Brady Heights, Tulsa

[1] From territorial days until the 1920s, Brady Heights was an important part of the then fashionable north side of Tulsa.

[2] The area derives its name from entrepreneur W. Tate Brady, who owned the land now covered by the addition which bears his name.

Architects and builders used elements of Queen Anne, Prairie School, Victorian, Georgian Revival and Bungalow styles.

The houses of Brady Heights are on a larger scale and of a more sophisticated design than those of adjacent neighborhoods.

Bay windows with leaded glass, servants’ quarters, and broad porches suggest the elegance of earlier days.