Friday, June 15, 2012

Will Rogers in Oklahoma Rt. 66 Hall of Fame




Steve Gragert, Will Rogers Memorial Museums executive director, received a duplicate plaque and acknowledged induction of Will Rogers into the Oklahoma Route 66 Hall of Fame in the Route 66 Museum in Clinton on May 26. Also inducted was Carol Duncan, Clinton community leader. Third District U.S. Congressman Frank Lucas was keynote speaker. The occasion marked the grand opening of renovated exhibit galleries of the Clinton Museum and Clinton’s Route 66 Festival. Will Rogers is featured in several segments of the exhibit. Clinton is on Highway 66 between Oklahoma City and the Texas border. Three years after Will Rogers’ death in 1935, the entire length of 2,200-plus mile route of United States Highway 66 was officially designated as Will Rogers Highway.


Posted by Rick Mobley

Route 66 Cruise through Tulsa ends at Will Rogers Memorial Museum


Rev your engines and join the Saturday, June 23, first annual Will Rogers Memorial Cruise on Historic Route 66. The event is open to all cars and clubs. Sign-up will begin at 1 p.m. at Historic Crystal City Shopping Center, 4200 Southwest Blvd. in Tulsa and end on Will Rogers Boulevard.

The final destination is Claremore and the Will Rogers Memorial Museum about 6 p.m.

For the full Cruise, sign up at the shopping center. Highlights along the route will be World’s Tallest Oil Derrick/Frisco 4500 Steam Locomotive in Route 66 Village, in  Tulsa, drive-through at Cyrus Avery Plaza, a drive path through downtown Tulsa,  stop at Meadow Gold sign, drive by Desert Hill Inn, stop at Blue Whale in Catoosa, drive by Will Rogers Hotel, Claremore, and stop at J.M. Davis Arms and Historical Museum.

Cruisers will end their journey at the Will Rogers Memorial Museum, where cars will be parked for showing. Events inside and on the Museum’s south patio, overlooking Claremore, will be showing of A Journey Down Route 66, narrated by Michael and Suzanne Fitzgerald Wallis, live music, sock hop and dinner.

Cost is $20 per car for the day of activities, including dancing to the live music of Bill Holden Band at the Memorial Museum. Admission at the door is $10. Will Rogers Memorial Ropers (docents) will have a Will Rogers Memorial Foundation fund-raiser food booth of barbecue on bun, chips, cookies and drinks  for individual purchase.

The day of cruising Historic Route 66 is hosted by the Will Rogers Memorial Museum in cooperation with Route 66 Cruisers, Claremore. For information visit the web site http://www.route66cruisersok.org/willrogersmemorial.htm or call the Will Rogers Memorial Museum, 918-341-0719.

Posted by Rick Mobley

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Route 66 Museum renovation opening May 26

Will Rogers’ widow, Betty (front row fourth from left); son, Jimmy, and his wife, Astrea; and eldest son, Will Jr. (far right front row); were in Amarillo, Texas, for the opening of Highway 66 designated Will Rogers Highway. The group then went on to  Claremore. Will Rogers will be inducted into the Route 66 Hall of Fame on May 26 in Clinton. (Photo from Will Rogers Memorial Archives)


Route 66 Museum renovation opening May 26
Will Rogers will be inducted into Route 66 Hall of Fame

Oklahoma Route 66 Museum in Clinton has undergone a renovation of exhibit galleries and will celebrate a grand opening Saturday, May 26, at 2 p.m. At the same time, Will Rogers will be inducted into the Route 66 Hall of Fame. Will, whose name was on the Highway many years, and Carol Duncan of Clinton, are the inductees.


After 17 years, the gallery has undergone a full renovation, “bringing the facility into the 21st Century,” said Museum Director Pat Smith.


Following the designation of Route 66 as a Scenic Byway in 2007, the museum was awarded a $120,000 federal grant from National Scenic Byways Program and the Department of Transportation. The Friends of the Oklahoma Route 66 Museum, Inc., and Oklahoma Historical Society collaborated and raised the remainder of funds needed to complete the project.


The grand opening ceremony will be during Clinton’s 2012 Route 66 Festival. Activities are scheduled throughout the day, including special Route 66 guests, music, free museum admission and refreshments. Clinton is on Highway 66 between Oklahoma City and the Texas border.


