Our family celebrated another birthday. Helen! She doesn't get older, she just gets better! She wanted a cheesecake for her birthday cake so that is what she got.
2023-6-21 Helen's Birthday
2023-6-15 Three Valley Museum, Durant OK
I made a little mistake on my last post when I said we headed back for a dip in the pool after we toured Fort Washita. We actually made a stop at the Three Valley Museum in downtown Durant.
Upstairs there are window vignettes of life in earlier times. School.
Lots of information about daily life in a small place. We also met a woman working there who had an RV and was very interested in our group so we exchanged information with her.
2023-6-15 Fort Washita, Durant Ok
The Texas Ramblin' Roses met at the Magnolia Cafe in Durant for breakfast on Thursday morning. The food was great and the service was excellent. Our next stop at least for six of us was Fort Washita which wasn't too far out of Durant. We managed to take a scenic detour on the way.
Fort Washita was built in 1842 as the southwestern-most military post of the United States. The mission was to maintain peace for the Chickasaw and Choctaw Nations within their new lands. They were relocated from the southeast part of the U.S. as we learned from our visit to the Choctaw Cultural Center. The Choctaw and the Chickasaw were harassed by both whites militias and other Indian tribes who resented their presence.The Visitor's Center occupies the site of the original chaplains quarters. We arrived just in advance of a large tour group of young students and were able to look at the exhibits and learn about some of the history before the students converged. The fort operated as a U.S. military post until the start of the Civil War in 1861 when it was occupied by Confederate forces until 1865. It was almost completely destroyed when they left. It was granted to the Chickasaw Nation until the Dawes Commission allotted it the Charles and Abbie Davis Colbert family. The Oklahoma Historical society acquired it in 1962 and restored it as a historic site and museum. They partnered with the Chickasaw Nation to assume responsibility and management of it in 2016.
There docents dressed in period costumes for the students tour. That poor woman was definitely suffering from the heat in those clothes.
This is all that is left of the laundress quarters. Enlisted wives often took fee paying jobs as laundresses as enlisted men received no family stipends.
We found the blacksmith working the forge. It was even hotter in this building. He showed us a number of tools from the era and asked us what they were for. Between the three of us, we were to identify almost all of them.
There was a replica post office in a corner of the building.
This Bake Oven was built in 1840 and could bake 180 loaves at one time. Soldier were given a daily ration of 18 ounces of bread a day.
No explanation needed for the remains of the latrines.
2023-6-14 Olivia's Boat
Thursday, several of us took off for the Texas side of Lake Texoma to check out Olivia's new boat. My friend Olivia lives in north Texas, winters in Rockport in her big Class C RV, and has a houseboat on Lake Texoma.
She had a bottle of champagne so we all toasted to her new part-time home and future fun.