Carnie Welch American Legion
Carnie Welch American Legion
Oklahoma Post 27
Oklahoma Post 27
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This article is in the 10 May 2023 edition of the Sequoyah County Times on page A11.
This is the 17 March 2023 edition of the Sequoyah County Times on pages A1 and A9. The accompanying photos are on page A1 (one photo is of Greg Slavonic and the other is of the Sallisaw Veterans Center). This has been added so those who are keeping up on the Sallisaw Veterans Center can be informed.
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New ODVA director will meet to address recent Sallisaw veterans center issues
LYNN ADAMS - STAFF WRITER
With the recent upheaval at the Oklahoma Department of Veterans Affairs with the firing of embattled Executive Director Joel Kintsel amid his claims of an illegitimate veterans commission, there may be a light at the end of the proverbial tunnel when it comes to figuring out what happened with the Sallisaw veterans center.
Or there may not be. Either way, newly appointed Interim Executive Director Greg Slavonic has made finding out what’s going on in Sallisaw one of his first priorities.
According to the ODVA, a meeting has been scheduled for next week to “discuss the Sallisaw Veterans Home project and address the construction and project budget issues recently brought to light.” The meeting is set for 9 a.m. Wednesday at the Vezey Veterans Complex, 2132 NE 36 Street, Oklahoma City.
In a Feb. 9 press release by the ODVA, the agency announced it has engaged the Oklahoma City law firm Hayes, Magrini & Gatewood to file a lawsuit against the architect on the Sallisaw project. The estimate of damages was calculated to be approximately $21 million.
The move to retain legal counsel to investigate and pursue damages arising from the design and construction of the center came with the approval of Oklahoma Attorney General Gentner Drummond.
The release does not name the architect, but according to building permit documents on file with the City of Sallisaw, Orcutt-Winslow of Phoenix was the project’s original architect.
According to Arkansas TV station 40/29, which attributed its information to the ODVA, “the company made significant mistakes during construction, and parts of the building were not up to code. [ODVA] has since hired a new company, which is fixing the construction problems.”
Your TIMES has been unable to independently verify the reporting by 40/29.
According to Keith Miller, Sallisaw building development director, the same contractor and subcontractors who began the project following the September 2020 ground breaking are currently working at the site.
For at least the past five months, however, semantics have muddied the project waters. Kintsel said on Oct. 25, 2022, that a dispute with the contractor was responsible for an eightmonth work stoppage at the 90-acre site on U.S. 59 south of I-40, but also said it was due to a change in the architectural and engineering firm.
“We had a work stoppage due to a dispute with the contractor, but that’s been handled, and things are back underway — October 7th we were back up,” Kintsel said on Oct. 25. “ Technically, the project never stopped, it just slowed down for awhile.”
Kintsel further said that the work stoppage occurred because the ODVA “had to make a change in the A& E (architectural and engineering) team.”
Nonetheless, the ODVA said in its Feb. 9 release that construction will continue as legal action is pursued to recover damages for the State of Oklahoma. The ODVA said the project is nearly 50% complete, and that the projected date for opening the veterans center remains March 2024.
But Slavonic, a retired rear admiral and former U.S. Navy undersecretary, wants answers. Now.
That’s why in his first few days on the job, in cooperation with the Oklahoma Veterans Commission, he singled out the Sallisaw project as a priority. Other important issues high on Slavonic’s agenda are investigating possible past information technology vulnerabilities, and strengthening cybersecurity and safeguarding Oklahoma veterans’ personal information.
The director and commission also plan to review the Oklahoma State Auditor and Inspector’s 2018 Special Audit Report, and address any unresolved issues, as well as conduct an updated employee survey at the soonest opportunity.
Slavonic describes himself as “a people guy, straightforward with no secrets.” And, true to his military background, he says the agency is “going to be a team that follows the chain of command.” Slavonic also says he expects everyone to treat all veterans, as well as each other, with dignity and respect.
Meanwhile, the drama that led to Kintsel’s firing on March 10 lingers. Kintsel has charged for months that the veterans commission is illegitimate, and any meetings conducted and decisions made were illegal.
The commission is made up entirely of Gov. Kevin Stitt appointees, and that’s what Kintsel says is the problem. Kintsel, a former parliamentarian of the Oklahoma House of Representatives, alleges massive corruption by Stitt’s administration, and claims at least three commission appointees are not legitimate. State statute says three veterans organizations — Military Order of the Purple Heart, Disabled American Veterans and Veterans of Foreign Wars — are to suggest five names of their members for seats on the commission. Although members of those organizations, the three appointees Kintsel questions had not been recommended by the veterans organizations.
In addition, Drummond in February said Stitt did not follow state law in appointing several of the commissioners.
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This is in the 3 February 2023 edition of the Sequoyah County Times on page B8. The full article had two photos with it. One for Leadership I and one for Leadership II. Our post commander (Kathy Albertson-Shelton) took the Leadership II class along with an inactive post member (David Bodine).
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This is in the 25 November 2022 edition of the Sequoyah County Times on page A8 on the lower left corner.
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This is from the 18 November 2022 edition of the Sequoyah County Times on page A6 under "This Week Of County History".
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This is in the 4 November 2022 edition of the Sequoyah County Times under the "This Week in County History" appearing on page A7. Veterans Day was originally known as Armistice Day because 11 November 1918 was the day the the Armistice was signed to end World War I. Later on it was changed by congress and signed by President Dwight D. Eisenhower on 26 May 1954 to honor all veterans.
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This was in the 7 October 2022 edition of the Sequoyah County Times under "This Week in County History" on page A7. The original article was in the 6 October 1922 edition of the Sequoyah County Democrat under the title "American Legion Conducts Charlie Price Funeral".
Remember that times were different back then and hard on a number of families, but that Charlie was a veteran.
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This is in the 28 October 2022 edition of the Sequoyah County Times on pages A1 and A10.
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Following 8-month stoppage, VA center now ‘back on track’
By Lynn Adams on Friday, October 28, 2022
While appearances may oftentimes be deceiving, this is not the case with the Sallisaw veterans center.
If it appears that no work has been done for months on the new facility, it’s because no work has been done for months on the new facility.
But according to Joel Kintsel, executive director for the Oklahoma Department of Veterans Affairs, that all changed on Oct. 7 after construction resumed on the multi-million-dollar project after an eight-month work stoppage.
