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https://history.okeq.org/files/original/3c5534c471c21dd145842498ffa3bbb3.pdf
b86fe35d10bfd959b7d694513b5ce89e
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[Series] History > Oklahoma Queer History
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-GAY-ETY
INT-TOWN.
far holds the record. Recently remo deled,the Bamboo still operates on the same side of town where it has been for
Oat of the Closet Into the Fire)
Since he had already las his job, John became the primary speaker for TGCC's newly formed Speaker's Bureau, appearing before churches and civic groups.
by loni broaddus
The vertical file in the Tulsa Library
public
relations to be
seen with a
Ttm Tumer is well known around Tulsa as the owner of Tim's Playroom.
"John was very upfront," says Tay Clare, a member of TGCC's inceptive
labeled "Homosexuality " contains few
er than thirty articles clipped from the Tulsa World and Tulsa Tribune. The earliest is dated August 1976; the head line reads "Homosexual Arrests In crease at Mohawk Park." Other arti cles discuss a proposed civil rights ordinance requested by the gay com munity,claims of police harassment by patrons of gay bars, clergymen views
an OHR swimming party.
The most thorough Journalism in cluded is a series of three articles by Keo Jackson on the entire front page of the City/State section of the Sunday World dated July 11, 1982. The first article estimates a gay population in Tulsa of 50,000 people, further predict ing that the "subculture ... will double in number by 1990." The second article, "Gay Pride Replaces Stereotype," is filled with positive comments by John Willis (owner ofZipper's) and Rev.Alice Jones (of MCC in Tulsa), as well as mentions of gay bars, activities, and organizations. The final article tells us
that the '"Fruit Loop'Showcases Dark
�e.
Jackson's account ot gay\itein 'Tu\sa
legally. Bootleg whiskey was available, of course; M.C.sold it out of a briefcase in half-pints.
The Blue Haven was located south west of Tulsa, near what is now Town West Shopping Center. It was one of four gay bars in Tulsa at the time though it also had a weekday hetero sexual clientele comprised of nearby residents. M.C. explains, "(Gays) couldn't come out on weeknights. Back in those days, not everybody had
didn't have cars."
So the gay community hung out downtown,sometimes at the Blue Note on Denver,more often at the St. Moritz. The St.Moritz was located in the center of the block where Cathey's Furniture is today, and according to M.C.,was "the number one place to go." Lesbians had their own bar, the Milwaukee Tavern, which was somewhere in the vicinity of 15th and Cincinnati.For the most part,
member of the oppostie sex.
"Bishop's Bar was quite gay-it was mixed," says M.C. "It was very typical (during that time) to find good places that were mixed. In other words, you didn't go into Bishop's Bar as a scream ing queen. You didn't go in there dressed in cutoffs. Women didn't even wear slacks in those days. " Indeed, the
Blue Haven, or even the few blocks over to the St. Moritz, where the jukebox played the big band sounds of Glenn Miller and Tommy Dorsey. Dancing, however, was not allowed: Oklahoma law prohibited dancing where beer was served.
After only about three months, the Blue Haven closed-a victim of the miles in a time when mobility was not eaS\\y attained.
Some time \ater, Thurman Glynn opened the Little Mexico Bar at about 18th and Boston. "That was a wild,
pissy-elegant place," rememoers M. C.
dows were Spanish style . . . they opened out. We crawled in and out of those windows because it was so crowded we couldn't get through the front door!"
Ah, the good old days.
Even in the early 40s, Tulsa had at least one gay bar. Called the Tropical Gardens, it was run by two sisters in what had once been a filling station.
M.C. Parker owns a book called Snoot If You Must which mentions The Tropical Gardens, though not by name. Copyrighted in 1943, the book was written by writer and publisher Lucius Beebe, who visited Oklahoma many times to see his lover, who had been drafted and stationed here.
Beebe writes: "Tulsa was not without its charms. There was, for instance, a nightclub that had formerly been a gasoline filling st· ation and beer flowed out of all of-the compressed air hoses."
