Thomas Gilcrease Sr.

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Thomas Gilcrease Sr.

Birth
Vowells Mill, Natchitoches Parish, Louisiana, USA
Death
6 May 1962 (aged 72)
Tulsa, Tulsa County, Oklahoma, USA
Burial
Tulsa, Tulsa County, Oklahoma, USA Add to Map
Plot
Gilcrease Mausoleum
Memorial ID
View Source
Oilman, Art Collector, Philanthropist, Born William Thomas Gilcrease & At the age of nine, Gilcrease who was one-eighth Creek, was awarded his allotment of 160 acres located about twenty miles south of Tulsa, Oklahoma. In 1905, oil was discovered in this area, and his land being astride the Glen Pool Reserve, made him a multi-millionaire by the time he was twenty. He founded the Gilcrease Oil Company in 1922 and was able to purchase more land. He had his company headquarters in San Antonio, Texas, in 1937, and also maintained a office in Europe. In 1949, the headquarters of the company returned to Tulsa. During the 1920s and 1930s being inspired by collections of European art museums, he began to collect oil paintings and other artifacts of the American West. His collection expanded over the next twenty years, with the majority of art obtained after 1939; he created a museum the Gilcrease Museum, located on the grounds of his estate in 1949. Due to declining oil prices in the 1950s, he sold his collection to the people of Tulsa. He died of a heart attack, is buried on the grounds of the Gilcrease Museum in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
William Thomas Gilcrease Sr. Obit/legacy info

An oilman and the founder of the Thomas Gilcrease Institute of American History and Art of Tulsa (Gilcrease Museum), William Thomas Gilcrease, the eldest child of William Lee Gilcrease and Mary Elizabeth Vowell, was born February 8, 1890, at Robiline, Louisiana. A Creek, he was affectionately called "Indian Tom."
After Gilcrease's birth his family moved to the Creek Nation, Indian Territory, and eventually settled at Wealaka. As a result of the Dawes Commission allotment process, Gilcrease received 160 acres near present Glenpool in 1899. His Creek blood was through his mother; his father was non-Indian. Gilcrease's sons, Thomas, Jr., and Barton, were of Creek and Osage descent as a result of his marriage in 1908 to Belle Harlow, an Osage. His second marriage, in 1928, to Norma Smallwood, Miss America of 1926, produced a daughter, Des Cygne.
Gilcrease's brief formal education revolved around rural one-room schools, a semester at Bacone College, and the Kansas State Teacher's College, Emporia. An early role model and teacher at Bacone was Alexander Posey, who instructed his students in the arts, sciences, writing, and, most importantly, their American Indian heritage. He taught Gilcrease about the Trail of Tears and Indian leaders such as Sequoyah and Sitting Bull, about how to make bows and arrows and to hunt, and about the operations of the Creek National Council at Okmulgee.
Discovery of the Glenn Pool Oil Field in 1905 propelled Gilcrease into the oil industry. His allotment had thirty-two producing oil wells by 1917. Once he was financially secure, Gilcrease was able to fulfill his personal philosophy that "every man must leave a track and it might as well be a good one." His interest in fine arts and petroleum led him to study in Europe; there he mastered French and Spanish and became versed in geology. During his life Gilcrease was a rancher, farmer, cowboy, banker, oilman, storekeeper, and collector of American Indian art and artifacts. In May 1956 he received an honorary doctorate of arts and letters from the University of Tulsa.
Gilcrease founded the Gilcrease Oil Company in 1922 and discovered a new oil-producing strata, named the Gilcrease sand, near Wetumka. His company brought in numerous wells in Oklahoma, Texas, and Kansas. He also obtained controlling interests in the Fourth National Bank of Tulsa, the Bank of Bixby, the state banks of Coweta and Wagoner, and a large bank in Stillwater.
Gilcrease's desire to acquire art and a comprehensive record of American Indians, from the prehistoric to modern period, sent him on collecting tours in Europe. In 1912 he purchased his first painting, titled Rural Courtship, by Daniel Ridgeway Knight. His remaining years involved planning, financing, and personally excavating Indian archaeological sites in the United States and Mesoamerica.
The Thomas Gilcrease Foundation was formed in 1942 to gather, maintain, and preserve materials promoting and understanding the American Indian. In 1943 Gilcrease opened his first museum; it was situated in San Antonio, Texas. In 1949 he constructed a building in Tulsa to house his collection adjacent to a residence he had purchased in 1913. The cultural assemblage grew to include ten thousand works of American Indian and related art, 250,000 artifacts, and 100,000 rare books. The Thomas Gilcrease Institute of American History and Art's collection was presented to the people of Tulsa in 1955, with the provision that the museum be "devoted to the free public enjoyment of the artistic, cultural and historical record of the American Indian."
Upon Gilcrease's death in Tulsa on May 6, 1962, his funeral was conducted by Chief Wolf Robe Hunt, a Delight Maker from the Acoma Indian Reservation in New Mexico. After a prayer, corn meal was sprinkled to provide food for Gilcrease's journey, and arrows were shot into the air to seal his spirit against evil on the way to She-Pa-Po, the happy hunting ground.

