In 1897, the
frontier town of Bartlesville in Indian Territory became the
site of the first commercial oil well in Oklahoma. During
the decade that followed, oil entrepreneurs streamed into
the area and exploration exploded in a frenzy of spectacular
success and failures. The discovery of oil and increasing
settlement led to statehood in 1907. This same year
Oklahoma became the nation's leading producer of oil, a
position it continued to occupy or share through the
tumultuous years of growth that followed.
Frank
Phillips, an ambitious barber-turned-bond salesman from
Iowa, visited Bartlesville in 1903 to assess business
possibilities in the surrounding oil fields. He
returned permanently two years later with his wife Jane and
young son John. After a series of failures that nearly
caused him to abandon the business, a string of eighty-one
straight successful oil wells insured success. By 1909
he had completed construction of the Frank Phillips Home.
From then until Frank's death in 1950, the home was the
setting from which he, his family and friends, and the
community that grew up around them, played a key role in the
development of the oil industry in America.
The original 26 room Neo-Classical
mansion was remodeled twice. It underwent extensive interior
redecoration the last time in 1930. It nonetheless retains
the graceful external lines of the original design.
Thereafter, neither the Phillips nor their granddaughter who
donated the home to the Oklahoma Historical Society in 1973,
made significant changes to the interior. Thus, with few
exceptions, the furniture, decorations and even personal
effects are original.
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As
a consequence, the Home depicts the lives, tastes, fashions,
and values of the Phillips and their world during the first
half of the 20th century. As an example of the
personal home of an Oklahoma oil millionaire, it is a window
through which you can step back to those times, and
experience the home life of one of America's most
fascinating oil men.
On the
ground floor, your tour will include the spacious, richly
paneled library, and the dining room where much of the
entertaining, was done. Here, and at their country
lodge at Woolaroc south of Bartlesville, the Phillips
received guests from near and far: personal friends,
American and foreign businessmen,
local ranchers and cowboys, and Native
Americans with whom Frank felt a particular closeness.
Frank was proud to have been adopted into the Osage Tribe,
and to wear their ceremonial attire.
On the second floor are Frank and
Jane's distinctly different bedrooms and private baths,
Jane's with gold fixtures and ceiling mirrors, and Frank's
with his personal barber chair. Also on the second
floor is the bedroom of their beloved foster daughters, with
its display of childhood animal friends and toys.
An expanded panorama of Frank and
Jane's lives and interests is presented in the award-winning
permanent exhibit in the garage behind the home.
Included is information on the humble beginnings, family
life, the oil business, Phillips Petroleum Company, and the
many philanthropic endeavors with which they associated
themselves throughout their lives.
A stroll around the grounds as you
leave will reveal how graciously this elegant home still
fits, nearly a century later, within the town setting it did
so much to create.
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