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Oklahoma Music Hall of Fame

Oklahoma Music Hall of Fame
Oklahoma Jazz Hall of Fame
Oklahoma Jazz Hall of FamePhoto: Smschrag, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0. Cropped & resized.

Look to your left for a pale stone building defined by its blocky stepped towers and massive arched windows, proudly bearing the words Tulsa Union Depot carved directly into the facade.

This place is the ultimate survivor. Completed in 1931, this depot is a stunning example of Art Deco, an architectural style from the twenties and thirties famous for its sleek, geometric shapes and grand ambition. At its peak, thirty six trains a day roared through here. But as automobiles took over, rail travel plummeted. By 1967, the station was entirely abandoned, left to decay for nearly forty years. It is a perfect example of how massive civic dreams can sometimes crash headfirst into changing financial realities.

But that is not where the story ends. In 2004, the city allocated four million dollars to rescue the building and transform it into the Oklahoma Jazz Hall of Fame. Pull up your phone to see a shot of the cavernous interior during that massive renovation.

They needed a permanent home to celebrate the monumental legacy of jazz, blues, and gospel in this state. And when you look at the people honored here, you find an incredible story of hidden art and history. Take Zelia N. Breaux. She was the very first person inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1989. She was not a world famous recording artist. She was a music teacher. Working in Oklahoma City's segregated African American schools, she organized a high school band in 1923 that grew into one of the most prestigious in the country. Her rigorous mentorship directly shaped future legends like Charlie Christian and Duke Ellington. In 1915, she even co-owned a theater to guarantee Black performers a stage of their own. Her artistic vision soared far beyond the harsh social and economic barriers of her time.

Sadly, the institution built to honor her faced its own brutal collision with the ledger book. Years of disastrous financial mismanagement under a former CEO culminated in the Hall losing its non-profit tax status in 2018. Things got so bad that in October 2020, the power was literally shut off over unpaid bills, and the organization plunged into bankruptcy.

But the music refused to die. A new foundation stepped in, bought out the operation, and pledged millions in fresh renovations. Check your app for a beautiful view of the exterior, standing strong as the rebranded Jazz Depot. Today, it is alive and swinging once again, ready to host future generations of Oklahoma artists.

We are going to keep that rhythm going. Let us head toward our final stop, a gleaming modern symbol of downtown Tulsa's rebirth, Oneok Field, which is just a fourteen minute walk away.

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