Metro
Diner, where Elvis ate, was built in the 1980's (and torn down, sorry to
say, just a few years ago to make way for a University of Tulsa
expansion), so it really wasn't authentic Route 66. But it sure looked
the part, and hosted many 66 roadies during its time.
11th Street still has many functioning motels and businesses left over from its 66 days, including the Oasis and Desert Hills motels.
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