Wanenmacher Arms Show marks 60 years in guns, politics, celebrities

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Poke78

Sharpshooter
Supporting Member
Special Hen Supporter
Joined
Aug 8, 2008
Messages
2,839
Reaction score
1,125
Location
Sand Springs
http://www.tulsaworld.com/homepage2...cle_268aac76-1bb7-569f-9c67-dc7cad0965f1.html

He went into it “kicking and screaming,” but before long Joe Wanenmacher called it his own. Now, as the Wanenmacher’s Tulsa Arms Show celebrates 60 years, it is a family business and likely will live on for another 60 — or at least as long as gun laws allow.

This weekend at the Expo Square Exchange Center the twice-annual 11-acre gun show with 4,200 tables, 7,000 exhibitors and 35,000 to 40,000 people in attendance continues a tradition that started in April 1955 with 19 tables set up pretty close to the same place — in the old armory at the Tulsa County fairgrounds.

“It started with the Indian Territory Gun Collectors Association,” 80-year-old Joe Wanenmacher said Wednesday. “It was just a group of gun enthusiasts who got together at The Sportsman sporting goods store in Utica Square.”
Their idea was to hold a show so they could see other collectors’ guns from around the state.

Wanenmacher was a young petroleum engineering student at the University of Texas in 1955 but joined the Indian Territory group (and is still a member) after coming to Tulsa to work in his father’s petroleum consulting firm in 1961.
“At that time I was a shooter and not too interested in gun collecting,” he said. “I was probably one of their worst club members until shortly before 1968.”

As the club’s secretary-treasurer planned to leave that year, the stage was set for an unsuspecting Wanenmacher.

[More at the link above.]

Great story - lots of history about the show.
 

Latest posts

Top Bottom