Time P.assed, but liqu9r by the drink didn't, and·many oTthe old bars closed
Before the Playroom, he managed The New Plantation,which was at 61st and Yale. And before that-he owned Jim's Anything Goes on 58th and Peoria whichcameafter The Queen of Heart's,
But his bar career started at Friend's Lounge. He had been married; he had been working in the construction busi ness. One day he went into Friend's - not knowing it was a gay bar. He played pool all afternoon with a group of les bians, who invited that night. Friend's owner, Tracy Mclaughlin, eventually hired Jim to bartend thei:�-..
Thq�.were the days of police harass
ment. Cops seemed to show up at the gay bars whenever they were bored,
theycan't push us around like this.' And he never would hire attorneys. He went down and represented himself all ' the time and he usually won."
the war. In 1976, arrests we:re made in Mohawk Park for "soliciting to perform an unnatural sex act, outraging public decency, and sodomy." In 1977,thirteen men were arrested for Jayw�lking
near a gay bar, of course.
A couple of gay organizations had been atteinped in Tulsa, but the one that put Gay TµIsa on the map was the Tulsa Gay Community Caucus.
In the early 70s, a series of hostile editorials appeared in the Tulsa World. "They were all very anti-gay, blatantly so, for no reason," remembers John, a co-founder of TGCC who soon became its primary leader and spokesman. "Gay Lib had never been whispered about in the city in any way."
The last editorial finally angered John to the point that he felt compelled to reply. He wrote a letter to the editor, a rebuttal which stated facts but never mentioned his own homosexuality.
"That's really kind of what started it, strange as it may seem," explains John about the beginnir-igs of TGCC. "There had always been problems ... as far as housing, and police harassment."
John's letter was printed the day he left for a two-week vacation. When he. returned,the embryo.group for TGCC was formed. John discussed the group and the situation with his boss, assur ing him that John would never bring the company name into it.
"It took them three weeks, but they figured out a way to get rid of me."
group. "He was absolutely the best
advocate for gay rights.!'
John received surprising support for his efforts-as well as some disappoint
ing lack of support."We got more sup port from the non-gay community than
c ,
BAY BARS IN TULSA
I ,1rt/1/ //II/If
TROPICAL GARDENS: Early 40s. Operated by two sisters in what had once been a tilling station.
ST. MORITZ: 1940s-50s. located on South Main. Was the place to go. Closed down alter a move in anticipation ot liquor by the
drink-which did not pass. I
BLUE NOTE: 40s-50s. located on North Denver.
BLUE HAVEN: Opened Nov. 1949 by M.C. Parker. Located in southwest Tulsa. Closed alter 3 months due to location.
MILWAUKEE TAVERN: 40s-50s. Lesbian bar. Located at about 15th and Cincinnati.
BISHOP'S BAR: 40s-50s. Located downtown. M\xed crowd but a popular gay hangout.
LITTLE MEXICO: Late 50s. Owned by Thur·
THE D06HOUSE: Owned by Bob Johnson.
TAJ MAHAL: Late 50s. Original location downtown. Manager and his lover were mur
the 11th Street location vacated by the 8th Day.
ZE••Ar Downtolliin, .-,,,., ,,_ __. ,,_, the Ta/.
Pink pool tallle.
• IIIMIOO LOU#IE: Opened early 60s. Owned by Gene Covington. Still operating-oldest gay bar in Tulsa.
8th DAY Located on 11th Street al Lewis nexI door to. what is now a flower shop.
GALA: Lesbian owned. Women's bar with niixed clientele. Located in what is now Tim's Playroom. First private club. Only entrance in the back.
SKOO-BEE-DO: Owned by Paul Scott.
FRIEND'S LOUNGE: Owned by Tracy Mclau· glin. Later called Tracy's, the New Edition.
TIFFANY CLUB: Opened early 70s.
QUEEN OF HEARTS: Opened 1974. Owners: Tim Turner and Paul Magruder.
CARUSO'S RICK'S
TIM'S ANYTHIN6 60ES: Owned by Tim Turner. 58th and Peoria.
NEW PLANTATION: Owned by Tom Olson. managed by Tim Turner. 51st and Yale.
