
The Lost “Gypsy Society”
Badger sipped coffee in the audience at The Gypsy Coffee House open-mic night for an entire year before he wrote his
Natasha Ball
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Badger sipped coffee in the audience at The Gypsy Coffee House open-mic night for an entire year before he wrote his
Natasha Ball
Before Leon Russell got ahold of it, the building was called the First Evangelical United Brethren Church. Russell and
Lindsey Neal Kuykendall
One of the benefits—or curses, depending on your viewpoint—of archiving is that, over the years, you accumulate a
Steve Todoroff
During the many decades of research for Longhair Music: The Songs & Sessions of Leon Russell, one of my more
Steve Todoroff
I’ve been teaching high school social studies for 18 years, so it’s hard for me to be shocked by the behavior of
John Waldron
Thirty years ago, a petite woman with curly blonde hair approached Greg Saunders at a bike race just west of Austin,
Ian Dille
Editor's note: For years, this photo of a KKK funeral has circulated among several photography collections in Tulsa,
Steve Gerkin
I waited too long. I’d known for weeks, if not months, that Bob Dylan was coming to play the historic Cain’s
Jeff Martin
Men had taken back up the much-sung practice of stepping out for smokes and never returning home, and it seemed all
John Brandon
My wife and I drove the handful of miles from our beloved 92-year-old bungalow in Mesta Park to the Oklahoma City Civic
Jake Johnson
"My ashes, as the phoenix, may bring forth A bird that will revenge upon you all." — William
Gordon Grice
In November 1876, two men met in Medicine Lodge, Kansas, and discussed their desires to cross the Indian Territory into
Martha Buntin
It’s easy to want to idolize Woody Guthrie. The guy was an adventurer, a wandering bard with a soft spot for
Matthew Carney
The Riverside Indian School is perched on a hill along the Washita River in the wind-whipped town of Anadarko,
Marcos Barbery
It was hot as hell. And it was July in Tulsa and I was on the wrong side of town. At least that’s what my friends
Renzi Stone
Part of the work put in by John Steinbeck in preparation for writing The Grapes of Wrath was a series of articles
Brian Ted Jones
The seventeen men were terrified, and with good reason. They stood shivering in the November midnight air, their bare
Lee Roy Chapman
They stole chickens and slaughtered cows they castrated pigs they cut the tails off piglets they followed deer
John Colburn
After he slew his enemy—a warrior in another tribe who killed his brother and was, according to ritual, justly
Holly Wall
I met Floyd recently at Oklahoma City’s Habana Inn on a Saturday afternoon, just minutes after 30 gay men paraded
Randy R Potts
“Tell all the people that Alex Posey is out here and about to be drowned and to come out and bring about three or
Richard Higgs
In one of the stars I shall be living. In one of them I shall be laughing. And so it will be as if all the stars were
Annie Heartfield Hartzog
The following accounts from European newspapers give an idea of what the Europeans read about the opening of Oklahoma.
