With our students still gone for the break, we took a little break this week, too. We worked on things at the institute Monday and Friday, but Tuesday through Thursday we explored more of OK. We made the two-hour drive (to the northeast) to Bartlesville on Tuesday (we stayed overnight and spent Wednesday there, too), and started our "tour" with a stop at Murphy's--a steakhouse started in the late '40s. It's a hole-in-the-wall type place that is famous for the "gravy over all" burger. That's a piece of toast under a hamburger patty under a pile of french fries with gravy over all; lots of gravy! We shared one and it was still a lot of food, and now we've had the experience and don't need to have it again.
We went to the Phillips Petroleum Company Museum (we went to the Conoco Museum in Ponca City in the spring; the oil and gas industry is a huge part of Oklahoma, and since we use those products every day of our lives, pretty interesting to learn about).
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| A couple of early delivery trucks |
The first commercial oil well in Oklahoma was called the Nellie Johnstone, dug in 1897. We saw this fun replica on the exact site of the original well:
Bartlesville has the only skyscraper in the world designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. Called Price Tower (Price was a pipeline construction firm), it has 19 stories and now has some hotel rooms, some preserved rooms to tour, some offices, and some art exhibits. It was very interesting to tour.
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| The olive and martini glass on the lower right are for the "Olive Drop" on New Year's Eve |
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| The Frank Phillips Home, replica of the first Phillips 66 gas station, and the steam engine |
Frank was a very generous man, and over a couple of years during the depression, he anonymously went to banks and paid off the mortgage of every church in Bartlesville. He also had huge Christmas shows for the children in town, bringing in entertainers the kids would know of and enjoy. Each child received a bag with candy, nuts, an orange, and an apple. Then he shook each child's hand and gave each a silver dollar.
An unexpected stop was the Keepsake Candle Factory and store. This all started with a woman and her family making 60 candles for the Methodist church Christmas Bazaar in 1969. They made molds from antique cut glass (circa 1820-1940) to form the hard wax outer shell, then filled them with softer, scented wax to burn. Pretty soon there was a demand and now they sell in gift and specialty shops nationwide. It was fun to see the original glass pieces used for the molds. The website is: http://keepsakecandles.com/classics_collection.aspx (click on the Victorian collection to see even more candles made from antique glass).
Many cities have decorated animals all around town--individuals, businesses, etc. put one near their site and decorate away. (Moose in Park City, UT, camels in Dubai, butterflies in Stillwater, etc, etc.) In Bartlesville it's buffalo, and here are just four of the dozen or so we saw.
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| Bartlesville Buffalo |
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| Sighted at Woolaroc |
Braum's products really are superior (the milk is just amazing), and we're going to miss them when we go home. Another fun tour (especially since it ended with a free ice cream bar and sugar cookie).
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| The tour bus moos |








glad you're enjoying some day trips while the students are home for the holidays. We are in favor of any good burger joint!
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