“We had a work stoppage due to a dispute with the contractor, but that’s been handled, and things are back underway — October 7th we were back up,” Kintsel said Tuesday. “Technically, the project never stopped, it just slowed down for awhile.”
The work stoppage, which Kintsel said lasted “about eight months,” occurred because the ODVA “had to make a change in the A&E (architecture and engineering) team.”
Following the September 2020 groundbreaking at the 90-acre location on U.S. 59 south of I-40, construction of the long-term care facility made major strides during the ensuing year, with the skeleton of the 230,000-square-foot center quickly taking shape.
But for the majority of the past year, the massive center has consisted primarily of exterior walls overlayed with green house wrap.
“We’ve had weather issues, we had this work stop-
“On a project this size, it’s hard to know what challenges are gonna arise and are unanticipated, that’s kinda the nature of something like this. We’re in a good place, and the project’s back underway. We’re very thankful for the community of Sallisaw and their support for the project. They’ve been absolutely wonderful.”
Kintsel said the center is “approximately 60% completed,” and said current work is focused on completing the roof and enclosing the exterior.
“Obviously, you don’t start with your finishes until completion of the outside, until it’s buttoned up. That’s where we are right now, finishing up the roof and enclosing the exterior,” he said. The eight-month work stoppage, however, was not without its casualties, which came with an increased price tag and a delay in opening the facility.
“The additional expense is going to be about $15 million,” Kintsel acknowledged. “The actual cost of it prior to this situation with the architect would have been about $77 million.”
Projections for the cost of the facility had included a price tag of as much as $85 million, but Kintsel said that estimate “was probably an early number. After we were able to get going on the project, we were able to tighten the costs and get it down to about $77 million.
“But with this additional amount, we’re lookin’ in the $92 million range. We’re trying very hard to control the costs where we can,” he affirmed.
The delays — weather, work stoppage, supply chain — have pushed back the opening of the center by 13 months, from March 2023 to April 2024.
But veterans who were looking forward to moving into the new facility can still be among the first to reside in the 180room center.
“We maintain waiting lists for all of our veterans homes, where people, even when they’re not ready or not even imminently prepared to enter the facility, they can put their names on [the list], so at the point that they do decide they’re ready to come in, there’s very little paperwork for them to do and they can just come,” Kintsel said.
While Oklahoma veterans will be a priority for the new center, Sallisaw’s proximity to western Arkansas opens residential possibilities for out-ofstate veterans as space allows.
“If there is capacity and there are veterans from the Arkansas side that qualify, we absolutely would serve them, too. The fact of the matter is we’re gonna serve any veteran that needs help. Obviously, if there’s availability that’s not being used by Oklahoma veterans and there are Arkansas veterans that need it, we would certainly serve them as well,” Kintsel said.
“The funding that we’re provided to carry out this mission, it’s federal dollars, and the feds are not gonna quibble with whether or not it’s an Oklahoma veteran or an Arkansas veteran. If the need’s there, they’re gonna be pleased to support that.”
With work resuming and an opening delayed but imminent, the fate of the veterans center currently located in Talihina has been sealed.
“No, it hasn’t closed, and I don’t know that it will close until we move,” Kintsel said of the Talihina veterans center. “There’s a lot of factors that go into that, but currently it is not closed, and it would be our desire to keep it opened until the move happens. Once we make the move, it will be sold and repurposed.”
Speculation has also surrounded the future of the Jack C. Montgomery VA Medical Center in Muskogee, but the ODVA does not have jurisdiction for that facility. “That’s a federal facility, that doesn’t belong to us,” Kintsel said.
When Kintsel visited Sallisaw in October 2021 and ballyhooed the new center when he was the speaker for a Sallisaw Chamber of Commerce membership luncheon, he said employee recruitment would begin in October 2022. Now that the opening for the new center has been pushed back, so has the employee recruitment schedule. “[Employee recruitment] will commence under the current schedule in the fall of 2023 — about six months before opening — late fall, early winter,” he said.
When completed, the Sallisaw veterans center will feature four buildings — three residential “neighborhoods” and a central community center. A neighborhood at the center is similar to a subdivision in a housing development. In two of the buildings currently under construction, a neighborhood consists of 72 residential rooms, with a third building comprised of 36 residences. The centralized community center will offer a reception area, dining room, a large room that can be used as a theater or a chapel, space for arts and crafts, a barber shop, a physical therapy room and a pharmacy to serve medical needs of the residents.
“ This is a state-of-the-art facility. It’s a home-like environment, and will be the premier facility of its kind in the U.S.,” Kintsel said at the October 2021 luncheon. At that chamber gathering, Kintsel said veterans with 70% disability or higher will not have to pay anything to stay in the facility.
Sallisaw beat out finalists Poteau and Muskogee in selecting the new eastern Oklahoma veterans center location. At the beginning of the selection process, there were six communities, which also included McAlester, Hugo and Holdenville.
Photo 1 : Joel Kintsel Executive director Oklahoma Department of Veterans Affairs
Photo 2 : Above, an architectural rendering of what the portico for the Sallisaw veterans center is expected to look like upon completion.
Photo 3 : Architectural rendering of a living area for the community center at the Sallisaw veterans center.
Photo 4 : Architectural rendering of a residence at the Sallisaw veterans center.
Photo 5 : Architectural rendering of a residence at the Sallisaw veterans center.
Photo 6 : Architectural rendering of the reception area in the community center at the Sallisaw veterans center.
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This is in the 12 August 2022 edition of the Sequoyah County Times on page A9.
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Kason recognized by Carnie Welch American Legion Post 27
By News Staff
In appreciation for Kason Copeland’s help with raffle ticket sales at Diamond Daze (he sold around 250 right at the end of time at the event on that day) and drawing the winning ticket for the raffle, Carnie Welch American Legion Post 27 gave him a certificate of appreciation. Commander Kathy Albertson-Shelton and Adjutant Larry Boatright are pictured with Kason after the presentation.
Treasurer Mike Mouzakis came out to surprise and give Kason a fishing set which was also to show the Post’s appreciation.
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This is in the 12 August 2022 edition of the Sequoyah County Times on page A9.
