 | This is the earlier shot. The sun was in front of me so the detail of the structure was obscured.
Great Gate of Hollister originally uploaded by anyjazz65
In Hollister, Oklahoma, population 60, stands this wall. Brick and stone and concrete. Just this wall. In a small town made up mostly of mobile homes and a post office, there is this wall. At the end of a nearly deserted street, a reminder of something completely forgotten.
It was too late in the day to get a good photograph. I'll have to go back.
soozika says: ... maybe the Romans once paid Oklahoma a visit after all ...?
It sure looks sort of like a naturalistic Magritte ...
anyjazz65 says: Thanks soozika. Magritte! That's true! Romans, not so far-fetched. It has been proven that Vikings roamed the eastern part of Oklahoma in about 600 AD. Why not Romans in the western half?
I have no idea what the original purpose was. Both times I have been there the ground was too muddy to explore the area behind it. I might get some idea of the size of the building or maybe the number of ground floor rooms if the floor is still there. Maybe this wall is all there is. In a town of only 600 residents, no convenience store or gas station or cafe or any public place, it is difficult to find someone to ask about it. And they might not know anyway. It is impossible to imagine the town needing a building of this size for anything.
soozika says: This is so intriguing -- that no one cared to record the history! Sounds like a weird place alright - no gas station, no stores ... no McDonald's even? ;)
The brick structure behind the columns - it would be interesting to know whether this has been erected to prop up the original structure at some later stage or whether it was part of it from the onset. But then, it's an integral part of two columns already ...
Maybe one from-railway-tracks-to-riches wealthy family wanted to erect a memorial and went bankrupt before it could be finished ... or maybe it has something to do with the railway that seems to have been the reason for Hollister coming into existence (or flourishing) in the first place. Hm. I must admit I'm almost tempted to drop the OK Historical Society a line ... with a link to this photo and a big question mark. On the other hand, maybe some things don't need to be known ...... ... ... ? Anyway, I already know more about Oklahoma now than I ever knew ... before lunchtime.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Oklahoma
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tillman_County%2C_Oklahoma
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hollister,_Oklahoma
Oh Boy (Gary) says: Very nicely done, do you have any idea what it was?
anyjazz65 says: Not a clue. My only guess is that it might have been a hotel for railroad workers in times past. The town does not seem to have ever been very large. There is a grain elevator and a single rail line now. The town is too tiny for a library or a courthouse or a police station. The post office is a small mobile home on the other side of the highway. I don't know. I plan a return trip earlier in the day so I can get a better shot. Maybe I can round up one of the 60 locals who might know what it was and where it went.
Lucky Clov says: Interesting- erected in the manner of a Doric temple. My guess is for the post office, library or other civic bulding. Who knows- could have been a movie set!
anyjazz65 says: Thanks. I MUST go back there. We Googled the town and found absolutely nothing that would tell us about this. The building is just too big for the town. There are currently only 60 residents but it could have been larger in the past I suppose. It would have to be 10 times or more larger to merit a brick building this big. As you can see, the streets are just rocked in lanes. There are as many empty buildings are occupied. The only activity seems to be the minor highway that passes directly through it. There is a grain elevator, a rail siding, a water tower and a tiny post office. Very unusual.
Oh Boy (Gary) says: With the coming of the Katy Railroad, Loveland, Hollister, and Tipton sprouted on the prairie. About the only objections that the settlers in this rich new land had were that Oklahoma was still a territory, and it was at least a two-day trip to Lawton, the county seat, since this was a part of Comanche County then. These situations were remedied by 1907 statehood and the creation of Tillman County, with Frederick as the county seat. Seven bustling towns were thriving in the new county: Davidson, Frederick, and Manitou on the Frisco line, Grandfield, Loveland, Hollister, and Tipton on the Katy. Tillman County entered the twentieth century with great expectations!
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