Crown Heights Park
Introduction
Author-Uploaded Audio
Text-to-speech Audio
The land for this park was part of the Oklahoma City Golf and Country Club and one of the city's very first golf courses. In 1931, this park that straddles both sides of N Shartel Ave was created from an area that encompassed parts of three golf holes and a natural ravine that drained the area.
Images
Country Club House
Aerial View of Crown Heights
Backstory and Context
Author-Uploaded Audio
Text-to-speech Audio
If you look around this park and think that it reminds you of a golf course, you’re onto something. The land for this park was originally school lease land, but when the school land passed into private ownership, the Oklahoma City Golf and Country Club landscaped one of the city’s first golf courses here. The clubhouse stood at NW 40 and Western and there were parts of three golf greens and tee boxes in the area of this park. When it was built in 1908, the club was considered very far from Downtown so members would ride the streetcar to the Belle Isle Station and waiting cars would whisk them over to the clubhouse.
Eventually the city grew to encompass the club and developers like G. A. Nichols had a strong desire to use the land for housing. In 1930, Nichols offered the Oklahoma City Golf and Country Club an offer they couldn’t refuse. He offered to trade the club this land for land he owned far away from the city at NW 63 and Western where he was building an addition of country estates called Nichols Hills. He sweetened the deal by offering to build a large and magnificent clubhouse as well.
Nichols called this new neighborhood Crown Heights and he sold this land to the city for use as a park in 1931.
Sources
"Titles Approved to Crown Heights Park." Daily Oklahoman April 10th 1931. .5.
"Decision Due on Tract Purchase." Daily Oklahoman April 26th 1931. .8.
"Golf Courses are Started." Daily Oklahoman March 23rd 1929. .8.
https://www.metrolibrary.org/archives/image/2022/04/country-club-house
Oklahoma Collection, Metropolitan Library System