Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Oklahoma Historical Society managed the property from 1982 to 2003, and from 2003 to the present the site has been managed by Preservation Oklahoma. The Overholser Mansion was restored in 2015 and is open for tours. [3] According to The Oklahoman local ghost stories in Oklahoma City claim Anna Ione Murphy Overholser's ghost haunts the ...
100 Park Avenue Building, Oklahoma City, 1923; Agnew Theater, Oklahoma City, 1947; Borden's Dairy Building, Oklahoma City, 1947; Cain's Coffee Building, Oklahoma City ...
Heritage Hills' largest house, and largest in Oklahoma City, is the Hales Mansion, spanning 20,021 square feet (1,860.0 m 2). The Châteauesque-style Overholser Mansion, the neighborhood's second largest house, is a historic house museum and is open to the public with guided tours.
Mesta Park is a residential neighborhood in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma which is also listed as a historic district on the National Register of Historic Places.The listing is roughly bounded by NW 16th and 23rd Sts. and Western and Walker Avenues.
Ponca City Hall (1917), a Spanish Colonial architecture style building at 516 E. Grand Avenue in Ponca City, Oklahoma.Two wings were added in 1923. [7]Moose Lodge (1920) at 111-113 N. 2nd in Ponca City, Oklahoma, a Classical Revival architecture style that was the Ponca City Post Office, and contained "bowling lanes, a billiard room, shower area, and lounging room" and its third floor was ...
The Elks Lodge Building in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, also known as the ONG Building, is significant as an architectural oddity, and for the association of its three successive owners in the history of the state. It is Italian Renaissance-style building that was built in 1926.
The Village is a city in Oklahoma County, Oklahoma, United States, and a part of the Oklahoma City metropolitan area.The population was 9,538 at the 2020 Census. [4]The Village is an enclave city nearly surrounded in full by Oklahoma City, except where it abuts Nichols Hills.
The Mansion was completed in 1928, one year after construction began. Built by the Oklahoma City architectural company Layton, Hicks and Forsyth, the 14,000-square-foot (1,300 m 2) Mansion is of Dutch-Colonial style. Carthage limestone was used so the exterior of the Mansion would complement the Oklahoma State Capitol.