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final home edition
Monday
$1.00
March 23, 2015
SERVING NORTHEAST OKLAHOMA SINCE 1905
broken arrow world weekly gallery
A special photo supplement of the Tulsa World
WWW.BRoKENARRoWWoRlD.CoM
Submit your photos to be published in the Broken Arrow Weekly Gallery The Tulsa World welcomes photos taken in Broken Arrow of activities, landscapes and scenes that highlight life in the community. Photos considered for publication in this weekly gallery can submitted online at: tulsaworld.com/submitphoto
Photos should not be altered and include accurate caption information. Please specify “FOR BROKEN ARROW WORLD WEEKLY GALLERY” in the caption.
A contact name, email address and phone number is required when submitting photos. For further questions, email tom.gilbert@
tulsaworld.com
Submit your photos of Broken Arrow through Instagram using #mytulsaworld. Winners will have their photo published in a weekly gallery that wraps around Tulsa World’s front page in Broken Arrow every Monday. Your Instagram name will be published alongside your photo and we’ll share your photo on Tulsa World’s Instagram.
Chris Royal and Courtney Hamilton perform with the Broken Arrow Indoor Percussion Ensemble during the group’s send-of performance Thursday at the Art Pancook leads a ukelele lesson at the Broken Arrow Senior Center in Broken Arrow on Wednesday. MATT BARNARD/Tulsa World
Broken Arrow High School gym. The group competed at the WGI Mid South Championship over the weekend in Bowling Green, Kentucky. Photo by James Royal
Broken Arrow Indoor Percussion performs its show “Shadow” during a send-of performance Thursday at the Broken Arrow High School gym. This is the irst year the Broken Arrow band program has had a winter indoor percussion ensemble. The Darrell Adrien (right) and Jimmy lewis play pool at the Broken Arrow Senior Center in Broken Arrow on Wednesday. MATT BARNARD/Tulsa World
Submit your stories for publication on BrokenArrowWorld.com We are always looking for news from Broken Arrow. Send us your stories and we will share them on BrokenArrowWorld.com and on our Broken Arrow Facebook page. Click on the Submit your News and Photos link at BrokenArrowWorld.com.
group competed last weekend at the WGI Mid South Championships in Bowling Green, Kentucky. Photo by James Royal
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Submit your event If you are looking for something to do in Broken Arrow, check out our community calendar with all the details. If you want to submit an event, just post it online at: tulsaworld.com/calendar
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Broken Arrow World weekly gallery
BROKEN ARROW WINS CLASS 6A GIRLS STATE TITLE
The Broken Arrow Lady Tigers react as their team defeats the Muskogee Roughers at the class 6A girls state basketball title game at the ORU Mabee Center in Tulsa on March 14. JAMES GIBBARD/Tulsa World
Emerson Leavitt sits on his great-great-great-grandpa’s antique potato cutting machine. Emerson’s great-grandfather, Don Hansen, will be planting potatoes at Thunderbird Farm.
This statue is near the intersection of Main and College in downtown Broken Arrow. Photo by Rhys Martin
The Tulsa Classic Thunderbird Club has adopted Washington Street between Olive and Aspen in Broken Arrow as one of its civic activities. The next clean-up day is Saturday, April 25, following the club’s regular Saturday morning breakfast meeting. More than 20 members in their Thunderbirds will be there cleaning the right-of-way. Drive by and wave with a thumbs up!
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Broken Arrow World weekly gallery
Looking Back at Broken Arrow Sullivan Brick Plant: For a town to
Reeda Sisson, 89-year-old resident of Senior Suites in Broken Arrow, won the title
Elm Place and the MKT train tracks and
grow, it needs a steady stream of building
hauled to the plant where it was dumped
supplies. The abundant timber around
in one of two pits. The two pits allowed
Broken Arrow provided part of that
batches to be worked on alternating days.
stream, but wood cannot be used to build
Once there, a horse named Baldy drove
everything. Chimneys and foundations
a mill that mixed the mud. Molds were
require something more, something like
lightly sanded to prevent sticking and
brick. In January 1904, W.R. Sullivan
pulled through the mixture to ill the
began making bricks in Broken Arrow.
mold. Once out, a pallet was placed on
A bit of experimentation was involved.
