Bohumil Makovsky
"Guiding Spirit"
Bohumil Makovsky represented a fulfillment of the
"American Dream." Imagine, if you will, a time before the turn of the century
and a 17-year-old Bohemian boy arriving in New York from mid-Europe on his way
to Nebraska to join his sister's family - a young man with little formal
education, unable to speak English, but able to eloquently communicate through
the language of Music with his improved "Albert System" clarinet. Even though
his initial role was that of assisting the family in cigar manufacturing, Boh
was within a short time leading a small band that criss-crossed the midlands,
playing for fairs, dances, shows, and other entertainments.
In 1903 Boh's band was booked out of Kankakee,
Illinois, for an engagement in Davis, Oklahoma Territory. The group arrived by
train only to discover that no such engagement existed. Boh paid his men and
headed for the closest large town, Oklahoma City. There he played in beer garden
bands, gave music lessons, organized and directed "polka" bands in
Woodward, Yukon, and Prague, and for ten years furnished band music for
Oklahoma State Fairs. In 1915 he was invited by the President of Oklahoma
A&M College in Stillwater to become band director. To Boh's surprise, he
learned upon his arrival in Stillwater that he was also to serve as Director of
Music, an administrative post.
Boh financed pioneer tours of the state by the
A&M College Band, composed music for the band, encouraged all phases of
public school music, rode the crest of America's band wave, and gradually but
surely, captured the imagination both of the citizens of Oklahoma and the
student body at O.A.M.C. By studying the Masonic ritual and memorizing large
sections of it,
Boh was able to enlarge his vocabulary and to master the
English language, which he spoke with a colorful accent. He became a citizen of
the United States, was elevated to the 33rd degree in Masonry, received an
Honorary Doctor of Music Degree, and was elected to Oklahoma's "Hall of Fame"
and to "Who's Who in Music" in the United States.
Even though Dr. Makovsky accomplished much in his
72 years, he was unfailingly humble and always expressed great appreciation for
how much others had done for him. The pipe he smoked, bent into a miniature
saxophone shape, and the uncrushed black bow tie which he always wore, became
his trademarks.
Boh was stern on the podium and uncompromising in
musical detail and interpretation at each of the Monday through Friday 7 a.m.
rehearsal hours, yet he was a sincere friend to all. Many were deeply influenced
by their contacts with Boh, and his students perpetuate his teachings and ideals
this day.
One can thus readily understand that Bohumil
Makovsky was a fulfillment of the "American Dream," and by his constant
encouragement and support of the Fraternity, was truly, "The Guiding Spirit of
Kappa Kappa Psi."