Senate Dedicates Painting of 1928 Trans-Continental
Foot Race Winner Andy Payne
The Senate unveiled another original
work of art commissioned by the Oklahoma State
Senate Historical Preservation Fund Tuesday. The
painting, by Oklahoma City artist Christopher
Nick, is of Oklahoman Andy Payne who was the winner
of the 1928 Trans-Continental Foot Race as well
as the Clerk of the Oklahoma Supreme Court for
38 years retiring in 1973.
“I knew Mr. Payne personally and knew we
had to get his story onto a canvas for others
to enjoy,” said Charles Ford, President
of the Preservation Fund. “Not only was
he a tremendous athlete, he also had a great head
for business and law, which was evident in his
success over the years.”
After high school, Payne moved to California looking
for work, but jobs were scarce. Fate intervened
when the former high school track athlete saw
an ad in the sports pages announcing C.C. Pyle’s
International Trans-Continental Foot Race. With
his Dad’s help, he raised the entry fee
of $125, and returned to California in February
1928 to attend the training camp at Ascot Parkway
in Los Angeles.
The 3,422 mile race from California to New York
began on March 4, 1928 and took 84 days to complete.
The 20-year-old Payne won the race and the $25,000
prize.
Payne returned to Oklahoma where he paid off the
mortgage on the family farm, built his parents
a new home, and bought himself some land and a
new car. He married his wife, Vivian, in 1929.
In 1934, with no job and the country caught in
the Depression, Andy ran for clerk of the Oklahoma
State Supreme Court and won. He continued to be
re-elected, leaving only for two year to serve
in the Army during WWII. After turning 40, he
attended law school at night and earned a law
degree.
His real interest was land acquisition especially
mineral production. He held onto the land and
minerals he had bought with his winnings and continued
to buy more. Coal, gas and oil were discovered
on his land something he planned for having studying
geology in order to make better land purchasing
decisions.
The painting was a gift of the Andy Payne family.
Senator Sean
Burrage, who represents Payne’s hometown
of Chelsea, made the suggestion to Ford to contact
the Payne family about the possibility of commissioning
the painting.
“What a great example Mr. Payne is to each
of us of how hard work and determination can pay
off. His story is especially pertinent today when
so many are facing such hard economic times like
he and so many others did during the Great Depression,
but he didn’t let anything hold him back,”
said Burrage, D-Claremore. “He was a great
Oklahoman, and I’m glad that the story of
this Rogers County native will forever grace the
walls of the State Capitol.”
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:
Sen. Burrage's Office - 405-521-5555