Daily Oklahoman, The
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
January 31. 1957, page 34
Cold Moisture Keeps Pelting Icy Oklahoma
Highways Glazed More Rain, Snow Is Forecast Today.
....A Yukon veterinarian was seriously injured late Wednesday
when his auto and a carload of young people from El Reno
collided at an icy intersection of Canadian county roads, four
miles north of Banner.
Luther J. Crump, 64, the veterinarian, was unconscious and
listed in serious condition from head injures. He was at Park
view sanitorium, El Reno....
[NOTE: 05-6-2007 - I found no other mention of Luther Crump
in the Oklahoman archives. Possible that his obit might be
in the Yukon, Canadian County papers - to which I do not have
access. I did find numeruous articles about Grady, the silo cow
(see below) published in February 1949 and later.]
Daily Oklahoman, The
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
February 26, 1990
Grady's Legend Passed Down To
Generations
YUKON [OK] _ Calling it ""a bit of local
folklore,'' Ginger LaCroix told the 1949 story of Grady the Cow
to a crowd at the Mabel C. Fry Library on the 41st anniversary
of the event.
Rain and snow failed to daunt 125 people who attended the recent
celebration honoring the cow which spent five days in the silo.
On the fifth day, Grady's owner, Bill Mach, tranquilized the
animal, covered its body with grease and, with the help of
neighbors, pushed and pulled the animal back through the tiny
opening.
The cow had bolted from an adjoining barn through a 17
1/2-by-24 1/2-inch opening and into the silo after giving birth
to a calf.
The event drew national attention to Yukon in 1949, with Bill
and Aleyne Mach receiving more than 2,500 letters from 45
states, Germany and Canada.
Aleyne recalled that most of the letters offered ideas on how to
get Grady out of the silo.
Ideas ranged from a helicopter lift to filling the 40-foot silo
with water and floating the cow to the top. The submitter of the
water idea did not say how the cow was to be gotten down from
the top of the water-filled silo.
The grease idea came from a Denver newspaper reporter, who flew
down to help with Grady's successful liberation.
Proclaiming last Thursday Grady the Cow Day in Yukon, Mayor Jim
Blankenship suggested the day should become an annual event,
""maybe even have a festival.''
LaCroix prepared her oral story of Grady's plight by
interviewing the Machs and others who lived in Yukon in 1949 and
by reading newspaper accounts of the incident.
She told the story to most of the elementary school-age children
in and near Yukon, having spoken one or more times at 15 public
and parochial schools.
""One audience had more than 800 children in it,'' she
said.
Thursday, the library was decorated with newspaper articles of
the events, pictures drawn by children, miniature silos made of
potato chip containers, and dozens of paper cows.
Many in the audience wore T-shirts made especially for the
event.
Among those attending were Aleyne Mach, whose husband has leg
problems and could not attend but did attend festivities that
evening); Mrs. Bob Park, whose late husband was owner-editor of
the Yukon newspaper in 1949; Zelpha Crump-Harrington, wife of
the late veterinarian L.J. Crump, who had helped deliver Grady's
calf just before she bolted into the silo; and Chan Guffey of
Oklahoma City, who wrote the 1949 Grady stories for The
Oklahoman.
That evening, 221 met at the library to honor students who had
participated in three Grady the Cow contests, promoter Bettye Jo
Watson said.
Daily Oklahoman, The
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
July 25, 1961, pg 532
Grady of Silo Fame Dead at 18
Grady jumped to fame in February 1949 when she popped her
1200 pounds through a silo door little bigger than a newspaper
page. The problem was how to get her out without tearing down
the silo or calling the butcher. Grady's plight captured
the publics imagination and advice flooded in... For three
days, press associations and newspapers told her story around
the world.
September 1998
Hospital to be Built on Famous Corner
A $30 million hospital is scheduled to be constructed on the
corner of the intersection on which a silo once stood. The site
became world-famous in February 1949 when a cow named Grady
jumped through the silo door and was trapped inside for a
week....
Sources: The
Oklahoman;
Contributed by Marti Graham, April 2007. Information
posted as courtesy to viewers and researchers. The contributor is not
related to nor researching any of the above.
|