Today’s postcard from a 1940 Oklahoma souvenir pack is of the heart of Oklahoma City. Only a few of the buildings are recognizable since my hometown underwent a savage urban renewal process in the 1970s.


The most distinctive surviving building is the tapered First National skyscraper near the upper center, with the tall Ramsey tower to its left. You can click to enlarge the comparison below of downtown Oklahoma City in 1940 and the 2020s.

When I was a child in the 1970s, entire blocks of downtown west and south of the First National (below and to the right of it in the aerial views) were cleared for what became the Myriad Gardens, the Devon Tower area, and the Myriad Convention Center, with the convention center demolished in early 2026 to make room for a new billion-dollar basketball arena. The old Colcord building is one of the few survivors in that area.
Let’s focus on the two giants of downtown at the time of the postcard: the First National and, just across the street, the Ramsey Tower or City Place. They are now dwarfed by the silly Devon Tower, but they still loom large in my memory.
Throughout my childhood, my father worked for Cities Service Gas Company in the First National building. After his retirement in 1984 amidst the fossil fuels turbulence of the great petroleum bust, he kept going to a barber shop high up in the building. So he witnessed how it slowly emptied out and was neglected after 1990.

It fell into bankruptcy, but thankfully Gary Brooks partnered with Charlie Nicholas to purchase and renovate it. It took them seven years and $287 million to rework it into a boutique hotel, upscale apartments, retail, and restaurants while converting an office annex into parking. The beautiful marble banking hall became Tellers restaurant.

A Bartlesville Connection
My father worked for Cities Service Gas, which had once had both its executive and operations offices in Bartlesville. In 1943, the gas company’s executive offices were relocated to Oklahoma City while the operations offices went to Wichita. In 1957, the two were consolidated in Oklahoma City.
Meanwhile, Cities Service Oil Company operated out of Bartlesville after a 1959 consolidation, but in the late 1960s and early 1970s left town for a new building in downtown Tulsa which I will talk about in a later postcard post.
The holding company of both entities was once headquartered in the iconic art deco Cities Service building at 70 Pine Street in New York City until operations relocated in the late 1960s and 1974.
My childhood familiarity with Bartlesville came from passing through to and from visiting relatives in Independence, Kansas. We would usually stop in Bartlesville on our way north to have lunch with Frank and Alice Rice, retirees who had once worked with my father in the Cities Service Gas offices in OKC. They all worked in the Gas Measurement division; the photo is from 1958.
Growing up, I was always fascinated by the top of the 1931 Ramsey Tower across the street from the First National. The Ramsey Tower is now known as City Place, and neither the postcard nor the modern aerial view provide a clue as to what about it interested me, but its newer name provides a hint.
The first picture below might lead you to think my memory is faulty, as that shows a Liberty Bank electrical sign atop the Ramsey Tower, but in the 1970s an electronic billboard atop the elevator box spelled out “City” in cursive and then flashed BANK before flashing the time and temperature. It always annoyed me if a noticeable number of the marquee’s bulbs were burnt out.


The Ramsey Tower/City Place has a more lasting claim to fame in its interior spiral slide that travels the full height of the building. The metal auger has door openings on each floor to allow occupants to slide directly to ground level. Later fire codes made it obsolete, but it was still used as a temporary gravity trash chute during renovations.
The neighboring skyscrapers went up simultaneously in 1931 during the Great Depression. That timing would seem odd, save that the discovery of a huge oil field below Oklahoma City insulated it for awhile from the national downturn.
Walter Ramsey was an oil baron and hired Walter W. Ahlschlager to design and Starrett Brothers, both out of Chicago, to build his 32-story building. The same firms built the rather similar 49-story Carew Tower in Cincinnati.
Ramsey had bought the land parcel soon after First National Bank had begun excavating the property to the south. A race for which tower would top out first began in January 1931, which Ramsey won. He spent $3,000,000 on his 440-foot tall 292,304 square foot building. It was the tallest in the state — for one month.
First National opened in November and became the tallest building at 493 feet from its antenna tip down to the street. It was over twice as large, with an initial floor area of 604,334 square feet, and cost $5,500,000. The top of the First National had the exclusive Beacon Club restaurant, named for the 25-foot tall aircraft beacon above it. The beacon’s red bulb was once visible for 100 miles.

When I was a kid visiting my father in the First National, I loved whizzing up and down in the express elevator. I ate in the Beacon Club with him once. The private club once boasted a membership of about 1,000 and civic giants like Dean McGee, First National CEO Charles Vose, and publisher E.L. Gaylord used to meet there weekly. The Club eventually faltered, and my father never went back after getting food poisoning there. With the First National occupancy in decline, in 1997 the club moved out of its iconic home on its top three floors over to the 24th floor of the Oklahoma Tower, and it finally closed in 2017 with just 200 remaining members.
Tomorrow’s 1940 postcard will take us to Stillwater. Care to guess the surviving but renamed building that will be pictured?
















































