Osage Bank of Fairfax explained
The Osage Bank of Fairfax was the first bank building built in Osage County. It was built in 1904, at the time of the Oklahoma oil boom. It is one of four small bank buildings built in Richardsonian Romanesque style in Osage County, Oklahoma during 1904–1911.[1] The others are Bank of Hominy, Bank of Burbank, and Bank of Bigheart.
It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984.
[2]
It is located on the southeast corner of N. Main St. (which is Oklahoma State Highway 18) and E. Elm St. in Fairfax.
Notes and References
- none. National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Richardsonian Romanesque Banks of Osage County Thematic Resources . December 1983 . Claudia . Ahmad . George . Carney . . February 15, 2023 . 17 pages. Does not include associated photos. A partial version of seven pages omitting the continuation pages with specific information about each of the four banks, and also not including associated photos, is available from the National Park Service at and also from the Internet Archive at available at Internet Archive.
- none. [{{NRHP url|id=84000315}} "Osage Bank of Fairfax" excerpt from National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Richardsonian Romanesque Banks of Osage County TR ]. . February 15, 2023 . December 1983 . Claudia . Ahmad . George . Carney. PDF is just the two pages covering Osage Bank of Fairfax, which appear as pages 13-14 within the full "Richardsonian Romanesque Banks of Osage County Thematic Resources" text document. With accompanying six photos of Osage Bank of Fairfax from 1983. The two text pages and the six photos plus captions are available in one combo PDF file at NARA.