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Post Officers sworn in
By News Staff on Friday, August 12, 2022
Two of the Post’s officers were unable to attend the July 2022 meeting. Commander Kathy Albertson-Shelton is shown swearing in Second Vice Commander James Cheater and Sargent-at-Arms Bob Thomas (seated).
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This is in the 20 July 2022 edition of the Sequoyah County Times on page A10.
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This is in the 20 July 2022 edition of the Sequoyah County Times on page A1.
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This is in the 22 June 2022 edition of the Vian Tenkiller News on the front page.
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Kolbe & Risley represent Vian High at Girls State The 2022 session of ALA a premier program for young ladies
The 2022 session of ALA Oklahoma Girls State took place at the University of Central Oklahoma from May 29 to June 3. Representing Vian High School at the annual Girls State were Kalee Kolbe and Hallee Risley.
American Legion Auxiliary Oklahoma Girls State is a premier program for young ladies across the state of Oklahoma.
During this week long summer camp, delegates create and operate city, county and state governments, while developing leadership skills and an appreciation of their rights as a citizen.
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This article is concerns who our post is named after. It is in the 6 May 2022 edition of the Sequoyah County Times on page A6 under "This Week in County History" The article was in the newspaper one hundred years ago.
This is in the 29 April 2022 edition of Sequoyah County Times on pages A1 and A10.
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Chamber gets a look at Veterans Center
By Roy Faulkenberry
Currently under construction
Following the monthly membership luncheon Wednesday, members of the Sallisaw Chamber of Commerce were treated to a tour of what will be a state-of-the-art Sallisaw Veterans Center as guests of Oklahoma Department of Veterans Affairs Executive Director Joel Kintsel.
Kintsel made a brief statement at the luncheon held at the Indian Capital Technology Center, chamber members were bussed or drove their own vehicles to the construction site of the Center located on south U.S. 59 in Sallisaw.
Kintsel and Nanneeusha Young, construction program administrator for the Oklahoma Department of Veterans Affairs, walked the members through a portion of the construction of the Center which will be 230,000 square feet when completed.
The expected completion date for the Center will be in June or July of 2023, Kintsel said. The estimated cost of the project is about $75 million and is being constructed on 90 acres of land.
Young walked the group through various rooms and at least one “neighborhood,” along with what will be eating and community areas. There is a reception area, 175 residential rooms, the dining area and multiple living areas that have been broken into those various neighborhoods.
The group had to envision what the finished product would look like since current construction involves steel framing, exterior walls going up, safe rooms, fire proofing and more inside work.
Kintsel said when completed, the Center would have about 250 to 300 employees to take care of 175 veterans that will eventually be housed there. Veterans with a 70 percent disability or higher will not have to pay anything to stay at the facility. He urged local veterans interested in becoming a resident in the Center to get on the waiting list, even if they may not be selected at first. By getting on the list, it would cut down the processing time.
In a previous meeting, Kintsel said plans are to begin recruiting employees in October of this year.
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First photo has under it in the newspaper : Members of the American Legion and chamber of commerce, pose questions to Nanneeusha Young (striped shirt), construction program administrator for the ODVA, and ODVA Executive Director Joel Kintsel (in suit behind Young), during a tour of the construction at the Sallisaw Veterans Center Wednesday. ROY FAULKENBERRY | TIMES
Second photo has under it in the newspaper: A large group of Sallisaw Chamber of Commerce members stand in the space that is the entry into the Sallisaw Veterans Center Wednesday. ROY FAULKENBERRY | TIMES
Third photo has under it in the newspaper: The interior of the Sallisaw Veterans Center has a cathedral appearance as Sallisaw chamber members get a tour of some of the Center Wednesday. ROY FAULKENBERRY | TIMES
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This in the 22 April 2022 edition of the Sequoyah County Times on page A6 under "This Week in County History".
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This in the 17 December 2021 edition of the Sequoyah County Times on page A8.
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This is a photo of the progress on the new Sallisaw Veterans Center. It was on KXMX 105.1's Facebook page. It was linked to the story "Construction update on Sallisaw's VA center". Click on this link (KXMX) to read the story.
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This photo is in the 13 October 2021 edition of the Sequoyah County Times on page 10. (In a later edition the Sequoyah County Times printed a correction with an apology. The VFW table was across the street from our tables.) The problem is whoever wrote the caption below doesn't know the difference between the VFW and the American Legion because they said our group was from VFW Post 4518 and their auxiliary when our members shirts and hats showed that they were from American Legion Post 27 and its auxiliary. I don't know whether to laugh or cry. I am sure Sasquatch knew the difference.
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This is in the 1 September 2021 edition of the Sequoyah County Times on the front page.
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This is in the 13 August 2021 edition of the Sequoyah County Times on page 1.
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This was in the 28 May 2021 edition of Sequoyah County Times under the title of JUST FOLKS. https://www.sequoyahcountytimes.com/just-folks/stanley-collins
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Stanley Collins
by Lynn Mcculley
Editor’s Note: “In honor of Memorial Day, Your TIMES highlights World War II Veteran Stanley Collins as a feature in this week’s Just Folks. To all families who have lost a loved one while serving in the U.S. Armed Forces, and to those who are retired or still serving, Your TIMES is thankful for their service.”
On Monday, World War II Veteran and a former educator and coach for Sallisaw High School, Stanley Collins of Sallisaw, will join other retired veterans in the annual Memorial Day Service which honors retired and deceased military men and women.
Collins, 92, a member of the Carnie Welch American Legion Post 27 in Sallisaw, said it is an event he has participated in since returning home from the U.S. Army Air Corps in 1953. “On Veterans Day, we do it again, the 11th month, the 11th day and the 11th hour, he said.
“The war ended on Dec. 31, 1946 and I joined the army as part of the clean up crew,” Collins said. “So even though I’m a World War II veteran, I didn’t actually go to battle but I still served during that era.”
Collins, who can still recall his earlier years in the service, said he was one of the last recruits to join the army at the end of World War II but one of the first to serve in the Korean War which followed.
Collins said he was only 16 when he joined the service.
“They didn’t really know my age and I had not finished high school. I almost didn’t get accepted because the recruiter thought I was illiterate,” he said. “I might have been a little but when I had some free time, I would read and read and read. When I got the opportunity, I took my GED and passed and I was able to get my high school diploma,” he said.
