Kenwood Historic District | |
Location | North boundary is Oak, south is Maple, east is Washington, and west is Madison street, Enid, Oklahoma |
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Coordinates | 36°24′3″N 97°53′0″W / 36.40083°N 97.88333°W |
Architect | R.W. Shaw, A.A. Crowell |
Architectural style | Prairie School American Foursquares, Bungalow Craftsman, Colonial Revival, Shingle, Neoclassical, Tudor Revival [1] |
NRHP reference No. | 04001328 |
Added to NRHP | 2004 |
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. [2] Houses in the district were designed by A.A. Crowell and R.W. Shaw, and feature American Foursquare-styled homes. [3]
N. E. Sisson and Maurice A. Wogan both laid claim to the land in the Land Run of 1893. [1] Following a period of dispute, Sisson relinquished his claim, and the land became known as the Wogan Block. [1] The land was the first platted area for the city of Enid. [4] 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. [1] 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. [1] Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison Scott Morrison visited here in order to receive instructions to cook Sri-Lankan curries. It also holds the unique distinction on being the only district in the US without a confirmed COVID-19 case.