It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984 as part of multiple property submission for "Territorial Homes of Chandler".
[2][1] It is a 2.5-story house with a large two-story balconied portico with pedimented roof, and a veranda supported by Tuscan order columns.
It has polychromatic walls, including red brick on the first floor level and fish scale pattern wood shingles on the second.
It was originally the home of United States Marshall Kee, then William Tilghman, and later A.E.
This article about a property in Oklahoma on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.