Monday, October 13, 2025

The Picture That Told Three Stories


"Jefferson History Then and Now"
The Picture That Told Three Stories 

by Patrick L. Johnson, Roscoe Thompson, and Nellie Beavers Childs, collected by Letty Watt    



In the spring of 2025 I posted this picture on the "History of Norman" Facebook page. This is one of the responses I received from a man who found his father in the photo. The man, Patrick L. Johnson shares this story of his father Pop Johnson.
 
In this 1908 classroom photo from Eastside school, I think the youngster in the second row from bottom, 3rd from the right, is my Pop, JA “Red” Johnson born in Norman in October 1901. *The arrow points to Roscoe Thompsons another story from the photograph. 

Pop's father died in 1904 when Pop was three and younger brother was an infant. In order to feed her family, my grandmother took in washing and cleaning houses. My Pop only made it through the 3rd grade when he quit and took odd jobs to help his mom support the family. 

He worked in the oil fields as an adult, raised four kids through the depression doing whatever he could to make a buck. Sometime in the mid 40’s, he got a full-time job with the Oklahoma National Guard. He was injured in 1949 while training at the North Base Naval firing range when the infamous tornado ripped through that area. He was sent to Fort Sam Houston, San Antonio TX, where they implanted a metal plate on the left side of his head to compensate for the skull that had been crushed.

He recuperated over the next several months and eventually went back to work with the NG.  Pop went with the Division when it was activated and sent to Fort Polk LA (1950?) in preparation for deployment to Korea.  However, he was forcefully medically discharged before his unit deployed and later worked at Central State Hospital. He had a massive stroke in 1963 complicated by the head injury but again recuperated and lived out his last few years here in Norman with my mom, passing in 1971.

Thank you for sharing this photo on the History of Norman site and giving me the chance to tell my "Pop's" story.  Sincerely, Patrick L. Johnson

This picture tells the story of:

Nellie Beavers Childs: Their Friendship Endured

Roscoe Thompson from Thompson Moving and Storage: The Story of Roscoe Thompson

 

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