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On October 5,
2001,
Friends of Libraries in Oklahoma, FOLIO, designated Okemah
as a Literary Landmark in honor of Woody Guthrie.
It was
the first step in FOLIO’s Oklahoma Literary Landmarks
Celebration, an official Oklahoma Centennial project.
Other Literary Landmarks
in the United States are the Thomas Jefferson Building at
the Library of Congress, the Plaza Hotel of Eloise fame,
and the William Faulkner home in Oxford, Mississippi. The
guidelines for Literary Landmark status come from Friends
of Libraries USA, FOLUSA.
FOLIO is a member of FOLUSA as local Oklahoma
Friends are members of FOLIO.
Michael Wallis, author of Route
66 and an indispensable library supporter chaired the
Oklahoma Literary Landmark Steering Committee.
The committee discussed many of Oklahoma’s
excellent authors such as Lynn Riggs, Will Rogers, John
Berryman, Ralph Ellison, and Angie Debo, but they selected
Woody Guthrie to be the first.
For his thousands of songs and poems, for his
autobiographical novel Bound
for Glory, for his love of America, he and his
birthplace deserved it.
One of his thousands of songs, This
Land is Your Land, is among the most beloved songs of
the twentieth century.
Another, The
Oklahoma Hills, is Oklahoma’s official state folk
song. We also
knew that Smithsonian exhibit on Woody Guthrie will be in
Oklahoma in early 2002.
The day started
with a meeting of Friends of Libraries in Oklahoma, FOLIO,
the major sponsor. Friends
live all around the state and they meet when they get
together. Library
Friends and the people of Okemah ate good Oklahoma barbecue
and got to know each other.
A drawing was held and a children’s book,
This Land is Your Land beautifully illustrated by Kathy
Jakobsen was won by a student from Virginia Beach, Virginia.
She was asked to read it to a child.
She could easily do that since she is going to be an
elementary teacher. She
was also asked to take it back home and donate it to her
public library. She
promised to do that. Michael
Wallis donated first edition signed copies of all his books
to Bonnie Crawford, the Okemah Public Library librarian.
The
plaque was unveiled at the Crystal Theater.
It reads: “Friends of Libraries USA, Literary
Landmarks Register – Okemah, Oklahoma, nestled in the Oklahoma
Hills and the birthplace on July14, 1912 of
Woody Guthrie the renowned poet and folk singer.
The hometown that influenced songs such as the
American classic This
Land is Your Land and scores of other songs, poems, and
books including his autobiographical novel Bound
for Glory, is designated a Literary Landmark by Friends
of Libraries U.S.A. Friends
of Libraries in Oklahoma, FOLIO - October 5, 2001.”
As
the dedication began each child was given an Oreo, a cookie
created in 1912, the year that Woody Guthrie was born. The
band Doublenotspyz played Woody Guthrie songs.
Michael Wallis introduced the people and groups who
made the day possible.*
Then
Dr. Guy Logsdon, a Smithsonian Scholar, stood on stage alone
and made all of us really understand why this town and Woody
deserved to be honored over and over again.
Accompanied by his guitar he sang Woody’s songs.
As he ended his presentation, the entire audience
stood spontaneously to sing, This
Land is Your Land. Hopefully
this will be one more way for Okemah to let the world know
who and where they are.
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