It has been said that the Weeping Oak tree was referenced by Ripley's Believe It Or Not as the "only oak with all its leaves pointing downward". This was supposedly in a 1937 syndicated newspaper article. It's very possible this is true but to this day, no one has been able to find a copy of it. Even if Ripley did feature the tree, it shows how easily he could be duped since a minimal amount of research would have shown that all post oaks have downward pointing limbs.
You can view the exact location of the Weeping Oak tree here in Google Maps.
Copy and paste the following coordinates into the search box of Google Maps or Google Earth and go right to the tree. While in either one, you can drag the little man over to the highway in front of the tree and view it at street level: 32.082038,-98.538334
Weeping Oak 2010 |
Another "weeping" oak, a couple hundred miles from De Leon. |
The berms aren't really visible anymore. The entrance and exit drives are still faintly visible. The large partially bare spot on the left is where the screen was. |
The Weeping Oak Drive-In
Across the highway on the east side, there was the Weeping Oak Drive-In movie theater. Owner Leonard Scales (who previously owned the Leon and the Texas indoor downtown theaters) opened the Weeping Oak on March 1, 1951 with a fireworks show and movie. The capacity was around 150 cars but as many as 200 squeezed in for the grand opening. Edgar Brinson purchased the Weeping Oak in the mid 1950s. The screen was damaged by a storm sometime in the 1970s but I believe it was patched up and the drive-in continued to operate until it closed in 1982. It was great back in the day. I saw many spaghetti westerns on that screen. It had a covered outdoor concession stand and a swing down in front of the screen for the kiddies who would rather play than watch a movie. The long-time projectionist was named Bear and young boys standing too close to him would get their private parts "accidentally" touched. Bear was also a school bus driver in nearby Gorman. Imagine that. We were too young and dumb to know what was going on. I don't think old Bear would get away with that kind of thing these days, eh?
The Weeping Oak had great food - the usual drive-in fare. Or at least it tasted good back then simply because we were hungry. Anyone who ever attended a movie there can recall the dirtiest, urine-smelling bathrooms around. But not cleaning the restrooms probably kept the ticket prices cheap, so it was ok.
When I was a kid, Edgar Brinson was the owner. It must have gotten boring after the main crowd had arrived so old Edgar spent the rest of the night drinking beer in the ticket booth at the main entrance. We used to climb up on the high metal fence and peek at him. We (me and my friends) once went into the large storage area under the screen and were amazed to see thousands of empty beer bottles.
When the movie was over, there was quite a cloud of dust when the cars started leaving.
Lots of kids sneaked into the drive-in, either in car trunks or by jumping the back fence. And lots of them were caught. Old Edgar was pretty slick and had help from some of his family on enforcement. I don't recall actually ever sneaking in without paying but if I did, I'm sure I got caught. The side dirt road on the north side of the property was a great place to "park" and possibly even watch the movie for free without sound.
There are literally THOUSANDS of weeping oaks in Comanche County and beyond. The Ripley's story is a complete myth as is the so-called "facts" about the tree. What's amazing is that Phil Tate at deleonhistory.com repeats the myth. On one page, he says the Ripley myth can't be verified but in an earlier page, it's matter of fact. http://www.deleonhandbook.com/De_Leon_Handbook/Weeping_Oak.html
ReplyDelete