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Pictures of Enid Homes
Photos of Historical and Other Homes in Enid, Oklahoma
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Waverley Historic District historic home
1601 W. Broadway
a colonial revival four square style home built in 1919 |
Waverley Historic District Historic home
1324 W. Broadway, a colonial revival style house built in 1916 |
Waverley Historic District Historic Home,
1402 W. Maine
An Italian Renaissance style home built about 1920 |
T. T. Eason Mansion, 1305 W Broadway
on the National Register of Historic Places |
The R. R. Kisner Mansion, built in 1927. The Roy Sanfords bought the home in 1944. During World War II, just after what is now Vance Air Force Base was opened, there was no housing for pilots training at the base so they housed three couples, two of them living on the third floor and one in the basement, with a bedroom on the main floor. The 15,000-square-foot home has three floors, contains eight bathrooms, seven fireplaces, a swimming pool, tennis court, six-car garage with a 1,327-square-foot apartment overhead. The home is constructed with two eight-inch-thick brick walls, separated by an air space, this type of construction helps to prevent dust from entering the house |
H. H. Champlin home
(in the National Register of historic places)
Roy Shaw, an architect built it in 1939 for the richest man in town, oilman and banker, H.H. Champlin, and it still is occupied by one of his great-grandsons and his family. Champlin chose to build in the Kisner Heights addition on the city’s southwest side. The Kisner addition originally had been the town’s first cemetery.The specifications called for cast bronze, double-hung windows manufactured only by a plant in Michigan. And, the glass in the windows was to be glazed with violet ray glass made only in England. The house is built of Briar Hill sandstone quarried in Ohio and shipped to Enid. The furniture for the house was supplied by a Hollywood, Calif., interior decorator and the woodwork in the mansion was designed by local architect Norris Wheeler and custom made by a Kansas City company. Champlin insisted on all copper pipes and heating and air conditioning ducts. 67 thermostats run throughout the house making it easy to adjust the temperature in each room. The Champlin refinery and oil company long ago were sold, his service stations were closed, as well as his First National Bank. The only physical remains of his amazing life is in the sprawling sandstone mansion and its broad manicured lawn and shade trees. |
Beautiful old home on East Broadway |
McCristy-Knox-Hedges Mansion on west Broadway
(in the National Register of historic places)
Waverley Historic District historic home
1323 W. Broadway
neoclassical style home built in 1909 |
Ehly House, 524 South Hayes, Mission Style - 1929 |
Former Lamerton home, Indian drive
(in the National Register of historic places) |

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Key to Enid |
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Century 21 |
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