Harman Patil (Editor)

Kenwood Historic District (Enid, Oklahoma)

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NRHP Reference #
  
04001328

Added to NRHP
  
2004

Kenwood Historic District (Enid, Oklahoma)

Location
  
North boundary is Oak, south is Maple, east is Washington, and west is Madison street, Enid, Oklahoma

Architect
  
R.W. Shaw, A.A. Crowell

Architectural style
  
Prairie School American Foursquares, Bungalow Craftsman, Colonial Revival, Shingle, Neoclassical, Tudor Revival

The Kenwood Historic District is located north west of downtown Enid, Oklahoma and is named for Kenwood Boulevard, a diagonal street created in 1894. The neighborhood encompasses 160 acres (0.65 km2) of housing created between 1895 and 1915. Houses in the district were designed by A.A. Crowell and R.W. Shaw, and feature American Foursquare styled homes.

History

N. E. Sisson and Maurice A. Wogan both laid claim to the land in the Land Run of 1893. Following a period of dispute, Sisson relinquished his claim, and the land became known as the Wogan Block. The land was the first platted area for the city of Enid. In 1895, Wogan sold the land to the Kenwood Land and Development Company, owned by Harrison Lee and his son-in-law Territorial Attorney General W.O. Cromwell. In the early days of Enid, the neighborhood became a home for wealthy businessmen, including Territorial Governor Frank Frantz, and his brothers, Montgomery, William, and Edmund Frantz.

References

Kenwood Historic District (Enid, Oklahoma) Wikipedia