President
Teddy Roosevelt Signing
Statehood Proclamation
click picture
to enlarge |
Artist: Mike
Wimmer
Sponsor: Walt & Peggy
Helmerich
Dedication: 2003
Size: 6' x 4'
Type: Oil on Canvas
Location: 4th floor, Outside
Senate Chamber Lobby |
“Oklahoma is now a state,” declared
Theodore Roosevelt, President of the United States, as
he signed the statehood proclamation at 10:16 o’clock
on the morning of November 16, 1907. The birth of the new
state of Oklahoma was attended with little ceremony. Only
a delegation of government clerks from Oklahoma and newspaper
men were in the cabinet room as witnesses.
The delegation formed around
the cabinet table and fifteen minutes after 10 o’clock,
the door leading to the executive private office was thrown
open and the President entered, taking a seat at the head
of the cabinet table. An eagle quill pen was arranged for
the signature and became property of the Oklahoma Historical
Society.
The President picked up one of
the new blotters which lay on the cabinet table to dry his
signature, but he had not completed the operation before
an alert person with gray hair, white tie and nervous smile,
cried out, “Mr. President, give me the blotter.” The
blotter was presented with a smile to Albert Hammer of Enid,
Oklahoma, who had made the request, a clerk in the general
land office.
The White House telegraph rooms
were directly connected both with Guthrie and Oklahoma City
and the second the President attached his signature to the
proclamation, the information was flashed to the new state.
Images are copyright
of The Oklahoma State Senate Historical Preservation Fund,
Inc. and the artist. Please contact Pam Hodges at 524-0126
or hodges@oksenate.gov for
further copyright information. |