Enid Cemetery

Enid's earliest graves were located on the Hymen and Cora Anderson farm land, following the death of their one-year-old son Lee Stuart in 1897.

[1] Lee Stuart's grave was joined by those of an elderly man, Peter J. Bradley, and a young black child named Johnson a few weeks later.

The Calvary Catholic Cemetery contains a mausoleum built in 1904 for Ruth Sara Kennedy from white marble in the Neo-Classical Revival style.

[1] At least 430 original homesteaders from the Land Run of 1893 are buried here, including:[1] Black people were interred in Potter's Field during segregation, and had a separate entrance to the cemetery.

Grave markers also include insignias representing membership in the Masons, International Order of the Odd Fellows, the Woodmen of America, and the Grand Army of the Republic.

Commander Robert L. Strickler, Martha J Camden (1852–1926), Aviation Cadet John Willard Nivison (1922–1943), Allen B. Crandall, Opal Young (1899–1903), Lee Stuart Anderson (1896–1897), Frank James T. Douthitt (1904–1923), and the Mill family in the Enid Cemetery.

Graves in Potter's Field, where black people were buried during segregation, and the poorer citizens were buried, often in unmarked graves.
A magen david is mounted on a metal pole near the graves of Enid's Jewish citizens who chose to be buried close to one another, forming a Jewish section in the Enid Cemetery.
The Champlin family plot.