• THE CLUB: Opened by owners of Gala. 12th and Memorial. Lesbian bar-originally attended by gay men also. Now called The Rustic Club.
• TIM'S PLAYROOM: Owned by Tim Turner. Opened in July 1977. Located at 11th and Lewis under the Meadow Gold sign.
• ZIPPER'S: Owned by John Willis. 33rd and Yale. Opened in 1979- ,
• SEEKER'S CHOfCE: Lesbian bar on Admiral at Memorial.
TULSA MINING CO.: On 11th Street. First alter-hours bar. Now Schlitzy·s.
• TOOL IOX: Near downtown. Western bar.
• OVER THE RAINBOW: At 11th and Garnett. Owned by Arlene Benson. Tulsa's largest les· bian bar-though clientele is mixed.
• DANTE'S: Owned by Mark trom L.A. Located
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been expected. One gay person ex- oplainedf thesehquestions are checked 'no' - .
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waTsulasna'sin"cSere�duiballyPrweefellr_-ernesceaSrctuhdeyd", epdionfreoemrinagnsdtusedny.tCalol poiveesrwtehreecroeuqunest�t.-
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19go the Premier Issue of Ano�her
fifteen years, begun to speak. We are Ieru-ning to take care of ourselves.
Tulsa, perhaps, is growing up with us.
· .
ment-which meant that comparues . .
baTsihseoffirssetxsutaelpp. reference. It passed. ideUanwfoarsttuoncaotenlys,idtehrethoenlOy rsdteinpa. nIcf et-he
mgauyncitoymCmhuurncithy. SistaMrteetdr�pm oThutals� �mo�mhe- smtoidr-e7fr0os, M(;C has grown from its first
proaches to the issue.
community for the most part indicated
which offered gays the only legal pro-
abnu!olduintrgein northeast a. MC� offers
that they would not or had not discrim
wteitchtitohne-eleactt· aiolaotefrJidmatIme,haollfehaospMe adyieodr many
otahcehr tcohtuhrecghaeys chommunity that
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1973·74 Dianne
ln i978 Jim Imhofe is quoted in the
guestrsappeagkreorusp,s,nad children's church,
ordinance protecting homosexuals.
Church
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119754·765
1977·78
Taja
Trudy Tyler
Mayo
Le Cabarret
gwe did from the gay community. The
should not beate chers or ministers.
a
1978-791
CLiassaeyGoSotdamrran
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waeyrecpoemrcmeuivneitdy was very hostile. We
less discaryimcionmmunity itself reported
19° 7.9-80 Mr. Timm Friend's Lounge
bo t-eve
as rocking their secure
1980-81 Leighann
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a n though their boat -was
paIsnt ffeacwt,yiet has only been during the
Cianti Caruso's
ars that Tulsa has had so
1981 ·82 TCohsi hCahTurner
Caruso's
1983-84
RHaevleenn HMoaliddday GCarasslihghLtanding
gTGCC soon became a page in Tulsa
Stephanie Casady Old Lady on Brady
n t . .
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Open 7 p.m. Nightly
(located inside TIM'S PLAYROOM Special Sidewalk Sale - June
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
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[1985] Gay-ety in T-Town, Early Gay History and Bars, 1940's- 1985
Subject
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Gayly Oklahoman, June 1985 article by Toni Broaddus reviewing gay bar history and other events including the formation of Tulsa Gay Community Caucus (TGCC) and Oklahomans for Human Rights (OHR).
Creator
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Toni Broaddus with the Gayly Oklahoman
Source
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Gayly Oklahoman
Publisher
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Gayly Oklahoman
Date
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June 1985
Contributor
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Gayly Oklahoman
Gayly Oklahoman
John Faires
M.C. Parker
Miss Gay Tulsa
Oklahomans for Human Rights
Sexual Preference Study
Tay Clare
Tim Turner
Toni Broaddus
Tulsa Gay Bars
Tulsa Gay Political Caucus
-
https://history.okeq.org/files/original/c9595acfdf635bd17f3530d01ce54e06.pdf
537c53efc893da073a9a55ec451d16cd
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[Series] History > Oklahoma Queer History
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____________________________________________________________
Flash From The Past
by Tim Turner
And help from others...
