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The Oklahoma State Society of Washington, D.C. was founded
eleven years after statehood. It was presiorganized by a group
which included the Honorable Thomas P. Gore, Oklahoma's famous
blind Senator and the first to represent the state in the
US Senate. Other organizers were Representative Jim McClintock
and Scott Ferris. Senator Gore was the first chairman.
Article II of the Constitution reads: "The objects shall
be to promote goodwill and amicable social relations among
Oklahomans in the District of Columbia and vicinity, to foster
a wholesome State pride and a sympathetic understanding of
Oklahoma institutions; and to promote, insofar as consistent
with the nature of such a society, the interest of the State
of Oklahoma and its people."
The Society functioned for several years, then gradually
became inactive. In 1930 the Oklahoma Congressional Delegation
called upon Bernie T. Dodder to assist it in revitalizing
the Society. Dodder worked for several months in the effort
to find and inspire the interest of Oklahomans in the organization.
In 1931, it started functioning again with Dodder as its president.
One year (1936) the Society had three presidents. William
Howard Payne, who was the president preceding term, recalled
that election campaigns those days were spirited events. "Wesley
Crozier's election was so close and so hot he resigned immediately
and on the spot," Payne said. His successor, Joe Morris,
also had a short term because he left soon to become the postmaster
of Oklahoma City.
Over the years the Society has sponsored many interesting
and entertaining events. Highlights of the years included
nationwide broadcasts of Society activities featuring prominent
Oklahomans, such as Patrick J. Hurley, Ambassador to China,
and Paul A. Walker, Chairman of the Federal Communications
Commission. Formal dinners and dances at leading hotels were
popular events during the 1940's and 1950's. The National
Press Club was the setting for many functions, and Sunday
afternoon teas with musical programs were well attended.
Over the years the Society organized boat trips down the
Potomac River, past Mount Vernon, with stopovers at the Marshall
Hall amusement park. One such trip featured a rodeo. In later
years, some of the cruises featured a "casino" atmosphere.
Presidential inaugurations have promoted elaborate Society
activities. For the 1949 Harry S. Truman inaugural parade,
the Society provided a $5000 Oklahoma float. The second inauguration
of Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1957 was celebrated at the National
Press Club. A record breaking snow storm during the John F.
Kennedy inauguration in 1961 stranded Oklahomans enroute to
a special inaugural dinner. A gala ball was held during the
inauguration of Lyndon B. Johnson.
When theater offerings have provided an appropriate Oklahoma
flavor, special evenings at the theater have been planned.
In 1960 Shirley Jones and other cast members from the musical
"Oklahoma!" joined Society
members for a barbecue before the performance at the Carter
Barron Amphitheater. When James Whitmore brought his one-man
portrayal of Will Rogers to Ford's Theater in 1979, the centennial
year of Will Rogers' birth, Ford's Theater was declared Oklahoma
Territory for the evening and the Society honored Whitmore
at a reception following the performance. In recent years
members have attended summer Wolf Trap performances to indulge
in "down-home" music.
Displaced Oklahomans have been attracted through the years
by a
varied schedule of activities. These activities have included
evening series
and breakfast meetings featuring prominent Oklahomans, election
night parties, football listen/watching parties and trips
to games, art shows, Christmas gatherings, memorial tree plantings,
Shenandoah
River canoe trips, Oktoberfests at the German Embassy, barn
dances, Indian heritage tributes, picnics-some things with
other states, and special Christmas flights to Oklahoma.
The Society has an annual spring tradition of honoring Oklahoma's
Cherry Blossom princess. Sometimes embassies and clubs have
opened their doors to the Society for these brunches, dinner-dances
and receptions, while at other times Society members have
created the appropriate atmosphere in less likely places.
Oklahomans can be counted on to turn out, at the beginning
of each year,
for the reception on Capitol Hill to honor the members of
Oklahoma's Congressional Delegation. Retiring members of the
Delegation have been saluted by a Society appreciative of
their significant contributions. These were ample occasions
for the celebration when native son Carl Albert became Majority
Leader of the House, and, later, Speaker of the House.
The first directory was published in 1961.
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