The Daily Ardmoreite - Ardmore, Oklahoma
Posted by: gparkes
N 34° 10.468 W 097° 07.795
14S E 672355 N 3783081
The Ardmoreite has been in this building since 1966.
Waymark Code: WM8JFA
Location: Oklahoma, United States
Date Posted: 04/09/2010
Views: 3
A series of markers throughout the city describe the buildings. The one on this building describes the Newpaper's headquarters building with the following narrative:
Ardmoreite Building
This building, originally built in 1930 by architect J.B. White, was called the Gilbert Building. It was renamed the Ardmoreite Building in 1966 when it became the home of The Daily Ardmoreite. Between 1930 and 1966 many businesses called this property home including Oklahoma Gas and Electric, the Masonic Lodge and the Ardmore Little Theater. The area used by the Little Theater on the ground floor can still be recognized as having a catwalk, balcony seating, stage frame and a huge Viking head. And until 1975, the paper’s press units were housed in the orchestra pit. The Ardmoreite decided to entomb the old press in concrete in the former orchestra pit rather than try to remove it.
The Masons used the fifth floor of the building for meetings and socializing. The area has distinct and beautiful architectural work on the upper floors. There was a snack shop and grill in the lobby in the early years that served hamburgers, sandwiches, chips, etc. This building has been home to four radio stations, three dentists, four ranchers, six oil companies, two photography shops, three insurance companies, two doctors of medicine, three financial companies, a credit service, a law firm, a television station, a newspaper, an electric company, a Masonic Temple and a dried meat manufacture.
The building has three elevators, two of which are freight elevators that are still operated manually. The third elevator was automated in the early 1970’s. The building’s basement area has been used for a storm shelter for the public when there is severe local weather.
The Ardmoreite sign on the southwest corner of the building was renovated in 1996 to include lighting and is very visible at night.