When you look at some of the photos from the Playroom Club era, 1978 to 1986, it almost
seems as though everyone was happy and gay during that period in time. From what I
remember, we were. We worked hard and we played hard, like most Americans at that period in
history. The end of the Free Love Era certainly was not evident in the gay club scene in the late
70's. AIDS was pretty much unknown, at least in our part of the world, life was good...spirits
were high, there was uncharted territory.
Around 1970, I got to hear great stories of the first known gay bars in the Tulsa area. Tropical
Gardens, as far back as the Early 40s, operated by two sisters in an old filling station; The Blue
Note Lounge located on North Denver during the 40s and 50s; The Blue Haven opened
November, 1948 by the 'much loved' Producer, Activist and Entrepreneur, the late M.C. Parker.
M.C. Parker and Tim Warren would later cultivate and produce the largest, most spectacular
Oklahoma Gay Event in history, the Miss Gay Oklahoma Pageant at the Camelot Inn. (Tim
Warren, his life partner forty years his younger, was later murdered and his body discovered in
Mohawk Park. The murder was never solved, as well as most gay murders in our city as I recall.
) M.C. was a promoter, he contracted sponsorship by major brand names such as Phillip Morris
and Halston and achieved an estimated attendance of over 2000, and that's not including the
number of baptist protesters outside the hotel. The Camelot was sold out for this event for one
of the few times in it's history, it was said, and was never the same afterwards. The entire event
was, to say the least, amazing... especially for it's time in history. We could talk about it for hours
over cocktails sometime.
The Milwaukee Tavern, a 40s and 50s lesbian bar located at about 15th and Cincinnati; Bishops
Bar, 40s and 50s located downtown with a mixed crowd, but a popular gay hangout; The St.
Moritz 40's and 50s located on South Main which was THE place to go and was closed down
after a move, in anticipation of Liquor by the Drink... which didn't pass. Little Mexico, late 50s,
owned by Thurman Glynn. The Doghouse, owned by Bob Johnson. The famous Skoo-Bee-Do
Club owned by Paul Scott who, rumor has it, met with a curious and untimely death in Hawaii.
Then there were the clubs I have personal memories of. At 20 years old I actually had no idea
there were nightspots that were frequented by crowds of gays. I actually thought that there
might be at least ten other gay people in the whole State of Oklahoma. That was, until I
ventured into Friends Lounge at 3rd and Utica, owned by Tracy McLaughlin, aka Tony. Tracy
has always been somewhat of my mentor as far as the club business. He ran a tight ship and a
good bar. He worked hard and loved giving the kids a safe place off the streets. Friends Lounge
was famous for it's Friday night drag shows and was a coming out place for hundreds over the
years. Unfortunately, much of the potential profits went for court costs and attorney fees over
time. Frequent police raids and obvious, blatant incidents of harassment were much too
frequent and it was my first personal experience of bigotry, political and social intolerance. I was
amazed to realize that at the same time I had discovered a multitude of others of the same
sexual orientation, I was also unknowingly transcending from a safe, accepted majority into that
of an often misunderstood and shunned minority. The battle, for me, had begun.
Tracy did a lot toward gay acceptance in Tulsa and for Oklahoma. Most of which today's
generation will never realize. But Tracy never wanted the spot light, he only wanted to be left
alone and given an opportunity to make a living and provide a place for gay people to go. Equal
treatment to straight bars. I will never forget, with amusement, one time when Tracy was to
appear in court on a trumped up charge of some kind, I asked him if he had a good attorney and
he told me he didn't need one. When I asked why not, he told me to show up in court and see
for myself. Tracy showed up in court with five stunning, outlandish, drag queens and the case
was thrown out before they had a chance to parade to the witness stand. The Judge didn't want
his court room turned into a circus, although the police had already taken the first step towards
that end. Friends lounge would later move West down third street to be called Tracy's, then The
New Edition and later sold to Jimmy and Roy and became the new location for the Tool Box,
which moved from downtown where Renegades is still located.
