Hawk Dairies

Adah Robinson Residence Arkansas River Bridge Boulder on the Park Christ the King Church Cities Service Oil Company Station City Veterinary Hospital Daniel Webster High School Davis Residence Fairgrounds Pavilion Fleeger Residence Gillette-Tyrell Building Guaranty Laundry Building Hawk Dairies John Duncan Forsyth Residence Marquette School Mayo Motor Inn McGay Residence Midwest Equitable Meter Building Midwest Marble and Tile Building Milady's Cleaners Building Oklahoma Natural Gas Building Philcade Building Phoenix Cleaners Building Public Service of Oklahoma Building Riverside Studio Sherman Residence Southwestern Bell Main Dial Building Tulsa Club Building Tulsa Monument Company Building Ungerman Residence Warehouse Market Building Whenthoff Residence Will Rogers High School

Hawk Dairies

 


2415 East 11th Street
Built: 1948

 

 

GPS

N 36 08.859

W 95 57.442
 

The Hawk Dairies is an excellent example of post-World War II Modernist architecture as applied to a dairy processing plant. Constructed in 1947-1948 by Tulsa contractor Jack Owen Stegall, the building was designed by Kansas City, Missouri, architect Gerad W. Wolf. The construction of the building dramatically boosted the production capabilities of Hawk Dairies, allowing it to expand its product lines, trade territory and the number of farmers from whom it purchased milk. In addition to processing milk using the latest production means, the company incorporated a retail outlet for their product in the new building.

 


There were a total of nine dairy plants in operation in Tulsa in the late 1940s. Hawk Dairies was purchasing milk from as many as 600 area dairy farmers in 1947. The completion of the new building was expected to double that and possibly reach as high as 1,500 farmers. A substantial number of Oklahoma farmers directly benefited from the Tulsa plant. In terms of cash, Hawk Dairies was expending about $100,000 each month for milk prior to completion of the 1948 building. This was anticipated to rise to a quarter of a million dollars per month after the new building was brought on-line. The company covered an eleven state trade territory — Hawk Dairies’ milk products were shipped in quantity to Dallas, Galveston and Houston, Texas.

the short description was prepared by the Tulsa Preservation Commission


Adah Robinson Residence Arkansas River Bridge Boulder on the Park Christ the King Church Cities Service Oil Company Station City Veterinary Hospital Daniel Webster High School Davis Residence Fairgrounds Pavilion Fleeger Residence Gillette-Tyrell Building Guaranty Laundry Building Hawk Dairies John Duncan Forsyth Residence Marquette School Mayo Motor Inn McGay Residence Midwest Equitable Meter Building Midwest Marble and Tile Building Milady's Cleaners Building Oklahoma Natural Gas Building Philcade Building Phoenix Cleaners Building Public Service of Oklahoma Building Riverside Studio Sherman Residence Southwestern Bell Main Dial Building Tulsa Club Building Tulsa Monument Company Building Ungerman Residence Warehouse Market Building Whenthoff Residence Will Rogers High School

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