1919 | 1732 S. Yorktown Avenue, Tulsa, Oklahoma | Home construction in Tulsa continued to boom as more families moved East from downtown. In a midtown neighborhood named for the street on which it lies is the Yorktown Avenue House, another Bruce Goff home design in Tulsa built in 1919. The home stands out subtly from the other single-story homes on the block owing to the unique segmental stone arch frames and the elongated arch opening that frames its broad front porch. Though it was confirmed as a Goff design by photographs from the Art Institute of Chicago’s Bruce Goff archives and an attestation from Thomas Thixton on his tour of Tulsa with Goff, the home records from Rush, Endacott and Rush, the architecture firm where then teenaged Goff worked, have been lost. The one-story wood frame home with wood siding was so unique in appearance at the time of its construction that Goff recalled students from his high school visiting the home during construction and laughing at how silly they thought it looked.