Oklahoma Magazine March 2019

Page 36

Life & Style

FUN FACTS POPULATION 4,154 OLDEST TOWN? In addition to Fort Gibson, which didn’t incorporate until 1893, Choctaw, Salina and Vinita each claim to be the state’s oldest town. Also in the mix is present-day Spiro, which evolved from the ancient Spiro Mounds.

OUTSIDE THE METRO

‘Frozen in Time’ Calling itself the oldest town in Oklahoma, Fort Gibson is an ideal place to be a kid, says one of its most famous sons.

T

THE FORT GIBSON NATIONAL CEMETERY WAS ESTABLISHED IN 1868.

ONLINE EXTRA

FOR ADDITIONAL PHOTOS AND INFORMATION ABOUT FORT GIBSON AND LEHMAN’S EXPERIENCES THERE, GO TO OKMAG.COM/

FORTGIBSON.

34

eenagers grab a late breakfast after hunting for waterfowl. Elementary-aged kids race their bicycles down Poplar Street. Adult walkers greet each other on Garrison Avenue. Anglers fish off the old bridge spanning the Neosho (Grand) River. Saturday mornings define Fort Gibson, where historic, idyllic and geographic realities collide in the self-proclaimed Oldest Town in Oklahoma. “It’s a perfect place to grow up,” says Teddy Lehman, arguably the greatest athlete to come out of Fort Gibson. “A lot of people don’t understand just how tight-knit a small community like that is.” It popped up as a settlement adjacent to the original Fort Gibson, built in 1824 as a garrison for fighting and removing Native Americans and “keeping the peace between the Osages and Cherokees,” according to the Oklahoma Historical Society. The organization oversees the fort, reconstructed in 1937 with Works Progress Administration money during the Great Depression. The fort sits on a bluff overlooking the Neosho, which converges with the Arkansas and Verdigris rivers a few miles downstream. Water and outdoors are essential to the Fort Gibson experience, Lehman says. “My friends and I got our first jobs picking corn in the river bottoms when we were in eighth grade,” he says. “We’d get up at 5 a.m. and work until about 8. Then we’d

OKLAHOMA MAGAZINE | MARCH 2019

blow all that we’d earned on breakfast. “You’re always near water. You’ve got the three rivers, all the surrounding lakes – Greenleaf, Tenkiller, Fort Gibson. We’d go skiing on the Manard Bayou, which dumps into the Arkansas. You can go hiking in the woods and hills; it’s like the Ozarks.” After an all-state football career with the Fort Gibson Tigers, Lehman was an AllAmerican linebacker at the University of Oklahoma and played four years professionally with the Detroit Lions before pursuing a sports-radio career. Lehman, who lives in Goldsby (south of Norman), returns to his hometown as often as possible to see his parents and visit with friends he’s known since he was 4. They keep him humorously humble. “It doesn’t matter if I went to OU and played in the NFL,” says Lehman, host of a daily program with Norman’s KREF and analyst during Sooner football games. “When I go home, I’m the kid who flipped over the handlebars on my bike. Your friends are always going to remind you of your foul-ups. My life and my friends are frozen in time there.”

ARTICLE AND PHOTO BY BRIAN WILSON

STATE FIRSTS According to the Fort Gibson Genealogical and Historical Society, the town had Oklahoma’s first telephone, drama theater, steamboat landing, school for the blind, highway to Fort Smith, Arkansas, and interurban transit line (to Muskogee). TEXAS TURN Before he went south to help liberate and lead the Republic of Texas, Sam Houston married Talihina “Tiana” Rogers, a Cherokee whose family had befriended Houston. They settled near Fort Gibson. She refused to go to Texas and later married two other men. Houston didn’t remarry and was reputed to have never lost his love for her. She is buried at the Fort Gibson National Cemetery.


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Articles inside

Michele Campbell

2min
page 82

Red Dirt Quirkiness

1min
page 80

Photos That Move You

1min
page 79

Casino Chaos

1min
page 79

Building a Great Time

1min
page 78

Reward Your Ears

1min
page 78

Hitting the Peak

1min
page 78

The Man Behind the Music

1min
page 77

'Phil'-ed to the Brim

1min
page 77

Go Green

1min
page 76

Flower Power

1min
page 75

A Graceful Balancing Act

3min
pages 72-73

Drinkin' and Eatin' the Blarney

2min
page 71

A Global Creator

3min
pages 70-71

Not Foolin' Anyone With These Biscuits

1min
page 68

Mom and Pop Meet Pizzazz

3min
pages 67-68

Summer Camp Directory

3min
page 62

Spring It On

4min
pages 56-61

From Sooner State to Silver Screen

6min
pages 52-55

Modern Appeal

12min
pages 40-42, 44, 46, 48, 50

Frozen in Time

2min
page 36

Not Catching Enough Zs

2min
page 34

Splendor in the Light

3min
pages 32-33

An inviting Renovation

3min
pages 28-30

One Man's Trash ...

1min
page 27

Western Swing Savant

5min
pages 24-25

A Haven for Second Chances

2min
page 23

On the Road to Tipperary

3min
page 22

Brewing a New Medium

2min
page 21

Framing the Future

2min
page 20

A Heart for Others

2min
page 19

Dribbling to the Bank

2min
page 18

Learning the Ropes

2min
page 17

Rage Against the Machine

2min
page 16

Honeycomb Hither

5min
pages 13-14
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