The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

22 sites suggested for historic register

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ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) >> Twentytwo locations in New York state have been nominated for listing on the National Register of Historic Places.

They include the 113-year-old Hudson Theater in Manhattan, a neighborho­od in Utica, factory buildings in Syracuse, the Internatio­nal Shirt & Collar Company Building in Troy, a oneroom schoolhous­e on the Southern Tier, and the Buffalo Milk Company Building in Buffalo.

The 22 sites will be listed on the state Register of Historic Places after formal approval by the state’s historic preservati­on officer. They will then be reviewed by federal officials for possible listing on the national register.

They are:

Central New York

•The Hawley-Green Street Historic District (Boundary Expansion), Syracuse – The expansion adds 107 contributi­ng buildings with a rich blend of architectu­ral styles – built between 1824 to 1930 – to the historic district originally establishe­d in 1979.

•Oak Knitting Company, Syracuse – Built in phases beginning in 1899, the mill was one of the first of many large industrial buildings constructe­d on the reclaimed salt flats in the northwest section of the city following the decline of the city’s early salt industry.

•The Syracuse Lighting Company Building, Syracuse – Built in six sections between 1893 and 1950, the power plant provided electricit­y to hundreds of industrial buildings in the city, directly impacting the growth and diversific­ation of industry in Syracuse.

Mohawk Valley

•Bagg’s Square East Historic District, Utica – Located on the south side of the Mohawk River, where low-lying flats were suited for a succession of transporta­tion modes – first by foot and hoof, later utilizing rail, boat, and automobile – the district reflects Utica’s developmen­t as a transshipm­ent center in 19th through the mid-20th centuries.

Capital Region

•The Cornwallvi­lle Cem- etery, Cornwallvi­lle – First used for burials in 1824, the cemetery serves as the final resting place formany of this community’s preeminent figures, among them the hamlet’s first settler, Captain Daniel Cornwall, a veteran of the American Revolution who arrived from Connecticu­t with his family in 1788.

•Internatio­nal Shirt & Collar Company Building, Troy – Built in 1876 for processing cereal grains into malt for brewing, it was later part of the city’s cuff and collar making industry, which dominated the city at the turn of the 20th century.

•The Moss Street Cemetery, Kingsbury – The cemetery’s earliest grave is believed to be that of an unknown Native American veteran of the French & Indian War who was buried there as early as the 1780s; it includes the graves of countless prominent early town residents, among them vet- erans from the American Revolution, War of 1812, and Civil War.

Southern Tier

•Common School 32, Trout Creek – Constructe­d sometime between 1860 and 1880, Common School 32 retains the iconic form of a 19th century one-room rural school and was the last one-room school in the town to close in 1968.

• George Washington School, Elmira – A project of the Great Depression­era Public Works Administra­tion, the Art Deco-style school opened its doors to students in 1940 and served as a local elementary school until 2006.

•John W. Jones Court, Elmira – Named after a city resident who escaped slavery andwas active in the Undergroun­d Railroad, the postwar public housing project was built exclusivel­y for African Americans, but also had the unfortunat­e effect of displacing the institutio­ns that formed the cultural heart of Elmira’s African-American community.

•Jewell Family Homestead, Guilford – Built around 1824 by the Jewell family, settlers from New Hampshire who became major landowners, the house is a representa­tive intact example of a New England, center chimney plan residence, one of themost popular forms of domestic architectu­re in regions settled by New Englanders in the late 18th and early 19th centuries.

Finger Lakes

•East Main Street Historic District, Rochester – The intact downtown neighborho­od contains amix of buildings that together illustrate the growth and developmen­t of Rochester’s east side historic commercial and retail center from the oldest build--

ings to the constructi­on of the Chase Tower in 1973.

•Le Roy Downtown Historic District, LeRoy – The highly intact collection of residentia­l and commercial buildings, built between 1811 and 1963 along the primary traffic artery through Le Roy, demonstrat­es its growth from frontier settlement to a bustling community at the turn of the 20th century.

•The Terminal Building, Rochester – Built 1924-26 as the first building to front Broad Street, the office building is an embodiment of the growth and transforma­tion of downtown Rochester in the 1920s, after the Erie Canal aqueduct was transforme­d into an automobile and subway conduit.

Western New York

•Buffalo Milk Company Building, Buffalo – Constructe­d between 1903 and 1905, the Buffalo Milk Company, which later reformed as Queen City Dairy, used the building for the pasteuriza­tion and distributi­on of milk, the first large-scale milk company to do so in Buffalo. •The F.N. Burt Company Factory “C” Building, Buffalo – The daylight factory building, constructe­d in 1911 for the largest producer of boxes for cigarettes and cosmetics in the United States. Like the other surviving Burt factory buildings, Factory C is also associated with general manager Mary R. Cass, who was one of the most successful women executives in the country.

•Buffalo Public School #24, Buffalo – Beginning in the 1930s, PS 24 housed several “sight-saving” classes, and over the following decade the building not only became the “headquarte­rs” of courses for the blind, but also for several programs designed for students with learning and intellectu­al disabiliti­es, predating state and federal laws regulating education for all students with special needs.

Hudson Valley

•Blauvelt-Cropsey Farm, Clarkstown – Erected for the Blauvelt family near the turn of the 19th century, the Blauvelt-Cropsey house is a highly intact and impressive­ly maintained sandstone residence that melds Dutch and English building traditions. Since the 1890s it has been associated with the Cropsey family, members of which reside there to this day.

•John Green House, Nyack – Built ca. 1819, it is one of a few remaining structures left from the earliest period of growth in Nyack and was the home of John Green, whose role in establishi­ng the Nyack Turnpike and regular steamboat service helped transform the community into a thriving seat of regional commerce.

•Stanfordvi­lle Station, Stanfordvi­lle – Constructe­d in 1889, the complex is the last of three stations built for the short-lived Poughkeeps­ie and Connecticu­t Railroad, which was establishe­d by the Poughkeeps­ie Railroad Bridge Company to compete with east-west routes.

•St. John’s Episcopal Church, Pleasantvi­lle – Erected in 1912, the highly intact Late Gothic Revivalsty­le church and the 1928-29 parish hall are recognizab­le local landmarks. The complex also includes a c1800 dwelling later incorporat­ed into the parish as a rectory.

New York City

•Hudson Theatre, New York – Constructe­d 190203 as part of renowned producer Henry B. Harris’s theatrical empire, the BeauxArts theater is one of the few remaining early 20th century playhouses within Manhattan’s Broadway Theater District.

 ?? PHOTOS COURTESY NEW YORK STATE BOARD FOR HISTORIC PRESERVATI­ON ?? Interior view of Area 3of the Syracuse Lighting Company Building in Syracuse circa 1895. Arc generators on the mezzanine level are connected to steam engines below.
PHOTOS COURTESY NEW YORK STATE BOARD FOR HISTORIC PRESERVATI­ON Interior view of Area 3of the Syracuse Lighting Company Building in Syracuse circa 1895. Arc generators on the mezzanine level are connected to steam engines below.
 ??  ?? Left: Detail from the 1873Brosiu­s Bird’s Eye View of the City of Utica shows the Bagg’s Square East Historic District. The view is taken from the north; the path of the Erie Canal forms the southern boundary of the district. Right: Current view of part...
Left: Detail from the 1873Brosiu­s Bird’s Eye View of the City of Utica shows the Bagg’s Square East Historic District. The view is taken from the north; the path of the Erie Canal forms the southern boundary of the district. Right: Current view of part...
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