Huckins Hotel
Introduction
Text-to-speech Audio
Many architectural gems fell during the urban renewal program, but in terms of historical importance, the Huckins Hotel was probably the biggest loss. Built in 1908 at the corner of Broadway and Main, the very nexus of Downtown, the Huckins featured in more than its share of historical events. It served as the temporary state capitol, a rallying point, and a smoke-filled room of local politics. The Huckins became the first urban renewal building imploded by explosives in July, 1971.
Images
Huckins Hotel Postcard, 1950
Interior of Huckins Hotel, 1914
Temporary Governor's Office at Huckins Hotel, 1910
Huckins Hotel Demolition, 1971
Backstory and Context
Author-Uploaded Audio
Text-to-speech Audio
Many architectural gems fell during the urban renewal program, but in terms of historical importance, the Huckins Hotel was probably the biggest loss.
This site was the location of the Hotel Lee (1900) until Joseph Huckins, Jr. bought it from Oscar Lee and renamed it the Lee-Huckins. A 1908 fire razed the building and Huckins rebuilt on the site with the much larger Huckins Hotel a year later.
Situated as it was at the corner of Broadway and Main, the very nexus of Downtown, the Huckins featured in more than its share of historical events. When the people voted to move the capitol to Oklahoma City in 1910, Governor Charles N. Haskell ordered the state seal brought from Guthrie to his newly established office in the Huckins Hotel, posting the proclamation on the wall outside his door. In 1911 during the massive streetcar strike that rendered the city immobile, activist Kate Barnard scaled the balcony over the entrance and gave a rousing speech to the strikers to keep up the fight. The Huckins coffee shop served as the smoke-filled room of Oklahoma politics, the scene of all manner of political deal-making for decades. So much so, one longtime senator from OKC was referred to as "the Senator from Huckins County."
As Mayor Patience Latting watched the Huckins demolition from a fire engine, she was heard to say, "It makes me kind of sad watching demolition machinery breaking up the Huckins. So many things have happened here." The Huckins became the first urban renewal building imploded by explosives in July, 1971.
Sources
"Plans Nearly Completed for New $400,00 Hotel Building." Daily Oklahoman (Oklahoma City) August 17th, 1908. .1.
"Instant Removal Governor's Affair." Oklahoma City Daily Pointer (Oklahoma City) June 13th, 1910. .1.
https://www.metrolibrary.org/archives/image/2020/07/huckins-hotel-0
https://www.metrolibrary.org/archives/image/2019/09/lobby-lee-huckins-hotel-oklahoma-city-okla
https://www.metrolibrary.org/archives/image/2012/08/temporary-governors-office-lee-huckins-hotel
https://www.metrolibrary.org/node/43362