top of the mold which was then inverted
The irst batch was taken from the kiln
and “bumped” to loosen the bricks. The
before they were fully dried. The second
mold was then removed, and the bricks
batch was burned but usable. Eventually
went through their initial drying. They
Sullivan mastered his craft and began
were then edged, or turned, to speed up
producing bricks that would become
the drying. After they were suiciently
ubiquitous in Broken Arrow. Sullivan’s
air cured they were kiln ired. This
bricks, known as stif mud bricks, were of
iring took a practiced hand as heating
a diferent quality than clay bricks as they
or cooling them too rapidly resulted in
were softer with a less vitriied inish.
the bricks breaking. So it was that these
Sullivan’s brickmaking process will seem
bricks were transformed from a muddy
familiar to anyone who has ever baked a
creek bank into the building blocks of a
cake. Mud was taken from the river near
city.
of Ms. Senior Oklahoma, Long-Term Care 2015, at the Cox Business Center March 7, sponsored by Grace Hospice. Courtesy Phyllis Parkhurst
Courtesy of the Broken Arrow Historical Society
Broken Arrow Chamber
Broken Arrow Police
President Wes Smithwick,
Oicers Keith Cook,
Mayor Craig Thurmond,
Rodney Gardner and
and Rooster Days Miss
Sgt. Steve Smith raise
Chick Sarah Singleton
the American lag at the
partake in a Chik-il-A
opening of the new Chik-
tradition, the irst bite.
il-A. Photo by Samantha
Photo by Samantha
Extance
Extance.
Flat Stanley was sent on
Broken Arrow Chamber
visit to Broken Arrow by 7-
President Wes Smithwick
year-old Emerson Juhasz of
is about to take his irst
Allentown, Pennsylvania, as
bite, a Chik-il-A opening
part of a classroom project.
tradition. Photo by
Stanley visited historical
Samantha Extance.
sites in the area and had his picture taken. On this day he saw beautiful dafodils in Bill and June Nessler’s yard.
How to subscribe
About Broken Arrow
City oicials
Emergency contacts
Get home delivery and unlimited access to our digital products, including the Tulsa World website, mobile website, e-edition, Android app, BlackBerry app, iPad app and iPhone app. As a subscriber, you can post comments on stories posted to tulsaworld.com. To subscribe, go to: tulsaworld.com/subscribe or call 918-583-2161.
Broken Arrow is Oklahoma’s fourth-largest city and Tulsa’s largest suburb, with an estimated population of 100,073 in 2011. It is also one of the state’s fastest-growing cities, adding more than 25,000 residents and a slew of big-box retailers since 2000. Known for quiet suburban life and short commutes to Tulsa, Broken Arrow has been named by national publications as one of the best 100 places to live, one of the 10 best places for families, one of the 25 safest cities in America and one of the most afordable suburbs in the south. A downtown revitalization efort that began in 2005 has aimed to create an arts and entertainment district centered on the city’s Main Street, and several new restaurants, a historical museum and a performing arts center have headlined the recent downtown improvements.
Mayor Craig Thurmond
Police Department: 918-259-8400
How to purchase photos Photos available for purchase are only those taken by the Tulsa World. There are exceptions for some events that are not open to the public, like a concert. To order a photo from the newspaper, call customer service: 918-582-0921, 800-444-6552. To order a photo online, go to: tulsaworld.com/search and use keywords to search our photo archive. Purchase photos by clicking the “buy photo” button that appears next to the photo.
Ward 2, Oice: 918-259-8419 cthurmond@brokenarrowok.gov
Vice Mayor Richard Carter Ward 1, Oice: 918-259-8419 rcarter@brokenarrowok.gov
Mike Lester Ward 3, Oice: 918-259-8419 mlester@brokenarrowok.gov
Jill Norman Ward 4, Oice: 918-259-8419 jnorman@brokenarrowok.gov
Johnnie Parks At-Large, Oice: 918-259-8419 jparks@brokenarrowok.gov
Police Chief David Boggs 918-259-8400 ext. 8394 dboggs@brokenarrowok.gov Fire Department: 918-259-8360
Fire Chief Jeremy Moore 918-259-2400 ext. 6355 jkmoore@brokenarrowok.gov