“With the possible exception of Curtis Avery, no historic name has been as closely associated with the iconic Route 66 than that of Will Rogers,” said Steve Gragert, Will Rogers Memorial Museums executive director.


Three years after his death on Aug. 15, 1935 in an Alaskan plane crash, Will Rogers was posthumously honored with the official designation of the entire length of United States Highway 66 as Will Rogers Highway. Markers were placed along the 2,200 –plus miles route and at each end,  from Chicago through Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and California, ending at Los Angeles and Santa Monica, where Will Rogers lived at the time of his death.


As a youngster, Will Rogers rode his pony along the old cattle trail that became Route 66 when he went from Chelsea to Vinita to attend school, and later as he drove the highway between his sisters’ homes in Chelsea and his self-declared hometown of Claremore, a concrete plath where his fellow Cherokees, his father’s herds, and the pioneer settlers of the West had made early history of what became Oklahoma, according to Gragert.


Jim Ross, Route 66 author; Shellee Graham, Route 66 photographer; and Jerry McClanaham, Route 66 author/artist; will host a book signing of their collaborative work, Route 66: Sightings, during the opening. Jared Deck will perform rock and roll hits heard during the Route 66 heyday. 


Exhibits at the Route 66 Museum have not been updated since being built in 1995, Smith said. The museum continues in the thematic approach of Route 66 by decade. Modern technology allows interaction with exhibits. Pre-recorded conversations and the more common sounds of a diner are overheard as patrons sit in booths located in the “Diner” exhibit. Kiosks are strategically placed;  loaded with games, video excerpts and other interactive activites for patrons of all ages.


An embedded children’s tour is a special addition, as caricatures of popular models of classic cars guides through the exhibits.


Changes create a more personal, hands-on Route 66 experience, Smith said.


The event is open to the public and is free of charge.


(For additional information contact Pat Smith at rt66mus@okhistory.org or call 580-323-7866.)



Posted by Rick Mobley

Rotary gift

Roger Fleming and Steve Gragert

Steve Gragert, Will Rogers Memorial Museums executive director, shows Roger Fleming, Reveille Rotary Club of Claremore president, the new admissions desk funded by the Claremore club with matching funds from Rotary District 6110 through The Rotary Foundation. The desk was installed when the Museum started charging admission this year, the first time since the museum opened 73 years ago. A plaque on the desk is dedicated to Reveille Rotary and The Rotary Foundation. Gragert said the $2,000 in grants “essentially covered all the costs of Pixley Lumber’s construction of the desk.” An increasingly constrained budget necessitated the move to charge admission. Income generated will allow the museum to sustain and  increase educational programs, mount new exhibits and conserve the vast collections. (Will Rogers Memorial Museum Photos)



Plaque on admission desk donated by the Reveille Rotary Club of Claremore

Posted by Rick Mobley

Monday, June 20, 2011

Back by popular demand, summer performances July 8, 15, 22, & 29 and August 5

Make Claremore a summer outing destination.





Letters from the Heart: Betty and Will Rogers, a one-woman, multi-media show written and performed by acclaimed New York actress Laurette Willis, is returning to Will Rogers Memorial Museum Theatre.

Back by popular demand, summer performances are scheduled on Friday evenings July 8, 15, 22 and 29 and Aug. 5 at 7 p.m.

Claremore is an exceptional destination for a day out or weekend of museum visits, dinner and theatre — or a pleasant drive for the theatre.

Tickets are $10 and are available in the Museum store or by calling 918-343-8115 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

War veterans and active duty military personnel will be honored July 8 and be given free admission with a paid ticket. As part of a Blue Star Museums program, they will also be given a 10 percent discount in the Museum store anytime between May 23 and Labor Day. Veterans and active duty military are asked to identify themselves when they reserve a ticket so they can be properly recognized.

Posted by Rick Mobley

Friday, September 24, 2010

WILL ROGERS DAYS 2010

November 4-6, Will Rogers Days, celebrating the 131st birthday of Oklahoma’s favorite son with a birthday party at the Oologah ranch, Pocahontas Indian Women’s Club tribute at Claremore Memorial Museum, Children’s Day at the Museum and Saturday parade down Will Rogers Blvd.
(For information, call 918-341-0719, Julie Luna, events coordinator,
or e-mail
jluna@willrogers.com.)

