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Kingfisher and Kingfisher County: Images of America (Arcadia Publishing)

Autor Glen V. McIntyre
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 31 ian 2009
Kingfisher and Kingfisher County showcases images from a special time, 1889 to just before World War II, and special places, small towns on the edge of the Great Plains. Sometimes called "the Buckle of the Wheat Belt," the city of Kingfisher is the county seat and lies about 45 minutes northwest of Oklahoma City near the center of the state. Other towns, Hennessey, Loyal, Cashion, Dover, and Okarche, still exist and thrive, although many other small towns in the county are only memories. The eastern portion of the county was opened by the land run of 1889, and the western portion, originally part of the Cheyenne and Arapaho Reservation, was opened by the land run of 1892. The growth and harvesting of hard red winter wheat has long been central to the economy of the area. Photographs of Cheyenne Indians, floods, wheat harvesting, small-town stores, and the people of the area are only some of the materials that preserve showing the way life was in Kingfisher and Kingfisher County.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780738561042
ISBN-10: 0738561045
Pagini: 128
Dimensiuni: 166 x 235 x 10 mm
Greutate: 0.4 kg
Editura: Arcadia Publishing (SC)
Seria Images of America (Arcadia Publishing)


Descriere

Kingfisher and Kingfisher County showcases images from a special time, 1889 to just before World War II, and special places, small towns on the edge of the Great Plains. Sometimes called "the Buckle of the Wheat Belt," the city of Kingfisher is the county seat and lies about 45 minutes northwest of Oklahoma City near the center of the state. Other towns, Hennessey, Loyal, Cashion, Dover, and Okarche, still exist and thrive, although many other small towns in the county are only memories. The eastern portion of the county was opened by the land run of 1889, and the western portion, originally part of the Cheyenne and Arapaho Reservation, was opened by the land run of 1892. The growth and harvesting of hard red winter wheat has long been central to the economy of the area. Photographs of Cheyenne Indians, floods, wheat harvesting, small-town stores, and the people of the area are only some of the materials that preserve showing the way life was in Kingfisher and Kingfisher County.

Recenzii

Title: Local author writes book about Kingfisher, Kingfisher County past
Author: Robert Barron
Publisher: Enid News &Eagle
Date: 2/2/2009
Glen McIntyre grew up in Kingfisher and although he now is employed in Enid, he still loves the history of the Kingfisher County area as reflected in his book aImages of America: Kingfisher and Kingfisher Countya, an illustrated history of the Kingfisher County area.

The book is scheduled for release on Feb. 9. The book is part of Arcadia Publishing aImages of Americaa series.

McIntyre was director of the Chisholm Trail Museum in Kingfisher for 10 years before coming to Enid and all of his nearly 200 images came from that museum. Some additional images were furnished by the Kingfisher Chamber of Commerce collection.

Arcadia Press hired McIntyre to compile the history, and similar histories are scheduled to be published on Garfield County and Woodward County.

His favorite part of the book are images near the end, showing people in Kingfisher County at play. There is a picture of children on tricycles, people talking on the front porch of a home, two guys pouring beer, a balloon ascension, people riding in the country and former Gov. Seay and family playing poker.

aI was really pleased to do, at the beginning, grandfathers and grandkids, and a little further in the book it shows what it was like for them when they first started west of Kingfisher. It gives a feeling of what hardships those guys had, a he said.

The book is a monument to the people of Kingfisher County and McIntyre portrays what life was like in those days. This is not strictly a history book but a way-of-life book. It isdivided into several chapters dealing with various parts of life. The beginnings, with pictures of the land run, towns that sprang up and died, farming, making a living, churches, schools, people and disaster, are all before the play section.

aThe history is there, but I wanted a feel for what life was like in the old days. Weave gained some, but weave lost a lot, a he said.

Among the things weave lost are neighborliness, where everyone knew everyone else and the ability to be satisfied with simple things, McIntyre said. Among the gains are quality of life and health care.

aIam talking about being satisfied with simple things, being able to know everybody, thatas what I mean. I realize I look back with rose-colored glasses. Part of the choice for the pictures were deliberate because they emphasize that way of life, a he said. aWe do have some disasters in there, tornadoes, fires and floods.a

Among the highlights of the book are some rare picture of the inside of the Kingfisher Hotel; wheat threshing, showing a way of harvesting that was labor intensive; and in the at play chapter there are images of some horse races and a 1907 Oldsmobile.

McIntyre is a native of Kingfisher. He received a bacheloras and a masteras degree in history from the University of Oklahoma and later received a master of liberal studies degree, also from OU. McIntyre plays piano, listens to classical music, collects inexpensive Byzantine and Roman coins and cares for two elderly dogs.

McIntyre said he has not thought of writing this type of book and he left quite a bit out. If he does another one, he will try to include some of the images he left out.

Notă biografică

Glen V. McIntyre grew up in Kingfisher, served for 10 years as the director of the Chisholm Trail Museum in Kingfisher, and currently works at the Cherokee Strip Regional Heritage Center in Enid.