Memorial dedicated to Charles Estes

fallen Game Warden

 

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Purchase a License   The first Oklahoma game warden to lose his life in the line of duty was honored with a memorial dedicated June 3 at River Park in Tulsa.

In 1911, the Wildlife Department was very new and only a few wardens existed. One of those men, Charles W. Estes, was killed in the line of duty in the Tulsa County area. On February 28, 1911, Charlie Estes told his wife he’d be back soon and rode off on his horse in search of poachers violating a law prohibiting hunting on Sunday.

   
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At the top of Turkey Mountain, Estes was shot to death by an unknown killer. His gun, holster and bullets were stolen. His sacrifice for the future good of Oklahoma’s wildlife and sportsmen was individually recognized June 3, 2001, with a memorial service dedicating a monument to his sacrifice at River Parks.

"It was a duck hunter he was investigating, but it wasn’t a duck hunter that shot him," said Carlos Gomez, Tulsa County Game Warden. "He was killed by someone with a high powered rifle. They suspected moonshiners and counterfeiters operating in the Turkey Mountain area."

The memorial, located at 5800 S. Riverside Drive, was made possible with the hard work of Estes’ great, great nephew, Bobby Tipton, Game Warden Gomez, River Park employees and benefactors. The dedication was attended by Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation Commissioners John S. Zink, Vryl Keeter, and John Groendyke, retired and present Department employees, law enforcement officers from several state agencies, friends and family of the Estes family and Senator James Williamson.

Gomez said that enough donations were made on Estes’ behalf to place a concrete walkway leading from the jogging trail to the memorial site with boulders on either side to serve as bench seating. A large boulder that stands erect will display a bronze plaque in Estes’ honor with a light shinning down on the memorial from a cottonwood tree.
   
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