“Since I was in the Air Corps, I would have people ask me if I flew a plane, I would tell them ‘no, but I flew a bulldozer,’” he said, laughing. He explained he was a heavy equipment operator which was one of his main duties while in the service.
Collins served a total of seven years, he said. When he returned home to Sequoyah County, he decided to go to college and earn his degree. He later met his late wife, Mona Rae Collins, and the couple decided to go to college together. They were married for 50 years before she died from cancer in 2005, he said.
Collins obtained a teaching certificate and took a job as a teacher and a coach for Sallisaw High School. He also furthered his education and became a principal later on. He taught history and “just about every grade” before retiring 35 years later, he said.
“I received extra pay for having served in the military, about five years of it, so it seemed like I taught for 40 years, but it was actually 35,” he said.
Collins said sports is something he has always loved and working as an assistant coach was one of the “best times” of his life.
“I coached Steve Davis, the former OU quarterback. He was actually a better running back. The best quarterback I ever coached was John Dooty. Now that boy was good. After Dooty graduated, Davis became the quarterback and later went to play for OU,” he said.
One of the best things to come out of his coaching career was when Davis and Bill Orendorff organized the Fellowship of Christian Athletes, Collins said.
“I don’t know if it’s still an active organization but it was a good one. I hope they still have it because I believe it is needed in every school,” he said.
Collins has been an active member of the Sallisaw Community and devoted 25 years of his life to managing the Sallisaw City Pool.
“I grew up near a creek in Long Community so I learned to swim. When I was asked if I could manage the pool, I agreed to do it. I was told there needed to be some rules and regulations there and someone to manage the pool so I agreed to take the job,” he said.
These days, Collins said he moves a lot slower and does not drive.
“That’s probably a good thing, I might have killed someone by now,” he said, jokingly. He said his daughter usually does the driving for him. He is also devoted to his church at Eastside Baptist Church in Sallisaw. He enjoys singing gospel and old time country music, he said, and recalled when he and his brothers formed a band when he was young.
“There was eight boys in my family. We lost our oldest brother in 1935. There were five of us who served in the service,” he said. On Saturday nights, we would get out our guitars and fiddles out and performed among ourselves. I played the harmonica and mandolin, but now when the Grand Old Opery came on, we would have to stop playing our music and listen to it. It was on the radio so we couldn’t watch it. There was no TV,” he said.
“These days, if I watch anything on TV, it would be baseball and would still go to a game if I could. My favorite team is the St. Louis Cardinals,” he said.
“I have favorite players really more than favorite teams. I like watching professional football players like Payton Manning. I don’t always like the teams but I like him,” he said, smiling.
When he comes across former students he taught years ago, Collins said some still call him “Coach.”
“I’ve had some come up to me and tell me ‘Coach you were pretty tough on us back then but you were always fair.’
“I believe honesty, fairness and taking responsibility for your actions is the best way to live your life,” he said.
Collins said the Memorial Day Service will be at 11 a.m. Monday at the Sallisaw City Cemetery.
“I’ll be in my uniform and attend the event as I always do. I was glad to serve my country when I did and I would do it all over again,” he said.
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This was in the 19 May 2021 edition of the Sequoyah County Times.
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Terri Long of Sallisaw won $750 from the 50/50 American Legion Auxiliary fund raiser held in conjunction with the recent Diamond Daze Celebration.
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This article was in the 7 May 2021 edition of the Sequoyah County Times. Also sharing a post from our Post Commander Kathy Albertson-Shelton along with photos from the event.
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Gabrielle Gore releases debut Album, ‘I See You'
Newcomer Gabrielle Gore’s debut album, I See You, is a masterful musical mosaic showcasing the talented Oklahoma native’s exceptional vocals—including her belting out a rockin’ lead single, “My Mustang,” that celebrates the exhilaration of cruising’ around town with friends.
“After a Friday night football game, some of my friends and I loaded up in my car and drove around for what seemed like hours,” recalls Gore. “When I got home, I immediately pulled out a notebook and started writing down how awesome it felt to have hung out that night. That’s what inspired “My Mustang,” with lines like “I’ve got a full tank of gas and a smooth highway,
You better buckle up and we’ll be on our way.”
The 10 tracks on I See You were recorded in October 2020 at Hilltop Recording Studio in Nashville and the album is set for a May 7, release on Wonderment Records. Gore’s CD has national distribution through Select-O-Hits Memphis, Tenn., and on Spotify, iTunes and other outlets. Wonderment Records is releasing her music internationally to radio in the United Kingdom, Ireland, France, Finland, Germany, New Zealand, Sweden and other countries.
“It was incredible to walk into the recording studio in Nashville—Music City USA—and to meet so many amazing musicians,” reveals the 18-year-old from Muldrow. “I’ll never forget the moment I heard my simple chords turned into fullfledged songs. It was amazing!”
The journey to that Nashville studio recording session began in 2018 when Gore attended a songwriting seminar in Van Buren, Ark., conducted by Royal Wade Kimes, a national recording artist who has released 14 albums and written songs for Garth Brooks, Diamond Rio, Gene Watson and others.
“After attending Wade’s seminar, I started writing songs for what would become my debut album,” explains Gore. A year after the seminar, her mom, Monica, had a chance meeting with Kimes, where she asked him to take a listen to her daughter’s music.
“I listened to a couple of songs they sent me,” remembers Kimes. “One particular song was a stand-out. So, I met with Gabrielle and Monica. I started working with Gabrielle, which led to me producing I See You and setting up that recording session in Nashville.”
Gore wrote or co-wrote five of the ten songs on I See You, including the title track. “The genesis for the song ‘I See You’ happened one Saturday morning when Wade and I were drinking coffee at his kitchen table. Looking out the window, fog was rolling in. The idea for the lyrics came to me when I had a vision of what it would look like to see your love walking toward you through the fog.”
She also co-wrote “Style,” “He’s My Hero” and “I Was Wrong.”
Gore says her musical tastes range from Patsy Cline, Reba McEntire and Trisha Yearwood to Judy Garland, The Beatles and The Mamas and The Papas.
