Rare, Collectible, & Otherwise

Tag: McAlester (Page 1 of 2)

Time Machines and Feel-Good Summers

The bridge had evenly-spaced expansion joints, and when we roared over it, his Mustang would rise and fall with each dip in the pavement. Craig would point out that we were “riding the Mustang” and we’d laugh about it every time.

I was in high school but too young to drive. He had a bright and shiny Mustang that had to have been a 1965 model, or somewhere in that ballpark. It was a nice car. Not brand new, I don’t think – but nice.

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It seems crazy now, but I don’t remember a discussion about why he changed from the speedy Mustang to a Volkswagon Beetle. It just sort of happened one day. No more Mustang. We were reduced to racing around town at the speed of slug. As in – slug-bug. (They weren’t Super Beetles back then. A lot of putt-putt. But fun.) Country roads, lake access stretches, Carl Albert Parkway down to Tandy Town and back, around to the A&W and then south to the Sonic.

Then start over.

That was small town life in that time. Maybe still is.

Parked just outside the front door today was a time-travel machine. At least, that’s the effect it had on me. A beautiful red Ford Mustang that had to have been completely restored to its original glory – since I don’t think any car of its age could have survived so long, looking so pristine.

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I dragged Dustin out of the kitchen to have a look at it. Made him peek inside at the gauges and steering wheel – a couple of the classic features. He was patient with me, taking it in. I knew a car like that doesn’t provoke the same emotions for him. It was a beautiful car to look at and he could appreciate it for what it was. It was a thought-starter for me. Impressive enough that I got the phone-camera out and snapped a couple.

Just looking it over brought all sorts of memories crashing back.

It seems to me that – the more time that passes since my high school days, the fewer occasions I have to think about that era. (Mesozoic, I think it was…) Oh, there are the occasional pictures shared on the internet that inspire memories. But there is nothing like a brilliant red time-capsule-condition Ford Mustang to make me smile and think about some wild-eyed things and… What were we thinking?

One of these days, I will be rich and famous enough to attend my high school reunion (don’t be holding your breath on that happening soon). Until then, I’ll commune with my former classmates in some of the just-remember-the-good-things recollections that are brought on by an impressively painted machine outfitted with bucket seats and a 289.

We’re in the Rose District! Come visit!

McHuston

Booksellers & Irish Bistro
Rose District
122 South Main St. Broken Arrow OK!

Long too soon for Goodbye.

They were huddled in the living room between the couch and the big easy chair, banging out Mustang Sally on electric guitars. A handful of us watched in the remaining floor space between the amplifiers, the drummer, and the walls.

The guy standing next to my friend Craig wasn’t playing, but it was apparent that he was a musician. His name was DeWayne and had that rock-and-roll look. Maybe Allman Brothers or Stevie Ray Vaughn. He was lean and angular and wore his blonde hair long – at least, for that day and age. But he was SO young.

Looking back on that evening, I’m guessing DeWayne Kennon must have been in junior high – 9th grade, I suppose.

There were garage bands around, but not so many in McAlester that one didn’t know the others. It’s still a small town. This band on that day wasn’t out in the cold, but jammed into the living room of one of their parents, jamming to rattle the windows. It was as close to live music as I had ever experienced.

After a couple of songs the drummer said something to the others and the skinny blonde kid opened a guitar case and pulled out a left-handed Fender.

A minute or so later, his age was no longer even considered. His music was the real deal.

The band was called Crystal Image and they even had posters. Print-shop-quality posters. They had played on television on a dance show in Tulsa or Fort Smith. About as professional as you can get for high school lads from McAlester, Oklahoma.

It has been enough years ago that the personnel changes are a little fuzzy, but at some point, DeWayne became the guitar player for the band. In the picture (which I have borrowed courtesy of Paul Choate’s website. Paul, I hope you don’t mind…), you can see the fellows who were the basis of Crystal Image. From left to right: Paul Choate, bass; DeWayne Kennon, guitar; Kenny Milam, guitar; Larry Hall, drums.

Still later on, I got to play with them and I can only imagine that I talked my way in. They didn’t let me join in for my musical prowess, that’s for certain. We weren’t known as Crystal Image at that point: the band was simply called – Kennon. I may have had ignition keys to the equipment-hauling van but we all knew it was DeWayne and his guitar-licks driving our musical bus.

Like anything else, there were highs and lows – but it was always fun playing music with DeWayne, his cousin Larry Hall on drums, and bass player Ronnie Christian. We played several weeks running at a nightspot called Roadhouse West, a venue I was technically too young to enter. I thought we had developed a star-quality following after a number of weekly appearances, but found out after the fact that the packed house and its dancing, partying, fun-loving crowd was mostly due to a liberal underage admittance policy. (I had thought I recognized some faces in the audience… )

Then there was that one-nighter at a college hangout in Ada, Oklahoma, where the stage was situated along a wall without a single electrical outlet. The house was rockin’ and we were in full swing when suddenly my electric piano went mute, and DeWayne and Ronnie’s guitars fell silent. In fact, the whole house went quiet except for Larry and his drums.

