Charles S. Keith House Explained

Charles S. Keith House
Location:1214 W. 55th St., Kansas City, Missouri
Coordinates:39.0308°N -94.6056°W
Built:1914
Architect:Shepard, Farrar & Wiser
Hare & Hare
Architecture:Colonial Revival
Added:March 31, 2000
Refnum:00000308

The Charles S. Keith House, also known as the J. C. Nichols House, is a historic residence located at 1214 West 55th Street in Kansas City, Missouri. The -story Georgian Revival house sits on a three-acre tract in the Kansas City's Country Club District near Ward Parkway.[1]

History

The Charles S. Keith House was designed by Kansas City architectural firm Shepard, Farrar & Wiser in 1913, and construction was completed on the residence in 1914. Charles S. Keith was a lumber baron and president of the Central Coal & Coke Company. Keith sold the palatial estate to well known Kansas City real estate developer J.C. Nichols in 1920 after deciding the house was more than he needed. Nichols lived in the house until he died in 1950. After the sale of the house, Charles Keith later went on to gain additional public notoriety when he accepted the position of interim mayor of Kansas City in 1940 between Bryce B. Smith's resignation and the inauguration of John B. Gage.

Architecture

The house has twenty two rooms, plus six full bathrooms and numerous smaller storage spaces. Exterior features included the use of elaborate cut-stone trim work, multiple pergolas, and a large carriage house. The three acre grounds were designed by Kansas City landscape architecture firm Hare and Hare, and they originally included formal gardens, a lily pool and vegetable plot.

Notes and References

  1. none . National Register of Historic Places Registration: Charles S. Keith House / J.C. Nichols House . National Archives . Cydney E. Millstein . August 31, 1999 . January 26, 2022 . June 12, 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210612114213/https://catalog.archives.gov/id . dead .