She has performed the National Anthem more than 300 times in the past three years. “I’ve sung the National Anthem at rodeos, banquets for government officials, football games, basketball games, stock-car races, and fundraisers. Still, the most memorable time I sang it was at the Laying of the Wreaths Ceremony at Arkansas’ Fort Smith National Cemetery. Every year we gather to honor our fallen heroes and their families during the holiday season. It was miserably cold, but I remember standing at the mic thinking how small of a sacrifice it was in comparison to all of those who had fought for our country that laid before me.”
Gore, the current Miss Oklahoma City’s Outstanding Teen, is the founder of two programs benefiting America’s veterans. Through her Healing Heroes’ Hearts platform, she connects with and empowers wounded warriors. She created her Music for Veterans program after realizing the positive effect music therapy has on the human mind.
Gore’s album release party for I See You is set for May 6, 2021, in her hometown of Muldrow.
Here—in her own words—are her insightful takes on each song on I See You:
“Arizona Skies”—"To put it simply, the heart wants what the heart wants.”
“I See You”—"The Spanish guitar in this song gives me goosebumps—it has such a warm, sultry feel!”
“Style”—"Whether it’s cowboy boots and shorts or bellbottoms and a funky hat, I always say, “Don’t cramp my style!”
“He’s My Hero”—"This song makes me think about all the times as a kid I went to the Old Fort Days Rodeo in Fort Smith, Ark. I love the mutton bustin’!”
“Saddle the Wind”—“I’ve always looked up to vintage vocalists like Judy Garland, so I decided to take this Julie London song and make it my own by infusing it with a bit of Judy!”
“My Mustang”—"I don’t think there’s anything more fun than getting dressed up and cruising around with your friends!”
“I Was Wrong”—"This heart-aching love song goes out to the girl sitting alone and wishing she could take back words she didn’t mean.”
“Who Knows”—“I think the appeal of first love comes from the uncertainty. Everything is new and exciting—and it’s fun to just enjoy the ride.”
“Symbols of Freedom”—"As someone who comes from a strong military family, it was essential to have at least one song on the album that I could dedicate to our service members.”
“The Owner”—“Nothing is more important to me than remaining true to my values—no matter the temptation.”
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A post from our Post Commander.
What a spectacular night last night was. If you were invited and did not attend...shame on you! Gabrielle Gore’s “I See You”, Album Release was last night. This young Lady has gone above and beyond to support and represent “WE VETERANS”. She has represented MY AMERICAN LEGION on numerous occasions, even done a building fund benefit for us. Gabrielle Gore we love you, appreciate you and wish the VERY BEST FOR YOU. Ya’ll come out for Memorial Day and hear this FUTURE STAR...sing her heart out.
Rex Whatley
Lynn Mcculley, columnist at Sequoyah County Times, Just Folks
At the age of 87, Rex Whatley of Sallisaw says he is “unique” because of where he came from and the places and things he has seen in the life he has lived.
As a young boy, Whatley lived in Paw-Paw, a community more commonly known as Pawpaw Bottoms, located south of Muldrow near the Arkansas River and is listed among Oklahoma’s “Ghost Towns” or abandoned.
“I attended school at PawPaw,” Whatley said.
“It was a small building but we had two classes. Joe H. Taylor was my teacher and his wife also taught at the school. There was big flood there in 1943 where the waters reached about eight feet high. I never thought I would see something like that. There were other floods but I think that one was the worst,” he said. Whatley said the bottoms were washed out from the flood of 43 and his family made the decision to leave.
“We had some good times there. PawPaw was a thriving community back then. There were several families who lived and farmed there. About every 10 acres, there would be a house,” he said.
“Now there still might be a few people who still live there but it’s not how it was back then. So many things have changed,” Whatley said.
Whatley graduated from the eighth grade at Moffett where he attended after leaving his school at Paw-Paw. He attended school at Ramsey Jr. High in Fort Smith, Ark., as a freshman and his family decided to move to Jacksonville, Ark., where he attended school and also worked for an ammunition plant. He also attended school at Longview, Wash., before his family decided to move back to Moffett. He said he was in the 11th grade by then.
“In 1950 my brother had bought a motorcycle and he wanted me to go with him to Alabama because he wanted to enroll me at Jacksonville State University. So I rode with him on the back of that motorcycle and I enrolled there and studied elementary teaching in mathematics,” he said.
Changes came quickly for Whatley in 1953 when he was drafted by the U.S. Army. He also met and married a girl who worked for Dixie Cup in Fort Smith, Ark.
He and his wife, Joy, have been married 63 years. The couple has two sons, he said.
“I saw her walking down the street one day and I got her attention and we got married on Aug. 10, 1957 and we’re still together. My family never did believe in divorces,” he said.
Whatley began working for the Sequoyah County Department of Human Services in February 1956 as a case worker where he later became supervisor.
“I worked in the old WPA building at the time. It wasn’t like the modern building they now have,” Whatley said. He retired from that position in 1994 after 38 years, six months and 1 day of work, he said.
“I’ve enjoyed my life here in Sequoyah County,” Whatley said.
“I think this is a good place to live. There’s been a lot of changes which I’ve lived through. I’ve lost a lot of friends and I’m the last surviving member out of my immediate family. I’ve lived through the Civil Rights Movement because I was in Atlanta for a short time when I saw a lot of that taking place. I also remember being offered $25 to vote for a person, he said laughing!
Although his age and ailments have slowed down his walk, Whatley said he remains actively involved in his community when he can be of help.
“I served on the board for Cookson Hills Community Action when it still existed here and I was active in the Masonic Lodge where I serve as Chaplain,” he said. He has also been active in the American Legion and the DAV.
“Some things taking place right now I don’t understand. There’s a lot of technology but the younger folks seem to be running things these days and as long as they understand it, I guess that’s good,” he said.
“I grew up as a poor boy in Sequoyah County but I felt rich because I worked and never missed a paycheck. I overdrew on my bank account one time but it was one time only,” he said, with a smile.
Construction has started on the new Sallisaw Veterans Center. This article is in the 22 December 2020 edition of Sequoyah County Times on page A1.
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Our float placed third in the Sallisaw 2020 Christmas Parade in the the church and non-profit division. This appeared in the 22 December 2020 edition of Sequoyah County Times on page A7.
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This is in the 13 November 2020 edition of the Sequoyah County Times on pages A1 and A5.
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Veterans Hailed as ‘Warriors’ at Veterans Day Ceremony
by Roy Faulkenberry
“Veterans are warriors and they have a calling to serve something better than themselves.”
