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128 E. Genesee Street: Brick; keystone window lintels; large pilasters; floral decorated frieze; bracketed cornice 15 Witherill Building 1855 Italianate 4 300-304 S. Salina Street: Brick; Syracuse High School 1856-1861; Bryant & Stratton 1870s & 1880s; Henry Pike, architect 16 Wilson Building 1898 Beaux Arts: 7 306-312 S. Salina Street
210 Montgomery St., 237-43 E. Genesee St. Syracuse: Site of Daniel Webster's 1851 "Syracuse Speech" in which he equated resistance to the Fugitive Slave Law with treason. In response, crowds in the area freed an escaped slave from the custody of federal marshals, galvanizing opposition to slavery in Central New York.
38 Auburn - Syracuse: Centro Transit HUB 138: Auburn, NY Grand Ave, Howlett Hill Road, Old Seneca Turnpike, Genesee Street ... East Genesee Street, I-690, I-481 ...
Hanover Square in downtown Syracuse is actually a triangle at the intersection of Warren, Water, and East Genesee Streets. The name may also refer to the larger Hanover Square Historic District which includes seventeen historic buildings in the area that was the first commercial district in Syracuse. [2]
The Harriet May Mills House or Harriet May Mills Residence is a historic home on the west side of Syracuse, New York. It was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 2002. [ 1 ] Extensive information on the restoration of the home and its former owners is archived on the now-defunct HarrietMayMills.org website.
7 Clay St. Le Roy: 1825 church houses one of the earliest surviving congregations in area, established 1812 7: Genesee County Courthouse: Genesee County Courthouse: June 18, 1973 : Main and Ellicott Sts.
South Salina Street between Erie Boulevard and West Onondaga Street was the main north-south artery of Downtown Syracuse and was among the busiest streets in the city. [2] The area has seen a great deal of revitalization in recent years with projects such as the conversion of the historic Syracuse Trust Building into luxury condos, a project ...
After graduation from Cornell, Hamilton S. White returned to Syracuse, developed the city's first public, mechanical and electric fire alarm systems, copied after Ithaca's mechanical system, and built his firehouse at the former 400 Genesee Street, close to the family house. Here, he boarded and trained his fire company, provided all the ...