. Onondaga's centennial. Gleanings of a century. NNIAL. of Henry Perkins, Lewis Averell, and Lewis Kinney; lot number 3 toAmos P. Granger and by him to Lewis Kinney. On the 1st of April,1848, the First Presbyterian Society bought the property for $10, south of the tavern barn mentioned stood in 1827 two one-storydwellings and south of them a two-story house in which Mrs. Dickinsontaught a young ladies school. ()n the site of Francis Hendrickss blockHarvey Baldwin erected before 1827 a two-story brick building, and inthat vicinity were several of the wood houses built by the SyracuseCom


. Onondaga's centennial. Gleanings of a century. NNIAL. of Henry Perkins, Lewis Averell, and Lewis Kinney; lot number 3 toAmos P. Granger and by him to Lewis Kinney. On the 1st of April,1848, the First Presbyterian Society bought the property for $10, south of the tavern barn mentioned stood in 1827 two one-storydwellings and south of them a two-story house in which Mrs. Dickinsontaught a young ladies school. ()n the site of Francis Hendrickss blockHarvey Baldwin erected before 1827 a two-story brick building, and inthat vicinity were several of the wood houses built by the SyracuseCompany. In 182/ I. De Blois Sherman built south of the corner onWarren street the brick dwelling long occupied by Dr. Lyman Clary,on the site of which is now being erected a brick block by Edward The west side of Warren street was unoccupied except bythis house. The first Episcopal church, finished in 1822, stood on thesite of the Granger block; the church is now the old St. Marys, stand-on the corner of Montgomery and Madison CookSaCoffee Hoi se. Block L09, surrounded by Washington, Montgomery, Fayette and Warren streets, contained a number of buildings before 1830. Col. !i Phillips lived in a house built about 1824 by Jonas Mann on tin Vanderbilt House corner, which became the historic Cooks Coffee House, On the Montgomery street corner, site of the Yates, was a THE VILLAGE AND THE CITY OF SYRACUSE. 427 dwelling built by A. N. Van Patten just before L827, which becamethe L. home. Next to the Redfield house was the two-story brick house of Capt. Hiram Putnam. Jason C. Woodruff livedon the Warren street side and had his livery stable in the rear. Theseand one other dwelling were all the buildings on the block until laterthan 1827. The next block south (112) had only four small houses, allprobably built by the Syracuse Company, until after L827. Samuel Phelps had a blacksmith shop on the site of the Myers blockin 1827. aside from which this block (5


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookpublisherbosto, bookyear1896