Joseph Carpenter House

The Joseph Carpenter house is the oldest and best preserved Prairie Style house in Stroud, Lincoln County, Oklahoma.[2] It was erected at 204 West 6th Street in 1913 as the residence of Joseph R. and Lovenia (Foushee) Carpenter.[3]

Joseph Carpenter House
Location204 W. Sixth Street,
Stroud, Oklahoma
Coordinates35°45′6″N 96°39′19″W
Arealess than one acre
Built1913
ArchitectCarpenter, Joseph
Architectural stylePrairie School
NRHP reference No.86002346[1]
Added to NRHPSeptember 26, 1986

Description and history

A 2 12-story structure, it features a hipped roof with a combination of stucco and wood clapboard siding for the exterior walls. A single story hipped-roof porch runs across the front of the home. The building possesses a multitude of other prairie-style elements and retains a high degree of architectural integrity. It was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on September 26, 1986, as NR ID Number 86002346.[4]

Joseph Carpenter was a successful businessman, accumulating considerable wealth as a merchant of farm implements and hardware,[5] which made him financially able to hire an architect from Kansas City to design his new home.[4] As one of the largest homes in Stroud, it reflected Carpenter's importance as a commercial leader in the city. A factor in the house retaining its architectural integrity is the care given it by Joseph's son and daughter-in-law Paul F. and Ruth (Riley) Carpenter,[6] who resided in the home through 1986 when it was placed on the National Historic Register.[4]

gollark: I'm also relatively confident the government doesn't have my *exact* internet history and whatnot, as that's spread over a bunch of sites and details like exactly which site I'm connecting to and which page on it are encrypted now.
gollark: For the few people I can actually convince to use Signal, my communication with them is up to "probably private".
gollark: dis.cool was a great demonstration of that.
gollark: I treat Discord messages and reddit posts as "basically public" anyway.
gollark: Connections to websites themselves run over HTTPS, which I'm mostly trusting of (MITM attacks are a thing and the government does realistically have access to a cert I'll trust, but that's detectable), and my DNS resolution also runs over HTTPS.

References

  1. "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  2. Oklahoma State Historic Preservation Office: National Register Properties in Oklahoma, Joseph Carpenter House, http://www.ocgi.okstate.edu/shpo/shpopic.asp?id=86002346, Last Updated: 2 May 2009.
  3. U.S. Federal Census, Stroud, Lincoln Co., Okla., 1900, 1910.
  4. Oklahoma State Historic Preservation Office, 2009.
  5. U.S. Federal Census, Stroud, Lincoln Co., Okla., 1900, 1910, 1920, and 1930.
  6. U.S. Federal Census, Stroud, Lincoln Co., Okla., 1930.


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