Around the same era, things were hopping downtown. (The Fruit Loop as it was called.) Friends
Lounge was less than 5 minutes from the famous pink pool table in the Zebra Lounge on Main
Street, owned by Tom Oliver, which was just around the corner from the Taj Mahal, owned by
Norma Peterson and later purchased by the late Pete Longenbaugh and Robert Kowalski (aka
Sugar). Sugar was the victim of a brutal knifing inside the Taj Mahal after hours....also unsolved.
The Fruit Loop was notorious for hustlers and parking lot parties for 'after clubbers' and those
too young to make it past the I.D. check at the clubs. The police seemed to just allow it for a
period of time then would randomly decide to clamp down... but the revelers would return and
the cycle would continue.
About the only dance club, The Gala at 11th and Lewis, (Just under the Meadow Gold Milk
Sign), eventually to be re-opened as Tim's Playroom Club, (Yours Truely) had been closed for
about 5 years, and that left Mary and Jody's The Club" on Memorial which had a very strict door
policy and was a good distance from the downtown action. "The Club" was probably one of the
most versatile gay/lesbian mixes next to the Gala of all times. We all partied together, both
inside and out.
I saw the vacancy for a dance club and had the itch to get into the gay club business myself. I
eventually met a new acquaintance who's uncle (uh huh) purchased a huge brick 13,500 sq. ft.
masonry building at 911 S. Main, which was very close to the action and would fill the void in the
club scene. With a lot of ambition, sweat, learning experiences and a little borrowed money,
Tulsa's grandest, most beautiful Art Deco Disco to date (one of the first) opened with a frenzy.
I'm thinking that it was about 1974. Bright red walls and bar lined with metal flake padding,
mirrors out the ying yang and a beautiful Art Deco stage with Silver Lamé curtains, The Queen
of Hearts Club and Cafe would be short lived, but it introduced Tulsa to a new era of national
advertising, dance clubs with professional sound and light shows, DJ's, pageants, national
entertainers like the Laughing Kahunas from Hawaii and Sami Joe Cole known for her hits, "Tell
me a Lie" and "It Could Have Been Me", and brought hundreds more out of the closet in Tulsa
and OKC. It also began to draw more attention from the city fathers which meant more media
coverage, more cops....more lawyers.
After the Queen of Hearts closed, it became New York, New York for a while and then was
purchased by Evelyn White who named it The Fountain of Youth, then The 911 Club, then
Papillon. After Evelyn sold it to Bill Oliver, who closed the Zebra after some 20 years, it became
Caruso's. People loved the club, as did I, and didn't want to let it go. Carusso's was later
demolished for parking space along with Mary's, our favorite wino bar which was snuggled
between Queen of Hearts and the Tiffany Club at 915 S. Main, owned by the late Jim Smith,
Robert Wilson and some other idiot. Anyway, at least my first 'dream club' became established
in the minds of many.
I then dabbled with Tim's Anything Goes Club, a plush conversation cocktail lounge at 58th and
Peoria in the rear of the center and gave it up as "too quiet" after a short time for the opportunity
to manage the New Plantation Club with some guys from Dallas, at 51st and Yale.