He began to slow his tempo, while looking around, and then finally just quit. In the ensuing silence of the nightclub, Larry pointed a drumstick toward a corner table and called to the people sitting there.

You’ve unplugged our extension cord, he said. Will you plug us back in?

They did, and we went back to work.

Since my piano was oversized, it was normally set up on the stage in a manner that had me facing the band rather than the audience. DeWayne and Larry used to talk about watching some of the dancers. I never said anything, but I enjoyed watching DeWaye, Larry, and Ronnie playing and singing. It was a thrill to me, just to be up there with them.

We practiced new material in a loft we had rented over a ladies’ dress shop. Some of you will remember it as catty-corner from the old Hunt’s Department Store in downtown McAlester. It was a long, narrow flight of stairs to get up there.

And I played a piano.

It was smaller than the normal home instrument, but it was still bulky and heavy. It took all of us to drag it up the stairs. Late one night, about halfway to the upper landing, DeWayne moaned a little under the weight, and then asked me why I hadn’t learned to play the flute instead. Lucky I hadn’t. There was no spot in the band for a flute player.

I’m a poor correspondent. Hadn’t spoken to DeWayne and Larry for years and then, probably 25 years ago and completely out of the blue – we ran into each other at the Tulsa zoo. Ronnie married and joined the service and I had not heard a thing about him until I saw him listed as a pall bearer in the News-Capital obituary.

DeWayne died earlier this week.

It turns out, he was only a year younger than me, but first impressions seem to stick and that kid with the left-handed guitar didn’t look old enough to play all those years ago. And he is too young to have left us.

Thanks for helping me carry that piano all those nights, DeWayne. And thanks for carrying me and the boys with your excellent guitar playing. I just wish there was such a thing as a life-encore so I could have heard you play one more tune before you left the stage.

The Good Doctor, Adieu.

Dr. Thurman Shuller came and sat with me some years ago, when I was visiting McAlester to sign some copies of my book on Pittsburg County. As it turned out, it was fortunate for me that he gave me some of his time, because there weren’t a lot of books to be signed. I was competing with the county fair, and the fair won.

To say that I was nervous about his company isn’t strong enough. At least, at first I was. Dr. Shuller – perhaps by virtue of living so long in McAlester – had a firm grip on the local history and served the county residents admirably as president of both the genealogical society and the historical society. His assessment of my humble work may not have made a difference in sales or public reception, but it was certainly important to me as a matter of pride.

Photo by Kevin Harvison, McAlester News Capital

I passed the test. He gave me the ultimate compliment, actually – telling me he learned a few things in reading my photo-heavy history. I don’t know if he truly did, but it made me feel good. He did point out that I spelled Reba McEntire’s name wrong, and that he ought to know, since she had been a patient of his. (Even now, I’m double-checking my spelling wanting to get it right for the good doctor.)

Thurman Shuller suffered a stroke on Thanksgiving Day, and died on Saturday. He was 98 years old.

He was just a few years younger when we talked in the front foyer of an Old Town antiques mall, and I can only hope I maintain my faculties as he had. He was slow-moving until he sat down, but once settled in his chair, it was obvious his thinking had not slowed at all. We talked about the book, some of the characters who had helped found McAlester in its early days, and touched on the subject of my father, who had worked with him at the Health Department and Clinic for many years. For some reason, I find it comforting to hear kind words about my dad from people who remember him from so long ago.

Dr. Shuller aided me greatly with the facts about the Busby Theatre and its namesake, but it didn’t come easily at first. I understood later his reticence in sharing his material with me, since he had researched Busby extensively and had compiled quite a dossier on that early day entrepreneur. After our first telephone conversation, I decided Dr. Shuller was a proprietary historian, one of those holding information but declining to share it – for whatever reason.

He sent me a big packet of articles along with one of his speeches, and some photocopied notes he had compiled – as well as an apology. It was his desire to have the information published in an article for the Chronicles of Oklahoma (the Oklahoma Historical Society monthly) that had prompted him to withhold the information I had asked about. He told me that he feared he might not live long enough to get the thing in print. He needn’t have worried.

All the same, my own efforts were greatly aided by the notes he shared. I hope that he got the articles (along with all the footnotes he was dreading) in the Chronicles.

He was a good man, well-respected in the community after serving 41 years as a pediatrician, later a published author, and one of the primary researchers in compiling the names of those who lost their lives working in the Pittsburg County coal mines. His accomplishments were as diverse as flight surgeon during World War II to piano player for the local Rotary Club.

I’m happy to have had a chance to talk to him at length for a single afternoon, and assist him back to his car. I owed him a debt of gratitude and I find it extra-satisfying to be able to deliver heart-felt thanks in person.

His legacy is rich in family, friends, acquaintances, and a solid body of local history preserved for all time.

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