Rare, Collectible, & Otherwise

Tag: literature (Page 20 of 39)

Pass the nails, a building is going up!

It’s like an Amish barn-raising – in the morning, not so much to see… then by early afternoon BANG! Everything but the kitchen sink!

It’s a sunny afternoon in the Rose District. Morning fog is gone and two-by-fours are popping up from the cement like dandelions on the Oklahoma prairie. As you can see in the image, crews are already working on the exterior wallboard along the south edge.

Before eight o’clock Monday morning, there were just a handful of workers at the site of the future In The Raw restaurant. They were looking over the stacks of lumber that had been unloaded next to the foundation. A few hours later, the walls were on their way up.

With the weekend forecast, it would be great if they could get a roof installed before the frosty precipitation arrives.

Black Friday is behind us and from my informal, strictly unscientific survey – the merchants in the Rose District were pleased with the number of shoppers out and about. (And, more importantly – the number of buyers. We like browsers, but we love buyers!) After so many months of barricades, roadblocks, and darkness, it’s a welcome change to see a hint of normalcy returning.

I’ve noticed activity at the Bruhouse just across the street, and they seem to be nearing readiness for opening. A new sign has gone up two doors down from them, where the incoming cigar bar is in its latter interior construction stages. Those of you who have not visited the Rose District since the streetscaping project began may not have been aware of some of the other changes.

On the west side of Dallas and Main, Spokehouse Bicycles has opened a second location to compliment their Tulsa store. The shop is bright and filled with two-wheelers of all types. They’ve taken up residence in the building vacated by On The Corner, which has relocated to the southwest corner of the Broadway and Main intersection, next to the little park.

A cellphone store has moved into the building just south of the Main Street Tavern, and there is a pop-up shop in the location vacated by Ruffles and Bows. Pop-ups are temporary retailers with short term rent agreements, generally offering seasonal merchandise. The shop is offering vintage and new gift ideas for the holidays.

The Military History Museum has officially opened its doors and has an impressive collection of memorabilia and souvenirs on display. Construction is ongoing in that part of the district, but there are still plenty of off-street parking spots available. We get spoiled in the Rose District, with parking right in front of the storefronts, and get nervous if we have to walk from around the corner. (We never worry about the distance when we have to park in the north two acres of the Walmart lot. Go figure.)

Most importantly, there are no more orange fences or barrel barricades obstructing the sidewalks. There is room enough for square dancing.

The trees have been installed, most of the streetlamps are working at night, and I’ve seen the electric contractors fiddling with the traffic signals.

It’s coming along, so come visit!

McHuston

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

I’ve got just the ticket.

It’s about all that’s left of Tulsa’s Orpheum Theatre.

There’s been a lot of attention lately regarding the movie shot in the area starring Julia Roberts and Meryl Streep, Autumn – Osage County. But it isn’t the first big-time film to grab local attention. Back when, downtown Tulsa had some magnificent movie theatres.

One was the Orpheum and it played host to the World Premiere of an Academy Award-nominated film. It’s hard to read from my cell-phone picture, but a ticket from that first showing on April 13, 1950 landed in the bookshop. It has an eighty-two cent price tag, with sixteen cents Federal tax, and two cents State tax. Total?

One Dollar.

Can’t even TOUCH a box of Milk Duds for that, these days.

Fittingly enough, the Robert Preston-Susan Hayward film was called TULSA and centered on the 1920s oil boom. There were power struggles, money and morals issues, and special effects. The Oscar nomination came as a result of the huge oilfield fire scene that depicted the dangers of oil drilling still recent enough for some movie-goers to remember. Thanks go to Tulsa author John Wooley for the movie poster image, included in his book about Oklahoma Cinema history. (The name of his work is SHOT IN OKLAHOMA: A Century of Sooner State Cinema.)

Like so many of the opulent movie-houses of the time, the Orpheum would have been breathtaking to enter. An article from 1924 described the construction contract for a five-story, fifteen-hundred seat theatre to be built on West Fourth street downtown. In its early years, the theater played host to the last acts to make the national vaudeville circuit before the film industry took over for good.

The loss of the old houses is certainly a shame, although – like so many other significant structures – the cost of remodeling run-down buildings can often outpace their relative value. The Orpheum made it until 1970, but there is no trace of it these days.

You can see some excellent pictures of the Orpheum in its day on the Tulsa-cultural-history website ForgottenTulsa.com – just click right here. There are also several reminiscent accounts of the theater posted by those with first-hand memories.

A single DOLLAR to watch a movie at the Orpheum. Ahhh. Those must be some of the good old days.

(Until you remember how much the average hourly wage was back then. Hint – $1.05 for service workers.)

The price for this old movie theater ticket in today’s vintage collectible market?

Who knows?

Come visit!

McHuston

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

Different Kind of Big Mac.

Historically nice afternoon in the Rose District and here I am at the shop trying to restore order, sorting through a major collection, and finding a few treasures!

That always makes working on Sunday a little more satisfying.

Might have been the phase of the moon or the lower pollen count. Whatever reason, Friday and Saturday wound up being Receiving Dock days, with bags and boxes of books rolling in over the threshold.

Naturally, I don’t want to start the week out with stacks and stacks of volumes piled on every flat surface, so I’ve taken the price gun in hand and the book cart rumbling down the aisles loaded with interesting additions to the inventory. Trying to get the majority of them shelved before the weekend is over. Some interesting finds.

Case in point: First Edition, First Printing copy of David McCullough’s biography of John Adams, signed by the author.

The historian apparently favors signing with flowing-ink pens, which makes the autograph look almost suspiciously attractive. But, those old-school writing instruments also provide enough ink to partially bleed through the paper, authenticating the signature as the real deal.

If that wasn’t enough, the original owner of the book included a Tulsa Town Hall program from April, 2004 – when David McCullough spoke on “History as a Source of Strength” at the Tulsa Performing Arts Center. And signed a copy of his book for a reader in attendance.

The dust jacket is now safely protected in a mylar cover and ready to make a spectacular addition to someone’s personal library.

It’s times like this that I wish it possible for me to be a collector of books, instead of a seller!

Come visit!

McHuston

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

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