H.C. Peterson
Pour yourself a sipping drink and get comfortable. I am going to tell you a story. It’s about a postal worker named
Michael Wallis
The Fourth Cavalry mustered at the gates of Fort Concho in San Angelo, Texas. Led by Colonel Ranald Mackenzie, the
Jay Cyril Mastrud
In the pages of the 1921 Booker T. Washington High School yearbook, long thought lost, are the first images we've
This Land
The Perryman Ranch located in Jenks, Oklahoma has its very own YvnvssvHetke, or white buffalo. Located on Elwood
Lee Roy Chapman
For a divorced woman getting by as a music teacher in 1921, Patti Adams Shriner achieved an incredibly bold ambition
Scott Pendleton
Even though final votes are still months away from being cast and counted in the 2012 elections, Oklahoma is about to
Jim Myers
It all started at the Dale Clark Lumber Supply store at Utica Square in the fall of 1972. “I saw him when I was
Tamara Logsdon Hawkinson
Look. I’m not going to sit here and pretend like I was the only gay dude watching the NFL draft; I’m just the only
Nathan Gunter
A dark-eyed beauty named Anna Lowe stepped off the train in late January 1920 at Henryetta, just south of Tulsa, but
This Land
“Even though the suspicion is probably not justified, it is hoped that the persevering reader will lay down the book
Larry Guthrie
North of the Red River, in the “Land of the Red Man,” on the iron-rich red soil and matching dust, with red
Larry Guthrie
Dental records proved the badly decomposed body that washed up on the Crystal Beach shores of Ontario, minus hands and
Steve Gerkin
Conservative Oklahomans wear it as a badge of honor. Their state is the “reddest of the red,” a moniker earned
This Land
The Tulsa Underground Circus fictitiously wrote that it was the work of a deranged Russian immigrant, a circus clown
Steve Gerkin
When I discovered Owassoisms–an Owasso-based community blog with a presence on Facebook, and Twitter--I couldn’t
Lindsey Neal
A mimosa is a simple drink. Combine three parts champagne to one part orange juice in a champagne flute and brunch
Jennie Lloyd
An excerpt from a speech given at the opening of the Woody Guthrie Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma, on April 26, 2013. By
This Land
Alberto Fuguet is a writer, a Guggenheim fellow, and, according to Newsweek, one of the “50 most important Latin
Alberto Fuguet
In the morning, he examines her. Though she is nineteen to his thirty-two, Don finds her garish in the clean light.
Whitney Ray
In 1968, Richard Nixon began calling for an end to the Vietnam War. As a candidate for the presidency in 1968, he gave
James C. Thomas
The Tulsa Police Department is arguably the most embattled police force in the country. Rocked by a recent corruption
Michael Mason
With a month and a half left until the official kickoff of football season, the NBA finals and the World Cup over and
Nathan Gunter
Sitting down to speak with Oklahoma City photographer Yousef Khanfar about his art leads almost inevitably to one
Greg Horton
It’s customary to begin with introductions amongst the Sioux. Even though this is a one-sided introduction—and
Marcus Bush
Most people dread the thought of prison. Claustrophobia, confinement, artificial and controlled light sources,
Erin Turner
One of Tulsa’s most notorious crimes occurred on Thanksgiving night, 1934. Twenty-one-year-old John Gorrell’s body
Kent F. Frates
All this man wants to do right now is find the damn game. It’s a Saturday in the middle of the European football
RJ Young
I don’t remember her name. I do remember that I interrupted her quiet. She was a plump, youngish woman, sitting in
Abby Wendle
The Scottish missionaries boarded their ship and crowded its deck, smiling and waving to their loved ones, who stood
This Land
artificer n. 1. a skilled craftsman 2. a clever or inventive designer 3. (Military) a serviceman trained in
Tim Brown
The following is an anonymous document from the Governor John Walton Papers, on file in the Western History
This Land
Little Rock was shell-shocked. It was July of 1960, and in the past year, five bombings had terrorized the city’s
Lee Roy Chapman
A collaborative blues poem written by the Stringtown Prison Poetry Workshop. This time is so hard to do
This Land
I want you to pay a lot more attention to all my words longer and deeper and quieter and louder than I ever could.
Thomas Conner
I bartend at a pub constructed predominantly of wood. We don’t do flaming Dr Peppers, Spanish coffees, or any other
Laura Carrera
A lot of eyewitnesses believe they spotted a suspect the government never found in the Oklahoma Bombing. Is he out
Gerald Posner
“Hang on, I’m gonna go out there and throw up.” Near the end of our first hour-long interview, Joe Exotic, a.k.a.
