This dignified residential composition, conceived as a two-story masonry block with subtly changing planes, is capped by a hipped roof with soffited eaves and elegant stick brackets. The recessed central entry has an arched canopy supported by heavy carved brackets, surmounted, on the second story, by a handsome Palladian window panel. A porte-cochere projects to the west. Deed records and city directories together suggest that the house was built c. 1920, either on speculation by the John C. Ryan Land Co. or on commission for Albert L. Camp. Camp was president of Camp & Camp Oil & Gas Co. and resided here until c. 1925. Dr. C. A. Hickman purchased the property in 1940. Hickman was founder and director of the State Reserve Life Insurance Co., and was the first chairman of the Fort Worth Civil Service Board. He sold the house in 1962 to the McDaniel family, who still resides here. The Camp-Hickman-McDaniel House is a contributing resource in the Elizabeth Boulevard Historic District (local and national).