The William and Luther Braden farm was the first parcel of land to be platted by the Waverley Development Company in May 1902.
There are also a few Tudor Revival, Neoclassical, Italian Renaissance, and Spanish Eclectic homes.
[3] Graham had the Prairie Box style house constructed in 1916,[3] and Eason lived in it from 1923 to 1935.
[2] Charles E. Knox, who owned a refinery in Covington, Oklahoma, purchased his mansion from Joseph McCristy, president of the Enid Mill and Grain Company.
This article about a property in Oklahoma on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.