That was part of the message delivered to veterans by the Rev. John Bennett during the annual Veterans Day ceremony at the Indian Capital Technology Center in Sallisaw Wednesday.
Bennett is a former state representative, a 21-year veteran of the U.S. Marine Corps and an Assembly of God pastor. He served in counter intelligence during his tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, is a certified black belt in martial arts, trained in interrogation, Army and Navy anti-terrorism, a tactical and firearms instructor.
After his military service, Bennett worked in the sheriff's office and FBI task forces and served as a rifle, pistol and shotgun instructor before being elected as a state representative in 2010.
Bennett told the crowd of about 80 people that all the branches of service were brothers. “All of you veterans make sacrifices for the freedoms we enjoy today,” he said.
“Why did they join?” Bennett asked. “They have that fighting spirit and they did all they could to protect our freedoms. They do this out of love. Veterans have sacrificed so much. They love their families and you, even though they may not know you.”
Bennett said veterans have a warrior spirit similar to Jesus. “Jesus was a warrior. He gave His life for our freedom. He voluntarily allowed them to put Him on the Cross, a warrior fighting for you and me for our ultimate freedom. There is no greater love than a man lay down his life for another. Thank you veterans, for all generations, he said.”
During the ceremony, Dr. Aubrey Henshaw and Jennifer Currie laid the wreath in honor of Junior Risley, who served during the Korean War.
Master of Ceremonies, Frank Sullivan III, thanked the veterans for their service and said, “You signed up not knowing whether you would pay the ultimate sacrifice. Every breath we take we owe to a veteran.”
Family members and friends also dedicated retiring flags in honor of a loved one who had served. Those dedications are listed as follows:
Dedicated By: Bill Brown - Veteran's Name: Frank Israel, Veteran's Ranks: M/SGT, Branch of Service: Army Medical Corps
Dedicated By: Gary Cate - Veteran's Name: Alvin Cate, Veteran's Rank: PVT, Branch of Service: U.S. Army, Wars Fought: WWII
Dedicated By: Betty Haddox - Veteran's Name: James Martin Benge, Veteran's Rank: PFC, Branch of Service: Army, Wars Fought: WWI
Dedicated By: Scott Coleman - Veteran's Name: Henry Matthew, Veteran's Rank: T/SGT, Branch of Service: U.S.A.F, Wars Fought: Korea and Vietnam
Dedicated By: Joe Peters - Veteran's Name: Goodlow Peters, Veteran's Rank: T/SGT, Branch of Service: Army, Wars Fought: WWII
Dedicated By: Don Tounsen - Veteran's Name: Henry Tounzen, Veteran's Rank: CPL, Branch of Service: Army, Wars Fought: WWII
Dedicated BY: Shirley Tounzen - Veteran's Name: Myrl Tibbitts, Veteran's Rank: SGT, Branch of Service: Army Paratrooper, Wars Fought: Vietnam
Dedicated By: Bill Hibbard - Veteran's Name: William Heral, Veteran's Rank: CPL, Branch of Service: Army, Wars Fought: WWI
Dedicated By: Traci Abell - Veteran's Name: James Anderson, Veteran's Rank: SGT, Branch of Service: Army/Navy, Wars Fought: WWII and Korea
Dedicated BY: Edward Baker - Veteran's Name: Arthur Eugene Baker, Veteran's Rank: SGT, Branch of Service: U.S.A.F., Wars Fought: Korea
Dedicated By: Gwen Grimes - Veteran's Name: Albert Ruiz, Veteran's Rank: SGT, Branch of Service: Army, Wars Fought: WWII
Dedicated By: Bobby Prewett - Veteran's Name: Herman Prewett, Veteran's Rank: SGT, Branch of Service: Army, Wars Fought: WWII
Dedicated by: Ellen Wilson - Veteran's Name: Donald R. Wilson, Veteran's Rank: SGT, Branch of Service: Army, Wars Fought: Vietnam
Dedicated by: Paula Mouzakis - Veteran's Name: George E. Mouzakis, Veteran's Rank: COL, Branch of Service: Marine Corp, Wars Fought: Korea, Award: Silver Star, 3 Distinguished Fly Crosses
Dedicated by: Joe Newman - Veteran's Name: Wayne McKnight, Veteran's Rank: CPL, Branch of Service: Army, Wars Fought: Korea, POW, Awards: Purple Heart
Dedicated by: Austin Choate - Veteran's Name: Beautine Barnes, Veteran's Rank: T/SGT, Branch of Service: Army, Wars Fought: WWII, Awards: Purple Heart, KIA
Dedicated by: Matthew Duke - Veteran's Name: Henry Street, Veteran's Rank: CPT, Branch of Service: Army, Wars Fought: WWII
Dedicated by: Martha McCoy - Veteran's Name: Howard Morton, Veteran's Rank: SGT, Branch of Service: Marine Corp, Wars Fought: WWII, Awards: Medal of Honor
Dedicated by: Sayde Anderson - Veteran's Name: Edward Stanley, Veteran's Rank: CGT, Branch of Service: Army, Wars Fought: Korea
Dedicated by: Janie Guidry - Veteran's Name: Birdie Thomas, Veteran's Rank: Sgt First Class, Branch of Service: Army, Wars Fought: Korea, Vietnam
Dedicated by: Vickey Price - Veteran's Name: William and Lawrence Zilch, Veteran's Rank: SGT’s, Branch of Service: Army, Wars Fought: WWII, Awards: Purple Heart’s
Dedicated by: Bradley Scrimsher, Veteran's Name: Wayne Nipp, Veteran's Rank: PVT, Branch of Service: Army, Wars Fought: WWII, Awards: Purple Heart
Dedicated by: Steve Myers - Veteran's Name: Ray Whitman, Veteran's Rank: PVT, Branch of Service: Army, Wars Fought: Vietnam, Awards: KIA
Dedicated by: Kelly Green - Veteran's Name: Norman Dean Braden, Veteran's Rank: CPL, Branch of Service: Army, Wars Fought: Korea
Dedicated by: Deanna Griffin - Veteran's Name: Carlton L. Lee, Veteran's Rank: S/SGT, Branch of Service: U.S.A.F., Wars Fought: Korea
The Veterans Day program was sponsored by American Legion Post 27 the Sallisaw Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW), the Marine Corp League and the Sallisaw Chamber of Commerce.
