Cold War Oklahoma

Author:   Landry Brewer ,  Bob Burke
Publisher:   History Press Library Editions
ISBN:  

9781540238504


Pages:   146
Publication Date:   29 April 2019
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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Cold War Oklahoma


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Overview

Oklahoma might seem like an unexpected place for Cold War tensions to boil over, but the state played a key role in a conflict that threatened global annihilation. Altus Air Force Base served as a hub for twelve intercontinental ballistic missile launch sites; in 1964, a missile housed at the Frederick site exploded, although the nuclear warhead remained unaffected. Ordinary citizens lived under the shadow of nuclear war as well. A former OU faculty member accused of committing espionage for the Soviet Union fled the country, while a SWOSU professor dug his own fallout shelter in Weatherford--by hand. During the Cuban Missile Crisis, an emergency siren malfunction sent terrified Elk City parents scurrying to local schools to pick up their children. Landry Brewer presents a fascinating cross-section of the era, from top-level strategy to the details of daily life.

Full Product Details

Author:   Landry Brewer ,  Bob Burke
Publisher:   History Press Library Editions
Imprint:   History Press Library Editions
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.00cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.367kg
ISBN:  

9781540238504


ISBN 10:   1540238504
Pages:   146
Publication Date:   29 April 2019
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

Cold War Oklahoma is a valuable contribution to Oklahoma history and contains careful research and important information that should be in the hands of every Oklahoman, every American. In these uncertain political times, this work could not have come at a better historical moment. Brewer encapsulates this well as he offers us this directive: 'Our task is to remember the events, the sacrifices, the stakes, the failures, the successes and the lessons learned so that we don't repeat them' Brett D. Burkhart, Ph.D., Oklahoma State University This work constitutes a masterful overview of ordinary Oklahomans in no ordinary time. Citizens were learning to live with the threat of a nuclear holocaust. Perhaps the most significant theme is what the author references on page 121, that is, the deep ties that emerged between the citizens of the Sooner state and what President Eisenhower famously called the military industrial complex. It is a delight to read from beginning to end, because it features several lighthearted vignettes about the strange and wonderful adaptations that shaped the Cold War era. After surveying the origins of the arms race, the author delves carefully into the Atlas F missile program and describes the 11 sites in the southwestern portion of the state. While turning the pages, I could almost hear the Thunderbolt sirens blare in Elk City during the Cuban missile crisis of October 1962! I could almost see ordinary people in Weatherford digging fallout shelters with their bare hands! The folksy examples of civil defense preparedness are revealing, to say the least, as the passages really bring the global clash to a local stage and insinuate the profound impact on home and hearth. The descriptions of military installations are accurate. The careers of Carl Albert and Thomas Stafford are compelling. The investigation into the espionage case of Maurice Halperin builds on what we now know, judiciously pointing to key facts and fresh insights from Venona decryptions. What distinguishes most of the chapters is the clarity, wit, and succinctness with which an exciting story is told. Brad Lookingbill, author of The American Military: A Narrative History (Wiley, 2013).


Author Information

Landry Brewer is Bernhardt Scholar and instructor of history for Southwestern Oklahoma State University and teaches at the Sayre campus. Although he has been published multiple times in the journal of the Oklahoma Historical Society, several times in western Oklahoma newspapers and has written two one-act plays that have been performed, this is Brewer's first book. He and his wife, Erin, have five children and live in Elk City.

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