Howdy Folks - Will Rogers - Claremore, OK
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member hamquilter
N 36° 19.259 W 095° 37.913
15S E 263734 N 4022766
This memorial to Will Rogers is in the form of a poem, which has been designated the official Oklahoma Poem.
Waymark Code: WMNMJT
Location: Oklahoma, United States
Date Posted: 04/04/2015
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member NCDaywalker
Views: 3

Mounted on a stockade fence near the entrance to the Will Rogers Memorial Museum, this bronze plaque gives the words to a poem by David Randolph Milsten about the legendary Will Rogers. The poem was later set to music by Bainbridge Crist, and published by Irving Berlin, Inc.

In the homey verbage of this beloved icon, the poem describes the dedication of the memorial on November 4, 1938, a few years after Rogers' untimely death. In 1941, the Oklahoma Legislature officially made this Oklahoma's State Poem. The plaque reads:

Well, here goes some scribblin' that's a little past due,
But I reckon I'm always a-thinkin' 'bout you.
I've been readin' the papers in my own little way,
And I see where you messed up my last birthday.
Through divine television I caught the dedication
And heard some tributes by a mighty swell nation.
Now that's a powerful nice shack you built on the hill;
But that's just like the Sooners, it gives them a thrill.
I never did nuthin' to cause all that fuss;
And sometimes, folks, I could almost cuss.
But, dern you, I love you, I guess it's my pride
That chokes me all up and hurts me inside.
I heard Jesse, Irvin, Cohan and Fred
And Amon and Eddie, what nice things they said.
I always called Claremore a big little town,
With guys like Mort Harrison and others around.
I see where Joe Crosson winged there for a day;
Remember him, Wiley? We slept all the way.
But I'll tell you the part which touched me the most,
And it ain't like me to speak up and boast.
It was when dear Mary pulled the curtain string
For my act in bronze -- what a homely thing!
But I guess it was sentiment that filled the place,
'Cause my kids kind of cried and I saw Betty's face.
God bless my old partner, she held up her head;
and though none of you heard me, she knew what I said.
And I spied Sister Sally with a shy little glance;
She's all the West means, charm and romance.
Old Jo had a job a-chisslin' my mug;
Why, I got more wrinkles than a Navajo rug.
So you're honorin' Oklahoma with a replica of me --
Move over Sequoyah, for another Cherokee.
Well, much obliged friends, for the money you spent,
And the words that were spoken by our President.
I wish you had erected a memorial to peace;
We'd be happy up here if war talk would cease.
But I ain't ungrateful, I just can't see
Such a hullabaloo 'bout a cowboy like me.
Well, so long folks, it's time to retire;
I got to keep a date with Odd McIntyre.

LEGEND
"Howdy folks has been designated as the official poem of the Will Rogers Memorial by enactment of the regular session of the eighteenth Legislature of Oklahoma (1941), and describes the dedication of the memorial on November 4, 1938. The characters mentioned are Jesse Jones, statesman, House; Irvin S. Cobb, noted writer; George M. Cohan, famous song and dance man; Fred Stone, stage and screen star; Amon G. Carter, publisher, Ft. Worth; Eddie Cantor, radio and stage comedian; Morton R. Harrison, member of the Will Rogers Memorial Commission; Joe Crosson, famous aviator who returned the bodies of Rogers and Post by air, from Alaska; Wiley Post, record flier with whom Rogers was flying at the time of his death; Mary Rogers, daughter of Will Rogers; Betty Rogers, wife of Will Rogers; and Sally McSpadden, sister of Will Rogers; Joe Davidson, sculptor of Rogers' statute; Sequoyah, famous Cherokee Indian whose statue is in the Hall of Fame in Washington; Franklin D. Roosevelt, thirty-second President of the United States of America; and O.O. McIntyre, noted columnist. The poem was written by the author of "an appreciation of Will Rogers", an authentic biography. The poem has been set to music by Bainbridge Crist, American composer and published by Irving Berlin, Inc., all rights are reserved, copyright 1939 David Randolph Milsten.

This installation made possible by the 1st session
34th Legislature 1973, State of Oklahoma
Dedicated November 4, 1973

Website with more information on either the memorial or the person(s) it is dedicated to: [Web Link]

Location: Will Rogers Memorial Museum

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