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One photo is "The Rev. John Bennett was the speaker at the Veterans Day Ceremony in Sallisaw Wednesday, hailing veterans as warriors." caption by Roy Faulkenberry of the Sequoyah County Times. The other photo is "Jennifer Currie and Dr. Aubrey Henshaw perform the laying of the wreath in honor of Junior Risley during the Veterans Day Ceremony Wednesday." caption by Andrew Newbury of the Sequoyah County Times.
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This is in the 13 November 2020 edition of the Sequoyah County Times on page A10.
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This is in the 30 September 2020 edition of the Sequoyah County Times on pages A1 and A3.
State and local leaders, representatives from the Oklahoma Department of Veterans Affairs and supporters break ground for the Sallisaw Veterans Center. Construction to follow.
Cherokee Nation tribal leaders honored Buddy Spencer, (center)
chairman of the Sallisaw Improvement Corporation, with a special blanket
and a plaque during the official groundbreaking ceremony held Friday for
the Sallisaw Veterans Center. Cherokee Nation Deputy Principal Chief Bryan
Warner (top) and other Cherokee tribal officials stated Spencer has been
“very instrumental” in his efforts of getting the center located in Sallisaw.
Other tribal officials pictured include Diane Kelly, Executive Director of
Cherokee Nation Career Services, left, District 5 Council Representative E.O.
Junior Smith, and Speaker of the Council of the Cherokee Nation Joe Byrd
(right).
Sallisaw Mayor Ernie Martens addresses the crowd at Friday’s official
groundbreaking ceremony for the Sallisaw Veteran’s Center which
was attended by about 300 people. Martens expressed his appreciation giving
special thanks to local businesses and agencies and everyone involved
in getting the center located to Sallisaw. Seated behind Martens, from the
left, includes Cherokee Nation tribal representatives Deputy Principal Chief
Bryan Warner, and Secretary of Cherokee Nation Veteran Affairs Joe Crittenden.
Also seated are Jerry Ball, commissioner of Oklahoma Veteran’s Affairs,
Sarah Lane, Deputy Director of ODVA, and Larry Van Schuyver, Chairman of
the Oklahoma Veterans Commission.
Roy Faulkenberry Editor
The executive director of the Oklahoma Department of Veterans Affairs (ODVA) may have summed it up nicely when he said Friday that the people working to get the new veterans center in Sallisaw had done “incredible things.”
Joel Kintsel gave opening remarks to welcome about 300 people in attendance for the groundbreaking of what will become the Sallisaw Veterans Center.
Kintsel and Sarah Lane, deputy director, recognized members of the Oklahoma Veterans Commission, the group that made the decision to locate the center in Sallisaw, plus committee members, Rep. Tommy Hardin, Sen. Mark Allen, Rep. Jim Olsen, former Rep. John Bennett and U.S. Rep. Markwayne Mullin, the City of Sallisaw and the Cherokee Nation.
“This started with a phone call from George Bormann who said we had a chance to get a good project. I remember looking at the plans. There were so many letters that filled that book. We said how can we do this. We need to prepare our hearts for those coming here. We've still got two years and we're going to have things coming. The Cherokee Nation was happy to step in,” Cherokee Nation Deputy Principal Chief Bryan Warner said.
Sallisaw Mayor Ernie Martens welcomed the guests and expressed his appreciation that for over the past two years the city has been allowed to develop a lasting relationship with the ODVA.
“I want to also welcome all of our valuable community partners in this project. It is amazing how quickly we received the huge amount of support needed to create a winning proposal,” Martens said.
“As I visit with our constituents, not only in our city but our entire area, I have heard continuous words of affrmation and appreciation for what our partnerships have been able to accomplish.
“I am most excited about what the future holds for this partnership and what we as a community will be able to do to serve and honor our veterans. Indian Capital Technology Center and Carl Albert State College have begun making plans to add additional programs to train the staff needed for this new facility.
“Our local VFW and American Legion are both making plans to sponsor activities for our veterans. Our churches are discussing how to bring services to our veterans. The Boy Scouts and other school youth groups are excited that they will be able to interact with, learn from and honor our veterans.
“As you may have noticed, several times I have used the phrase 'our veterans.' Please rest assured that members of our community will do everything in their power to ensure that the residents and staff of this new facility will feel loved, appreciated and made to feel a part of our community.
“Please rest assured that the selfless acts of service given by our veterans to our country will be remembered, honored, respected and appreciated,” Martens said.
“Today is an exciting day, not only for the Oklahoma Department of Veterans Affairs and the State of Oklahoma, but for the community of Sallisaw as well. We have been anxiously awaiting this day for two years,” Sallisaw City manager Keith Skelton said.
“On Sept. 24, 2018, I was honored to stand before the Oklahoma Veterans Commission and present Sallisaw as a choice to be the home of Oklahoma's newest veterans care facility. Our presentation that day was not only about incentives and property, it was about how the community of Sallisaw wanted to form a partnership with the Department of Veterans Affairs; it was about how our community wanted to form a partnership that would give our veterans a facility that would enhance their quality of life; it was about how our community would form a partnership that would embrace the veterans for who they are and what they have done for our great country.
“To make this happen, our city staff and community partners worked many hours on the proposal. The key component of that proposal is the 90 acres you are standing on here today. For their assistance in purchasing this property, and providing it for the facility, I would like to thank the following: the Cherokee Nation and Cherokee Nation Business, National Bank of Sallisaw, Armstrong Bank of Sallisaw, Firstar Bank of Sallisaw, Arvest Bank of Sallisaw, Sallisaw Improvement Corporation, the City of Sallisaw and Sallisaw Board of City Commissioners, and Mr. Raymond Merrill and family.
“I would also like to thank Rep. John Bennett, Rep. Jim Olsen, and Sen. Mark Allen for their continued support over the last two years. In addition, I would also like to thank the many other individuals and businesses in the community and Sequoyah County that provided other incentives or letters of support. The outpouring of support from our community was so incredible, we were unable to include all of the letters of support in our proposal.
“On that September day back in 2018, I closed our presentation with these words: the motto of Sallisaw is 'Built on Pride, Dedicated to Excellence.' We want the new veterans center to also be built on pride and dedicated to excellence.
