For Immediate Release: May 16, 2007
Painting
Commemorates McAlester's First Coal Production and KATY
Railroad
In honor of Oklahoma's
coal and railroad industry, a painting depicting the relationship
between McAlester's first coal production and the KATY
railroad was unveiled Wednesday in the Senate. The painting,
by world-renown artist Wayne Cooper, was sponsored by
the Puterbaugh Foundation and commissioned by the Oklahoma
State Senate Historical Preservation Fund.
"This painting portrays an incredible time in our
state's history when we were entering the age of industrialization,"
said Charles Ford, president of the preservation fund.
"Being that this is our centennial, we couldn't have
picked a better year to have such a painting added to
the Capitol's collection. As we move forward in this era
of high technology, this painting will remind us of our
humble beginnings."
Oklahoma's coal industry grew alongside the state's railroad
industry in the late 1800's. The relationship between
the two industries was mutually beneficial. Railroad companies
bought coal to use as fuel; coal companies used the railroad
to move coal to other markets.
The usefulness of coal was noted when French explorers
saw Native tribes in eastern Oklahoma using it to make
their fires hotter for blacksmithing. In time, coal became
an important resource, being used for heating and cooking
and as fuel for steam engines. Steam then started to be
used to turn wheels that ran steamboats, trains and machines
in factories.
J.J. McAlester came to Indian Territory looking for coal.
While he searched for it, he set up a trading post at
Bucklucksy. Being married to a Choctaw woman, he was adopted
into the tribe and was allowed to mine for coal and sell
it outside of the Territory. But he needed a way to move
his coal to market. So he traveled to Kansas where he
persuaded railroad officials with the Missouri, Kansas
and Texas Railroad (known as the MKT or "KATY")
to build tracks into the Territory. The route was set
and once the tracks reached Bucklucksy, the name of the
town was changed to McAlester.
The state's first coal mine was near Krebs. As the mines
grew in size, so did the towns in the area. Needing workers,
mining companies went to Europe to recruit workers and
many European immigrants settled in the area to help mine
the coal.
The painting was sponsored by the Puterbaugh Foundation
named after Jay Garfield Puterbaugh, who was one of the
founding fathers of the coal and rail industry in southeastern
Oklahoma. He founded the McAlester Fuel Company which
brokered, marketed and transported much of the coal mined
around McAlester. The Puterbaugh Foundation makes grants
to benefit Oklahoma education, health care, medical research,
youth and children's programs and other projects that
will enhance the quality of life in Oklahoma. The Foundation
is chaired by Justice Steven Taylor of the Oklahoma Supreme
Court.
"The Puterbaugh Foundation is very proud to sponsor
this historic painting which commemorates the coal and
railroad heritage of McAlester, Oklahoma,” said
Taylor. “We do this in honor of J.G. Puterbaugh
and the people of McAlester."
Cooper's works can be found in many private and public
collections worldwide, including 13 paintings which hang
in the State Capitol. His latest work is an oil painting
on canvas that took him around six months to complete.
"It was a pleasure getting to work on this historical
painting of McAlester. I enjoyed visiting the city and
its coal museum as well as going around to the old mines
sites. That helped me get the lay of the land and the
general feeling of the painting," said Cooper. "This
work has created a lot of interest because there are so
many things included in the work and that has made working
on this piece all that much enjoyable."
This and other art commissioned by the Oklahoma State
Senate Historical Preservation Fund, Inc. can be found
on the Internet at www.oksenate.gov.
For more information contact:
Pam Hodges: (405) 521-5675