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Stop 2 of 13

The Mayo Hotel

The Mayo Hotel

Look up for a tall, beige 13-story building with a fancy cream-colored, patterned front face and a dark metal fire-escape zigzagging down the side.

You’re standing by what started life as the Mincks Hotel, built in 1927 to 1928-right when Tulsa was feeling boldly confident and oil money was doing what oil money does: showing off. A businessman named I. S. “Ike” Mincks put it up at 403 Cheyenne, just a block west of the Oil Capital Historic District, aiming squarely at traveling businessmen who wanted comfort, status, and probably a decent place to talk shop.

Timing mattered. The hotel opened in time for the first International Petroleum Exposition, when the city was basically rolling out the red carpet for the oil world. The building itself was a statement: 13 stories plus a basement and a penthouse, about 195 feet tall. It cost $802,800 back then-roughly about $15 million in today’s money-serious cash for serious ambition.

Now, let your eyes trace those bright, detailed panels on the front. That’s glazed terra cotta-made by the Northwestern Terra Cotta Company-wrapped over reinforced concrete. Architect Alfred C. Fabry mixed Gothic, Italian Renaissance, and Baroque vibes into one confident design, like Tulsa saying, “Yes, we read books, too.”

But the story has a twist: Mincks went bankrupt in 1935. The building sold off, reopened as the Adams Hotel, and later-early 1980s-shifted again into the Adams Office Tower. It was recognized for its architecture and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1977. Even the Tulsa Press Club posted up here for a while, then found the place a little too… complicated when they came back.

When you’re set, Tulsa City-County Library is a 4-minute walk heading southeast.

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