“Together, the Department of Veterans Affairs, the City of Sallisaw and its community partners can make this new facility a reality. It will be a facility that will be matched by no other. A facility that will become the staple of how a veterans center should be built, operated and embraced by its community.
Today is the culmination of what started back in 2018. For our community, the groundbreaking here today makes it offcial – Sallisaw is the home to Oklahoma's newest and most advanced veterans care facility,” Skelton said.
https://www.sequoyahcountytimes.com/news/long-awaited-day-arrives-ground-broke-veterans-center
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25 September 2020
Cherokee Nation officials including Cherokee Nation Deputy Principal Chief Bryan Warner, Secretary of Cherokee Nation Veterans Affairs S. Joe Crittenden, members of the Council of the Cherokee Nation and Executive Director of Career Services Diane Kelley joined state and area leaders today to celebrate a groundbreaking for the new veteran’s center in Sallisaw.
In 2018, the Cherokee Nation worked with the city of Sallisaw on relocating the Oklahoma Veterans Center in Talihina to Sallisaw, which is located in the Cherokee Nation.
Cherokee Nation Businesses invested $300,000 to help relocate the center and to help get operations started in Sallisaw. In addition to financial assistance, the Cherokee Nation also pledged support through its Career Services program to secure the center’s workforce. Osda!
As part of the ceremony, Secretary Crittenden delivered the invocation, and Deputy Chief Warner gave remarks and presented veteran Buddy Spencer with a plaque and a blanket, along with members of the Council and Career Services.
Here is the URL to the Facebook page where the article was at which includes photos.
https://www.facebook.com/TheCherokeeNation/posts/3213338418791914
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This is in the 26 June 2020 edition of Sequoyah County Times in the "This Week in County History" column where it continues on page A7.
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100 years ago
(From the June 25, 1920, issue of the Sequoyah County Democrat)
The American Legion, of Sequoyah County is preparing for the biggest event ever pulled off in this part of the state. The date for the big celebration will be Monday July 5th, and one of the many attractions to be staged will be State Commander Horace H. Hagan, of Tulsa, who will be the principal speaker of the day. Commander Hagan is a man that has helped the American Legion posts in the state to make the American Legion in Oklahoma known nationally. Other states have watched Oklahoma Legion posts and they are following many of our footsteps.
Col. Al Todd, who is in charge of the grounds has arranged several free exhibitions, the legion going to enormous expense to have the free attractions, besides numerous of shows and other amusements. The picnic will be held at Sallisaw dam west of this city and everything will be ready when the bugler blows, “It’s time to get up.”
There will be plenty of shade, plenty of ice water and a place where you can check your luggage. Another feature of the day will be the parade around the business section of town by former service men all in uniform and helmets. Just like they were in 1918. The stores in Sallisaw will be closed the entire day and the merchants have offered numerous prizes to be given to the visitors at the celebration grounds. If you have anything to exhibit bring it along, as there is a prize awaiting you.
The Carnie Welch post, of Sallisaw, with the aid of other legion members of the county have gone to enormous expense to make biggest, best and grandest celebration ever pulled off in Sequoyah County.
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This was in the 12 June 2020 edition of the Sequoyah County Times under "This Week in County History" on page A6. This isn't directly about our post but this event happened on the night the post had a meeting and some of the members had input.
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Where did the meteor fall?
The Files Of Your Sequoyah County Times
100 years ago (From the June 11, 1920, issue of the Sequoyah County Democrat)
An enormous meteor lightened the southern sky at 8:40 o’clock Tuesday night apparently falling to the earth somewhere close to Sallisaw. Appearing first within a few hundred yards from the earth, the lower and heavy portion of a greenish blue color was followed by a long wedge-shaped tail. As, the luminous mass approached the earth, the head apparently separated into five or six parts, but remained together as a mass. During the last few seconds of the fall and a few seconds after it had disappeared the southern sky was lightened with a blue green flash.
Immediately after the falling of the body, a deadened sound followed and the buildings and windows of Sallisaw trembled for seconds. The sound resembled a “dud” from a Hun field piece. It was approximately five minutes from the first time the meteor came in sight before the sound was heard. It was figured out by members of the American Legion, who were in session at the time that the meteor had fallen a distance of 264 miles from first time it came in sight until it hit the earth.
According to a professor of astronomy, “The meteor came from a destroyed planet between Jupiter and Mars. Frequently this planet throws bits that hurtle through space,” While reports received at this office say part of the meteor had fallen near Sadie, but it could not be confirmed.
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These photos were in the 29 May 2020 edition of the Sequoyah County Times on pages A1 and A10. (Since our post could hold our Memorial Day Ceremony this year it was held downtown Sallisaw by people who care enough and brave enough to remember despite the COVID-19 situation. Some of our members aided before, during and after the service.) Each paragraph describes the photos below.
Memorial Day Service
PHOTOS BY ANDREW NEWBURY | TIMES
Maj. Joe Peters, United States Air Force retired, of Sallisaw, was the featured speaker during the Memorial Day service at the Stanley Tubbs Memorial Library Monday.
The crowd stands and salutes for the raising of the flag and singing of the National Anthem Monday during the Memorial Day service at Stanley Tubbs Memorial Library in Sallisaw.
Gabrielle Gore performs the National Anthem during the Memorial Day service in Sallisaw.
Larry Boatright plays taps at the end of the Memorial Day Service at Stanley Tubbs Memorial Library Monday.
Members of Boy Scout Troop 731 in Sallisaw, from left, Myron Osburn, Jr., Cale Abbott and Maddox Mayo raise the flag to kick off the Memorial Day service at the Stanley Tubbs Memorial Library.
Susan Gehring and Kathy Albertson-Shelton lay the wreath during the Memorial Day service.
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This is in the 13 May 2020 edition of the Sequoyah County Times on pages A1 and A3.
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Veterans Center Still on Schedule
by Roy Faulkenberry
The Oklahoma Veterans Center to be located in Sallisaw is on track to go into construction in late September or October, according to George Bormann, director of economic development for the City of Sallisaw.
Questions have been raised in recent days about whether the project would be delayed due to all the disruption caused by COVID-19.
Bormann said this week plans have been drawn up and contractors have already applied for a building permit to construct the center, which will be located near the intersection of U.S. Highway 59 and Drake Road, south of Interstate 40.