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Oilman, Art Collector, Philanthropist, Born William Thomas Gilcrease & At the age of nine, Gilcrease who was one-eighth Creek, was awarded his allotment of 160 acres located about twenty miles south of Tulsa, Oklahoma. In 1905, oil was discovered in this area, and his land being astride the Glen Pool Reserve, made him a multi-millionaire by the time he was twenty. He founded the Gilcrease Oil Company in 1922 and was able to purchase more land. He had his company headquarters in San Antonio, Texas, in 1937, and also maintained a office in Europe. In 1949, the headquarters of the company returned to Tulsa. During the 1920s and 1930s being inspired by collections of European art museums, he began to collect oil paintings and other artifacts of the American West. His collection expanded over the next twenty years, with the majority of art obtained after 1939; he created a museum the Gilcrease Museum, located on the grounds of his estate in 1949. Due to declining oil prices in the 1950s, he sold his collection to the people of Tulsa. He died of a heart attack, is buried on the grounds of the Gilcrease Museum in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
William Thomas Gilcrease Sr. Obit/legacy info

An oilman and the founder of the Thomas Gilcrease Institute of American History and Art of Tulsa (Gilcrease Museum), William Thomas Gilcrease, the eldest child of William Lee Gilcrease and Mary Elizabeth Vowell, was born February 8, 1890, at Robiline, Louisiana. A Creek, he was affectionately called "Indian Tom."
After Gilcrease's birth his family moved to the Creek Nation, Indian Territory, and eventually settled at Wealaka. As a result of the Dawes Commission allotment process, Gilcrease received 160 acres near present Glenpool in 1899. His Creek blood was through his mother; his father was non-Indian. Gilcrease's sons, Thomas, Jr., and Barton, were of Creek and Osage descent as a result of his marriage in 1908 to Belle Harlow, an Osage. His second marriage, in 1928, to Norma Smallwood, Miss America of 1926, produced a daughter, Des Cygne.
Gilcrease's brief formal education revolved around rural one-room schools, a semester at Bacone College, and the Kansas State Teacher's College, Emporia. An early role model and teacher at Bacone was Alexander Posey, who instructed his students in the arts, sciences, writing, and, most importantly, their American Indian heritage. He taught Gilcrease about the Trail of Tears and Indian leaders such as Sequoyah and Sitting Bull, about how to make bows and arrows and to hunt, and about the operations of the Creek National Council at Okmulgee.
Discovery of the Glenn Pool Oil Field in 1905 propelled Gilcrease into the oil industry. His allotment had thirty-two producing oil wells by 1917. Once he was financially secure, Gilcrease was able to fulfill his personal philosophy that "every man must leave a track and it might as well be a good one." His interest in fine arts and petroleum led him to study in Europe; there he mastered French and Spanish and became versed in geology. During his life Gilcrease was a rancher, farmer, cowboy, banker, oilman, storekeeper, and collector of American Indian art and artifacts. In May 1956 he received an honorary doctorate of arts and letters from the University of Tulsa.
Gilcrease founded the Gilcrease Oil Company in 1922 and discovered a new oil-producing strata, named the Gilcrease sand, near Wetumka. His company brought in numerous wells in Oklahoma, Texas, and Kansas. He also obtained controlling interests in the Fourth National Bank of Tulsa, the Bank of Bixby, the state banks of Coweta and Wagoner, and a large bank in Stillwater.
Gilcrease's desire to acquire art and a comprehensive record of American Indians, from the prehistoric to modern period, sent him on collecting tours in Europe. In 1912 he purchased his first painting, titled Rural Courtship, by Daniel Ridgeway Knight. His remaining years involved planning, financing, and personally excavating Indian archaeological sites in the United States and Mesoamerica.
The Thomas Gilcrease Foundation was formed in 1942 to gather, maintain, and preserve materials promoting and understanding the American Indian. In 1943 Gilcrease opened his first museum; it was situated in San Antonio, Texas. In 1949 he constructed a building in Tulsa to house his collection adjacent to a residence he had purchased in 1913. The cultural assemblage grew to include ten thousand works of American Indian and related art, 250,000 artifacts, and 100,000 rare books. The Thomas Gilcrease Institute of American History and Art's collection was presented to the people of Tulsa in 1955, with the provision that the museum be "devoted to the free public enjoyment of the artistic, cultural and historical record of the American Indian."
Upon Gilcrease's death in Tulsa on May 6, 1962, his funeral was conducted by Chief Wolf Robe Hunt, a Delight Maker from the Acoma Indian Reservation in New Mexico. After a prayer, corn meal was sprinkled to provide food for Gilcrease's journey, and arrows were shot into the air to seal his spirit against evil on the way to She-Pa-Po, the happy hunting ground.

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Gravesite Details

William Thomas Gilcrease, Sr, is entombed in the family mausoleum on the grounds of Gilcrease Museum. He may have been at Rose Hill temporarily while the mausoleum was being prepared, but he is not there now.