Lake Texoma Souvenirs




Since I’ve been living on Lake Texoma I’ve been surprised at the lack of souvenirs. Tee-shirts, sweatshirts, ball caps, sun visors and beverage can koozies, yes. But genuine souvenirs, no.

Have I missed something around here?

Well, thanks to Ebay and a love for garage sales, flea markets and antique stores I have acquired a few Lake Texoma treasures I proudly display in my home and office. Besides the vintage postcards I’ll save for another post, another day, I have two prized pieces of pottery pictured below.

One is a lovely decorative plate manufactured by Vernon Kilns for the W.J. Baldwin Store in Madill, Oklahoma. That’s what is printed on the back of the plate, so I did a little research on the store and the pottery kiln, both of which are now defunct.

W.J. Baldwin and his wife Hazel owned and operated their department store in Madill, Oklahoma. They commissioned the commemorative plate some time before 1958.

That’s all I know for sure, because that was the year Vernon Kilns in Vernon, California went out of business. Wikipedia states, “Vernon Kilns produced transfer-print specialty ware which could be special ordered. Custom decal plates, as special order items, were produced for department stores, for promotional advertisement, for commemorative events, and for the tourist trade.”

Please post your comments and photos of the Baldwin’s store if you’re so inclined. It would be GREAT to have them as part of my Lake Texoma treasury.

My other piece of Lake Texoma pottery is a mug manufactured by Conrad Crafters in Wheeling, West Virginia. It even has gilt edging, which doesn’t show up in my photo.

Conrad is still in business today and an email to them with the picture of the mug attached received the following reply from David Knight: “We produced souvenir mugs of that type in the mid to late 60's. Cheap Chinese imports forced us out of that line around that time.”

A map is not really a souvenir, but I cannot help myself here, so I’m including a photo and brief description of a Lake Texoma map from the 1950s. It was put out by the M-KT Railroad which ceased operations in 1988, having operated in Texas, Kansas, Oklahoma and Missouri since it began in the 1870s.

The Katy Railroad, as it came to be known, is probably most famous these days for the publicity stunt staged in Crush, Texas on September 15, 1896. You’ll get a longer version of the incredible tale in a story published by Clay Swartz recently in Cowboys and Indians Magazine, but the gist of it is that the Katy Railroad staged a fake train wreck, a crash to attract attention. And the stunt worked. It’s reported that 50,000 people were present for the Crash at Crush that day, and three of them died as a result.

Got any Lake Texoma souvenirs of your own to share? If so, post below!




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Lake Texoma Current Weather Alerts

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Lake Texoma Weather Forecast

Monday

Sunny

Hi: 69

Monday Night

Clear

Lo: 57

Tuesday

Partly Sunny

Hi: 75

Tuesday Night

Chance Thunderstorms

Lo: 64

Wednesday

Chance Thunderstorms

Hi: 75

Wednesday Night

Slight Chance Thunderstorms

Lo: 67

Thursday

Chance Thunderstorms

Hi: 77

Thursday Night

Thunderstorms Likely

Lo: 69


Lake Texoma Water Level (last 30 days)


Water Level on 4/22: 615.69 (-1.31)



Lake Texoma

Fishing Report from TPWD (Apr. 17)

GOOD. Water normal stain; 58 degrees; 1.53 feet below pool. Striped bass fishing is great drifting live shad around the islands or past the bridges near the rivers. Rain should finish off the spawn and look for bait on the banks with feeding fish near them. Top waters are working on sandy flats in 2-8 feet of water. Smallmouth bass are good on live shad along the bluffs on the banks in 2-4 feet of water. Also fair on spooks early and look for largemouth off the banks in 6-12 feet of water on main lake points near rocks. Catfish are fair on cut shad along the rocks in 30-45 feet of water. Drifting cut rough fish or gizzard shad in 5-10 feet of water near the river could produce a big fish after a rain with an inflow of dirty water. Crappie are good on brush piles in 12-18 feet of water on jigs using electronics to locate active fish working in and out of the brush. Look for spawners shallow with warmer temperatures in the forecast. Report by Jacob Orr, Guaranteed Guide Service Lake Texoma. Threadfin shad are spawning along the banks. Hybrid stripers are good on topwaters in the morning along rocky banks. Some days the egrets are working leading the way to fish. Some schooling activity under gulls. After the morning bite ends switch to swimbaits and Alabama rigs in 10-25 feet of water on the edges and dropoffs. This pattern should hold for the next 4-6 weeks while shad spawn near docks and banks. Report by John Blasingame, Adventure Texoma Outdoors.

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