All events are free
.
Wednesday, 3 Novem
ber
7:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.
“Stars of Oklahoma,” Main Theatre, Will Rogers Memorial Museum
• A film montage of motion picture personalities with Oklahoma connections
Thursday, 4 November
9:30 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
Will Rogers Birthday Party, Will Rogers Birthplace Ranch
• Kim Grazier & Oologah-Talala Elementary School Presentation
• Will Rogers Birthday Cake
• Kowboy Kal performs

2:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.
Pocahontas Indian Women’s Club Tribute, Will Rogers Memorial Museum
• “Hats off to Will” Celebration
• Fashion Show
• Wreath-laying and Tea

Friday, 5 Novem
ber
10:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m.
Children’s Day at the Museum, Will Rogers Memorial Museum
• Main Theatre- Oologah-Talala Elementary School performs Will Rogers Play
• Heritage Gallery, Cherokee Story Teller
• Andy Hogan Rope Demonstrations, SE Patio of Building & Tomb area near entrance
• Sunken Garden, Gene Lloyd singing Oklahoma songs with a partner
• Games and snacks; SW grassy area for teaching and monitoring traditional Oklahoma games

Saturday, 6 Novem
ber
10:00a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
Antique & Classic Car Show, Will Rogers Memorial Museum

10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
Public Reception for Glorea Robb Morgan and Cleora Robb Galt, Will Rogers Memorial Museum. The Robb sisters appeared with Will Rogers in the Fox fi
lm Mr. Skitch in 1933.

4:00 p.m. 

Will Rogers Day Parade


Posted by Rick Mobley

Friday, September 17, 2010

Twins from 1933 Will Rogers' movie to lead Will Rogers' Days parade


Three California sisters with a connection to Will Rogers will be in Claremore for Will Rogers Days. Glorea Robb Morgan and Cleora Robb Galt (right) will be Grand Marshals for the Nov. 6 Will Rogers Days Parade. Their younger sister, Louanne Fay, will accompany them. (Photo Courtesy Ryan Miller, Capture Imaging)


A scene from the Fox Film production...
WILL ROGERS in "MR. SKITCH"


A number of twins were submitted to Will Rogers for parts as two of his children in the 1933 movie “Mr. Skitch.” But he knew right away he wanted the Robb sisters — Glorea and Cleora.

A news release from that time states after several submissions, Will said, “I want little girls that look like little girls.” The search ended with 11- year-old Glorea Jean and Cleora Joan getting the parts.

The 88-year-old twins will be Grand Marshals of the Will Rogers Days Parade Saturday Nov. 6. Their younger sister, Louanne, 78, will accompany them. She played in “The Will Rogers Story,” which starred Will Rogers Jr.

They will be special guest s for “Night at the Museum,” a ticketed event for Friends of Will Rogers on Friday night (“Mr. Skitch” will be playing throughout the evening) and for a public reception Saturday from 10 a.m. to noon at the Will Rogers Memorial Museum. The parade down Will Rogers Boulevard will begin at 4 p.m.

“Mr. Skitch,” a screen comedy, starring Will Rogers with Zasu Pitts, is the story of Mr. Skitch, head of a family of six. He embarks on an automobile tour in hopes of regaining the family fortune lost in a bank failure. He gets a casino job and parlays the first dollar he earns into $3,000 — which his wife promptly loses in an auto camp.

Penniless, he takes his brood and heads for Hollywood where he will become the manager of a movie star impersonator. He finally digs out of his financial difficulties in Hollywood.

The twins were special guests in August when the Will Rogers Ranch Foundation, Pacific Palisades, Calif., hosted events in tribute to Will Rogers on the 75th anniversary of his death in an Alaskan plane crash. They attended a showing of “Mr. Skitch” at the ranch, where Will lived at the time of his death. It coincided also with the opening of the Will Rogers Historical Park Visitors Center and a fund-raising polo event on Aug. 15.

“Mr. Skitch” plays Oct. 6 and Oct. 26, in the Claremore Will Rogers Memorial Mini-Theatre, where a different movie plays every day.

“Mr. Sketch” is available in the Memorial Museum Store as a single or in a four-box set.


For additional information about the Will Rogers Memorial Museum or Birthplace Ranch at Olga, visit the website www.willrogers.com, or call 341-0719.



Posted by Rick Mobley