Eventually, through trial and error and with a tip from a well known and much appreciated Tulsa
Newspaper sports writer, I opened the type of bar that I was most comfortable in.(Trashy Classy,
as some called it, very much like Tramps is today!) He pointed me to a location that had been a
well known gay hang-out for close to twenty five years (Including the next seven) and had been
closed for the previous five years. Thus, becoming one of Tulsa's most controversial yet fun,
notorious and nationally known gay clubs ever, Tim's Playroom Club. Eventually we joined in
with the OHR Blueboys and helped gay softball achieve fame in Oklahoma. We had national
invitational tournaments in Tulsa as well as traveled to Houston, Dallas, Kansas City , OKC and
Wichita. It really helped put Tulsa on the gay map. We once played in one of the nations largest
invitational gay tournaments in Houston among a field of twenty two teams from places such as
New York, San Francisco, Atlanta and won the Most Spirited Team (Miss congeniality) award. I
still think it's because we had the best-looking team there and we made more friends in the
bars. Team Photo
Doubling in size in just a few years, The Playroom would offer a diverse crowd a variety of
entertainment and events. From a Cruise Bar at noon to a wild, thumping Dance bar at night
Tulsa got it's first feel of Cerwin Vega Earthquake speakers in a bar that pounded away at the
fifty year old brick walls causing them to crumble. It also got a close up look at dozens of Tulsa's
Police Officers who constantly toured with flashlights in their hands and disgust and smirks in
their faces. It was an ongoing battle. We had it set up so that whichever of the staff went to jail
for whatever trivial or trumped up reason, Team B would contact the attorney to bail out Team A
and reopen immediately. During the seven years of operation there were more than fifty arrests
of myself or staff members and resulted in NO CONVICTIONS. Imagine that. Eventually, with
the help of KOTV Channel Six who did a thirty minute segment on Tulsa gays, most of which
was filmed in my bar and called "Strangers In The Night" (of which they no longer recall or can
find a copy of in their archives), and aired it during prime time, a face to face discussion with
then Tulsa Police Chief Jack Purdy and a meeting with a nationally recognized attorney who
could not represent us because of conflicting interests, but made a strong recommendation to
the Police Department Internal Affairs that they cease the harassment and change their policy
and treatment toward gays or face another Stonewall or worse, a lawsuit.
Things got much better for a few years. Some policy changes were eventually made and the
attitudes seems to have improved somewhat over time. Although there were still questions,
such as the tragic and unbelievable unsolved multiple murder of manager Robert Kowalski (aka
Sugar)and another, which inadvertently closed the downtown version of the Taj Mahal. There
were several other unsolved gay murders in Tulsa before and after that incident. (another story)
Pete tried moving the Taj to 11th & Lewis behind the Playroom, in the old Zebra Club, but I don't
recall that it lasted too long.
It surprises most to hear that there were as many as thirteen active, open gay bars in Tulsa
during this time frame and most were successful. Great clubs with another complete history
behind them, such as Zippers at 33rd and Yale owned by the late John Willis and of course the
legendary Bamboo Lounge on Pine Street which has reopened a couple of times since the
infamous late Gene Curnigan.Tulsa Mining Company, Seekers Choice, Over the Rainbow and
Dante's, just to name a few, but none bring back the memories of the early days like the old
downtown scene as seen in many other larger cities.
Due to the eventual adoption of the much misunderstood at the time, and misconstrued by the
public, Liquor by the Drink, I realized that the end of the club business, as I knew it, had come.
Gone were the back-door bottle club days. The bulk of the profits would now be re-directed from
the owners and investors to the government coffuers, using a common method known as overtaxation
and regulations.....or progress, as some would call it. But that is yet, another story all
together.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
[c. 1990] Tulsa Gay Bar History by Tim Turner
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Tim Turner
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Tim Turner
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Tim Turner
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
About 1990
911 Club
Art Deco Disco
Bamboo Louge
Bishops Bar
Blue Haven
Blue Note Lounge
Bob Johnson
Camelot Inn
Caruso's
Dante's
Doghouse
Evelyn White
Fountain of Youth
Friends Lunge
Fruit Loop
gala
Gene Curnigan
Jack Purdy
Jim Smith
John Willis
Little Mexico
M.C. Parker
Mary's
Milwaukee Tavern
Miss Gay Oklahoma Pageant
Mohawk Park
Morma Peterson
Murder
New Edition
New Plantation lub
New York
OHR Blueboys
Over the Rainbow
Papillon
Paul Scott
Pete Longenbaugh
Queen of Hearts
Renegades
Rober Kowalski
Robers Wilson
Seekers Choice
Skoo-Bee-Do
St. Moritz
Strangers in the Night KOTV
Sugar
Taj Mahal
The Club
Thurman Glynn
Tim Turner
Tim Warren
Tim's Anything Goes Club
Tim's Playroom
Tom Oliver
Tool Bo
Tracy McLaughlin
Tramps
Tropical Gardens
Tuffany
Tulsa Bar History
Tulsa Mining Company
Zebra Lounge
Zippers