Oklahoma
State Senate
Communications Division
State Capitol
Oklahoma City, OK 73105
405-521-5774
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For Immediate Release:
April 18, 2006
Senator Kenneth Corn
Senate Passes Resolution Honoring Heavener Researcher
The State Senate on Monday passed a resolution honoring the exceptional
life and work of Gloria Farley of Heavener, a teacher, researcher,
author and caseworker for the state welfare system.
Senator Kenneth
Corn, author of Senate Resolution 87, said Farley’s tireless
work and efforts have produced a wealth of historical knowledge
and ultimately resulted in her research area being transformed into
the Heavener Runestone State Park.
“Gloria Farley has devoted a half a century to research and
record evidence of pre-Columbian visitors to America and specifically
Southeastern Oklahoma,” said Corn, D-Poteau. “Her perseverance
resulted in the protection of the Heavener Runestone as a State
Park, ensuring the preservation of a unique historical artifact.”
In 1928, Farley first viewed the Heavener Runestone, then known
as Indian Rock, which changed her life forever. While maintaining
her career as a kindergarten teacher, Farley spent decades researching
the site. She has authored 66 published articles and presented over
50 lectures on epigraphy and her findings. In 1994, her book, “In
Plain Sight: Old World Records in Ancient America,” was published,
and a second book is scheduled for publication next year. Her extensive
collection is being catalogued and displayed by the Oklahoma Historical
Society.
Farley, a renowned epigrapher in her own right, and with the assistance
of some of the world’s most prominent experts of ancient Norse
languages translated the inscription on the rock as reading “Glome’s
Valley”. The language used in marking the rune dates from
300 A.D. to 800 A.D.
Farley’s work to bring academic legitimacy to the Heavener
Runestone and various other sites throughout America resulted in
numerous honors. She has been named a fellow of the Epigraphic Society
and the Explorers Club, is a charter member and trustee of the Institute
for the Study of American Cultures, which honored her with the Root
Cutter Award, is a charter member of the Oklahoma Women’s
Hall of Fame, and an honorary member of Delta Kappa Gamma International.
“Gloria Farley’s accomplishments were not limited to
her work as a highly respected epigrapher,” Corn said. “She
was a woman of boundless energy and talent, a loving mother, an
inspiring teacher and a woman of great empathy as evidenced by her
work as a caseworker for the welfare system in Oklahoma. She will
be greatly missed.”
For more information,
contact:
Senator Corn's Office: (405) 521-5576

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