Holly Wall
There was a year—I don’t remember the exact one but definitely around the height of his new-found celebrité in
Juan Reinoso
I had been watching freight trains from the window of my 10:00 Tuesday-Thursday class all semester. The classroom
George McCormick
Senator Thomas J. Walsh of Montana bent over the library table and peered down at witness Harry Ford Sinclair, “I
Steve Gerkin
Mary Popkess marched into the Sand Springs football stadium under a full head of steam. She made straight for the
Anne Barajas Harp
Tom Bouggous was a man who stood out in a crowd. He was an outspoken and powerfully built Indian who had lived in the
David A. Farris
My freshman year roommate was a five-foot-one Korean-American via Seoul, Los Angeles, and New York. She had never
Claire Spears
Originally published on the blog The Tulsa Race Riot of 1921 on March 18, 2013. It is normal that we look upon
Evan Ramspott
It isn't Fall in Oklahoma until the Tulsa State Fair comes to town. Ranked #21 on Carnival Warehouse's "Top 50 Fairs"
Michael Cooper
The young black girl poses in a common, patterned dress by an ordinary side chair. Her shadow creates a ghostly
Steve Gerkin
As an orphan, Billy James Hargis was an outsider from birth. Imagining the first time his adoptive mother saw him in
Stanton Doyle
His four-day road trip traced I-40 from Durham to L.A. By the end he’d seen the Smoky Mountains, Meteor Crater in
Natasha Ball
Editor's note: From 2002 to 2006, Brian Byrne delivered the daily weather report on KWGS, the University of Tulsa's
Brian Byrne
Written by Larry White and Michael Canter. After reviewing the following retrospective regarding the top
This Land
“You can leave your contraband at the door,” the woman tells me. I’ve filled out and signed several forms and
Joshua Kline
My mother, Ruth Elaine McMaster, was born into music. Her grandfather Rufus was the deacon at John Brown University in
Jim Downing
Joe Brainard made art the way some might obsess over a lover: in an all-consuming frenzy and for hours on
Holly Wall
Joe Brainard made art the way some might obsess over a lover: in an all-consuming frenzy and for hours on
Holly Wall
I’m a fiction writer, but I’m not a very good creative writer. Like a lot of writers, I steal shamelessly from
Larry Baker
What is it about music fans and lists? Music fans that have a need, or perhaps a preoccupation, to let you know about
Scott Booker
The following excerpts were originally published on 22 April 1889 by Le Figaro newspaper in Paris, France. “Today,
This Land
Some places are lonelier than others, and the place he’d found himself on this particular night was the most solitary
Chris Sandel
On August 10, 1966, just after 10 p.m., James French walked to the electric chair. Escorted in by two guards, French
Bob Gregory
Having finished a midday meal on their small kitchen stoves, a group of Native athletes walked from the
Steve Gerkin
For a moment, try to imagine our city without the Cain’s Ballroom. Now also consider downtown Tulsa without the
Walt Kosty
The afternoon opens with a birthday party. Your neighborhood friends are ramping BMX bicycles in the driveway.
Aaron Toney
The fall of the first family of televangelism came swiftly. Two Oral Roberts Ministries employees crouched on a desk
Kiera Feldman
What better way to peruse an issue of This Land than with the aroma of a cafecito on your table? You can now pick up a
This Land
Now you can find copies of This Land all over Tulsa. Issues are currently for sale at: Dwelling Spaces - Blue
This Land
Video producers/directors Matt Leach and Sterlin Harjo recommend a few memorable views from the
This Land
The Long Form Lives! As This Land editors, Michael Mason and Mark Brown are (literally) professional readers.
This Land
Mortals who decided to check out the comic book exploits of Thor after enjoying the thunder god’s adventures at the
James Vance
Somebody has to drive Mike Samara to work every night, and Suell Turner figures it might as well be him. “If you
This Land
The night the Oklahoma City Thunder lost for the final time this season to the Los Angeles Lakers I was sitting in a
Nathan Gunter
They were mostly dead by then, the girlfriends, mothers, and wives of the 1930s era gangsters who once dominated front
Laurence J. Yadon
On the morning of December 14, 1976, Charlie Brooks Jr. and Woody Loudres waited outside a liquor store on Rosedale
Mike Mariani
Tino Tudisco does tailoring and alteration in his shop in the Sinclair Building on Bartlett Square in downtown Tulsa. A
Jeremy Charles
With life science and research advancements within the cosmetology field, there are many amazing products that have the
Samuel Annis
This verse appeared on the front page of the Tulsa Daily World on November 15, 1917. EDITOR’S NOTE: “The tarring
F.L. Lanford
Toby Jenkins, father of two grown children and proud "Poppi" of three grandchildren, has been involved in one way or
Brooks Nickell
Jevon Grimes can still remember the way his teammate, Kerry McQuarrie, passed the soccer ball back to him nearly a
Kristi Eaton