Tulsa Monument Co. named to National Register

The Tulsa Monument Co. building, located at 1735 E. 11th St. (Route 66) in Tulsa, was named to the National Register of Historic Places effective Sept. 4, according to an e-mail received today from the National Park Service.

According to the Tulsa Preservation Commission, the Art Deco building was built in 1936 by Harry H. Mahler.

Mr. Mahler suggested to the prospective owners that this new building simulate the appearance of a monument. A long building, it contains strong horizontal and vertical elements in its exactly symmetrical facade. It has wings extending on either side of the towered main entrance. It is a single-story, flat roofed building of white plaster concrete with striking gunmetal gray trim features. The triple banded pillar caps bordering the entry tower are representative of the original term given the style during this period, “3-Bar Modern.” The central focus is the tall clock tower over the main entrance with spot-lighted clocks on three sides.

The neat part is the building is still being used for its original purpose. Benchmark Monument Co. is the current occupant.

(Photo courtesy of the Tulsa Preservation Commission.)

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