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609 N.E. 17th Street

609 N.E. 17th Street is a red mingled brick house with a red Spanish-tiled roof. The central mass is symmetrical with a stone door casing in a one-story entrance projection opening onto a fenced terrace which extends halfway east to include a two-story hexagonal wing, the lower part of which has French doors on all sides.

Charles E. Huffman 1930-33
Clarence E. Duffner 1933-41
Cecil Aker 1941-45
Albert Landrum 1945-63
N.H. Albertson 1963 -

Mr. Huffman was president of the C.E. Huffman and Sons Construction Company. Among the structures built by this firm were the fire station at 36th Street and Classen Boulevard, the old Harbour-Longmire building and the old Coliseum.

From 1928 to 1936, Mr. Duffner was in partnership with R.D. Cravens in the Duffner-Cravens Mortgage Company. Mrs. Duffner's father was John Baedecker, who built many of the houses in the Winans area, now Heritage Hills. The mortgage company was dissolved in 1936 when Mr. Duffner formed Duffner Investments.

In 1939, Duffner began concentrating on building apartments and houses in the early development of Creston Hills and Midwest City. He built most of the Wilshire addition. He was instrumental in incorporating and starting The Village. His son, Jack Duffner, is also a builder, developing Hillcrest, Mayfair, Glenbrook, and Wedgewood area, among others. Jack Duffner remembers the funeral of Wiley Post on the steps of the Capitol building, when planes piloted by Post's friends flew over -- streamers flying and dropping blossoms among the crowd.

Mr. Aker was the general manager of Griffith Theatres, a chain of Oklahoma City movie houses.

Mr. Landrum was the local agent for Federal Life Insurance Company.

Mr. Albertson was a certified public accountant for Baptist Hospital.