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Outside the Metro

Outside the Metro

THE POWER OF SOD

Before timber was ample in Oklahoma, many settlers turned to the grasslands around them to build shelter.

Marshal McCully used a ½ acre of sod to build his home, which lasted 15 years. Photo courtesy the Sod House Museum When settlers came to what would become the central portion of Oklahoma, claimed land and started to build lives, they were met with a challenge. e area is primarily prairies and grasslands, with very little timber for building. ankfully, there were other options. Pioneers in this area, and all through the central United States, built sod houses (or soddies) from the very grassland growing around them.

Marshal McCully was one of these settlers. He participated in the land run in 1893, staked his claim and began work on his sod house. McCully’s shelter was especially well-built, and is currently on display at the Sod House Museum in Aline, near Enid.

When McCully arrived for the land run, he had very little to get him started.

“He had a quarter in his pocket and a two-cent stamp, the twowheeled cart, the horse, some bedding and a tiny bit of food his mother gave to him,” says Renee Trindle, director of the Sod House Museum. But this meager start allowed him to blossom from the prairie around him.

McCully staked his claim in the Cherokee Outlet, but he needed shelter, as he was required to live and improve upon the land. He, and thousands of other settlers, dealt with the lack of timber by cutting the grassy sod into strips, then into blocks that were stacked to make shelters.

According to the Encyclopedia of History and Culture, “typically, [the] soddy’s walls were two to three staggered blocks deep (providing a wall depth of two or three feet), and the sod blocks were laid grassy side down.”

Trindle shares that though simple in nature, the sod house was warm in the winter and cool in the summer, providing natural insulation to keep pioneers comfortable. ey were even superior in this respect to the later homes built from timber, as those lacked any kind of insulation.

For the sod house, the small amount of timber available was used for rafters and frames for doors and windows. McCully recognized the value in the local alkali clay and used it to plaster the inside walls of his structure; one reason it lasted him 15 years and is still standing today. But this was unusual, as sod houses were meant to be short-term housing, typically only sheltering a family for three to eight years.

“When the pioneers wrote their family history, so many of them just wrote tiny bits about [their sod houses] and not details,” says Trindle. e soddy was forgotten once railroads could deliver wood to the area and families were able to construct their permanent homes. But it’s important to remember this part of history.

“People really need to see a sod house to understand this part of the state and how life was,” says Trindle. BONNIE RUCKER

Plan Your Visit

SOD HOUSE MUSEUM

4628 State Highway 8, Aline 580-463-2441 okhistory.org/sites/sodhouse

Visitors can walk through the sod house and enjoy exhibits, artifacts, photographs and a root cellar. Due to COVID-19, staff as the museum asks visitors to social distance with those not in their groups, and wear a mask if they have not been fully vaccinated.

2020

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THE PROFESSIONALS

HOSPICE CARE

My wife’s father has Alzheimer’s Disease. He lives with us and she is his main caregiver. I am worried about her, as she has not made time to take care of herself. Any advice on how I can help her?

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FINANCIAL ADVISOR

Why the sudden interest in infl ation?

During periods of rapid economic growth, infl ation is likely to pick up. There is speculation that the economic recovery underway now may set the stage for another bout of signifi cant infl ation. Infl ation can take a toll: When DAVID KARIMIAN infl ation is in check, it becomes more CFP®, CRPC®, APMA® likely that the standard-of-living will improve. Interest rates tend to track with infl ation trends, so lower cost-of-living increases usually keep interest rates down. History indicates that high infl ation can result in a more challenging investment environment. Why the concern today: There is growing optimism that as the rollout of COVID-19 vaccines continues, the economy will gain steam. At the same time, the economy is still getting a lot of support. The federal government has provided six trillion dollars of stimulus in the past year. Will the confl uence of a steady return to normalcy along with dramatic fi scal and monetary stimulus light enough of a fi re in the economy to make infl ation a bigger concern? Only time will tell, but it is an issue that bears close watching.

Caitlin Eversole

Admissions Supervisor Grace Hospice of Oklahoma 6218 South Lewis, Suite 1000 Tulsa, OK 74136 918.744.7223 www.gracehospice.com

David Karimian, CFP®, CRPC®, APMA®

Prime Wealth Management A private wealth advisory practice of Ameriprise Financial 7712 S. Yale Ave. Suite 240 Tulsa, OK 74136 918.388.2009 • David.x.Karimian@ampf.com www.primewealthmgmt.com

4/19/21 4:06 PM

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