Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Folk singer’s boyhood home to be rebuilt

Oklahoma residents embrace and celebrate Woody Guthrie’s legacy and history

- JUSTIN JUOZAPAVIC­IUS

OKEMAH, Okla. — When Woody Guthrie’s dilapidate­d boyhood home was ordered torn down in the late 1970s, the demolition reflected the strained relationsh­ip between conservati­ve Oklahoma and the native son famous for his folk singing and progressiv­e politics.

Those tensions persisted for more than a generation, but attitudes about Guthrie have slowly softened. Now, developers working with the blessing of Guthrie’s relatives have announced plans to rebuild his 1860s-era boyhood home in Okemah, a timeworn town of 3,300 people desperatel­y seeking tourism dollars.

“If you were to put a Mount Rushmore of American music here in the Midwest, the first two artists on it would be Hank Williams and Woody Guthrie,” said Johnny Buschardt, a spokesman for the project. “Without Woody, there wouldn’t be a Bob Dylan or a Bruce Springstee­n.”

Best known for the song “This Land is Your Land,” Guthrie came of age during the Great Depression and later embraced leftist politics, including for a time some tenets of communism. By weaving social issues into his music, he reimagined folk songs as platforms for protest, starting a creative tradition carried on by scores of other top artists.

In hundreds of folk songs and ballads, Guthrie’s lyrics celebrated American workers, lamented the woes of the poor and advocated for civil rights. Although revered as one of the best songwriter­s in American history, he was rarely acknowledg­ed, let alone honored, by his home state, even for decades after his death in 1967.

“When I was going to school [in the 1960s], it was almost like his name wasn’t supposed to be mentioned. And when it was brought up in class, the teacher would change the subject,” recalls resident Ric Denney, whose family has roots in town dating to the 1920s.

It took more than 30 years, but Okemah now celebrates Guthrie with an annual music festival that draws thousands of people from around the world. Tributes such as the mural of Guthrie strumming his guitar on the side of a downtown building are commonplac­e these days.

Other parts of Oklahoma are honoring him, too, in a big way. In April, a 12,000-squarefoot museum showcasing his life’s work opened to much fanfare in downtown Tulsa. A community park across the street from the museum is called Guthrie Green.

The estimated $500,000 rebuilding of Guthrie’s childhood home will use original planks salvaged from the rundown property called London House, which was purchased by prominent local businessma­n Earl Walker in the early 1960s. Walker said he hoped he could eventually win support from town leaders to restore it as a way of promoting Okemah, about 60 miles south of Tulsa.

Instead, they ordered him to tear it down, declaring the property a public nuisance because it had become a place for teenagers to smoke and winos to pass out.

Walker complied, but he saved the lumber for the day when his neighbors would recognize Guthrie’s importance to the town and the country. The bundle of preserved wood eventually ended up at the Okfuskee County History Center.

Today, all that remains of London House are a few blocks of the home’s sandstone foundation — mostly obscured by knee-high weeds. A faded sign on the lot warns visitors against stealing the stones.

London House is to be rebuilt on the same lot, and project organizers said they want to come as close as possible to making it look like it did when Guthrie lived there.

At the history center, board member Ron Gott is eager for work to finally begin after years of indifferen­ce or opposition from town leaders.

“In the early 1970s and ’80s, Woody was still a bad name among some residents,” Gott said. “You had some old-timers here in Okemah who were just against Woody, but there’s maybe a handful still alive.”

The town is “coming around,” he added. “Most people understand [the home is] a draw, something that is part of history.”

Organizers hope to raise money for the project through donations and a benefit concert in Tulsa by singer and Hollywood actor Kris Kristoffer­son in mid-October, among other events.

Constructi­on is scheduled for November through May.

Kansas-based project coordinato­r Dan Riedemann, who owns a company that restores celebrity properties, said the undertakin­g will preserve Oklahoma’s music royalty for future generation­s.

“He’s their Elvis Presley, and this is their Graceland,” he said in a recent interview.

Guthrie’s family members have also praised the plan. His granddaugh­ter, Annie Hays Guthrie, who travels to Okemah every year, said she feels like a part of her has “come home.”

 ?? AP/SUE OGROCKI ?? This is a replica of sorts of Woody Guthrie’s childhood home. It sits at the Okfuskee County History Center in Okemah, Okla., and is made of wood salvaged from the actual home.
AP/SUE OGROCKI This is a replica of sorts of Woody Guthrie’s childhood home. It sits at the Okfuskee County History Center in Okemah, Okla., and is made of wood salvaged from the actual home.
 ?? AP/SUE OGROCKI ?? Waylon Bishop, president of the Okfuskee County History Center, examines boards salvaged from Woody Guthrie’s boyhood home, a run-down property called London House that was ordered torn down decades ago.
AP/SUE OGROCKI Waylon Bishop, president of the Okfuskee County History Center, examines boards salvaged from Woody Guthrie’s boyhood home, a run-down property called London House that was ordered torn down decades ago.

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