Friday, October 25, 2019

Cobblestone Foundations in Owego, Tioga County

    Two houses - 80 and 84 Main Street in the village of Owego have cobblestone foundations.  They were both built in 1888 by Joel Hamilton. Interesting there were still masons around by that time who knew how to do this. These are just like the ones  found in Cortland and Home. Both are now apartment houses.
    Source: Building Structure Inventory Forms at Tioga County Historical Society.

                            Views of 80 Main Street



                        Views of 84 Main Street



Friday, May 31, 2019

Cobblestone Houses in Massachusetts

    
                                                                                                         
 [Photos by Cynthia Gaylord]






Bricks were substituted for the more customary limestone blocks as quoins. The foundation of the house is slab stone. The stone part of the house measures 24'7" at the front and 33' 5 1/2"  at the side. The dining room and kitchen are at the rear.



   



    What is now the kitchen area was once the carriage house.


This  house at 17 Bartlett Street, Westfield, Massachusetts, may be the eastern-most cobblestone house in the U.S. It was built about 1838 by Ralph Lucius Dewey (1818-1863), a local mason, with water-washed stones gathered from the nearby Westfield River after being dumped there as ballast from canal boats.
    The Hampshire & Hampden Canal, which, with the Farmington Canal, linked Westfield to Long Island Sound at New Haven, Connecticut.  The canal system was planned as early as 1822, completed in 1835, and operated for a period of 17 years.
    Extending as far north as Northampton, passing through Westfield, the water link was a canal four feet deep and some 34 feet wide, extending 87 miles to the sea.  The canal was used for both freight and passenger service, and the boats made their way leisurely along the route, pulled by horses, There were 90 locks.   
   The canal system was abandoned in 1847 because of railroad competition and financial stress.  Eight years later, the canal route became a railroad right of way, and a railroad was built along the same route, using the drained canal bed  in some places.  
   Mattie (Boyden) Sizer,the last descendant of Dewey to live there, died in 1960 and the property sold in 1961.


Amasa Rice House, 1641 East St.,  Pittsfield, Berkshire County, was built about 1840 on the site of Fort Anson, constructed by Col. William Williams in 1754 for the defense of his extensive land holdings.  Rice was a prosperous farmer and was among the founders of the Housatonic Engine Company in 1844.It sat near the East Branch of the Housatonic River in an area known as “The Junction.” It has been demolished.

Friday, April 26, 2019

Cobblestone Buildings in Otsego County





Note the "piping" style of cobblestone masonry work at ground level.


   265 Skaneateles Turnpike, Town of Plainfield,  east of
         Plainfield Center, built by Philip Burns, ca. 1849.   
                                    


This  house at 6923 Route 51, West Exeter, was erected in 1851 according to the date stone.


    Date stone on house at 6923 Route 51, West Exeter.




School house at corner of Routes 23 and 24, Exeter, built 1849.


               Route 22, West Exeter (apparently gone)
                                                   Robert Roudabush photo, 1970s