ENID, a city of Oklahoma, U.S.A., 65m. N.W. of Oklahoma city; the county seat of Garfield county. It is on Federal high ways 64, 164 and 81; has an air port ; and is served by the Frisco, the Rock Island and the Santa Fe railways. The population was 16,576 in 1920 (94% native white), and it was 26,399 in 193o by the Federal census. It is the leading grain market of the State, and the general trade centre for a rich agricultural district, pro ducing chiefly grain, live stock, alfalfa, milk, poultry and broom corn, and for the oil and gas fields in the eastern and southern part of the county. It has railroad shops, terminal elevators (capacity 3,00o,000bu.), oil refineries, flour mills and meat packing plants, a milk condensery and factories making agri cultural implements, tractors, threshers and wire. The output of the factories within the city in 1927 was valued at and included 6,000,000 lb. of butter. Enid was founded and incorporated in 1893.