The work of three historians — Mary MacKenzie, Lee Manchester and Janet Null — has been combined in this survey of the historic architecture of Main Street, Lake Placid, in the heart of New York's Adirondacks. Rich in both current and archival photographs, the book includes a section of comparative streetscape images, placing full-page archival shots side-by-side with current views of the Olympic Village. TO PURCHASE A BOUND, PRINTED EDITION, GO TO http://stores.lulu.com/marymackenzie
5. Main Street, Lake Placid:
An Architectural and Historic Survey
Mary MacKenzie
Lee Manchester
Janet Null
Makebelieve Publishing
Jay, New York
September 2006
6. Main Street, Lake Placid: An Architectural and Historic Survey
By Mary MacKenzie, Lee Manchester and Janet Null
Edited by Lee Manchester
Front cover illustration: A panoramic photo of Main Street, taken by Saranac Lake photographer William Kollecker
between 1927 and 1933, looking north from just below the Marcy-Lake Placid hotel.
Back cover illustration: A 1911 colorized postcard shows the Main Street streetscape (mislabeled “Lake Street”) looking
south, with 97 Main St. and 99-101 Main appearing in the far left.
Compiled September 2006
Published December 2008
To the best of the editor’s knowledge, all the material in this compilation is in the public domain. No profits of any sort are
made by the editor on the sale of this book; any charges come from the printer for duplication and binding costs, and for
shipping and handling.
For additional copies of this book, visit Lee Manchester’s print-on-demand Internet storefront at
http://stores.lulu.com/leemanchester,
where electronic PDF copies can be downloaded at no charge, and print copies can be ordered at cost.
7. Contents
Acknowledgments and notes...................................................................................................ix
Surviving 19th century buildings (listing) ..................................................................................xi
East Side ................................................................................................................................. 1
West Side ............................................................................................................................ 109
Historic Main Street streetscapes........................................................................................ 161
8.
9. Acknowledgments and notes
This is a compilation of the work of three researchers and a multitude of archival photographers.
The summaries of each building’s background combine the research of Mary MacKenzie, Janet Null and Lee
Manchester.
Mary MacKenzie was the Lake Placid village historian. MacKenzie’s research was completed in October 1988 for a
preliminary historic survey of Main Street.
Janet Null was contracted two years later (1990) to produce a professional survey of Main Street historic architecture
for the Lake Placid Historic Commission.
Lee Manchester was a staff writer for the Lake Placid News from 2000 to 2006. He had a strong interest in local
history and historic preservation, and many of the feature articles he wrote for the News focused on those subjects.
The modern-day (2006) photos were taken by Lee Manchester. Manchester also edited this compilation.
Most of the historic photos contained in this compilation were drawn from the following sources:
• The Mary MacKenzie Historic Slide Collection
• The private collection of Chris and Nancy Beattie
• The archives of the Lake Placid village historian, housed in the Lake Placid Public Library
A few historic images were harvested from various sites on the Internet, including the New York Public Library and the
U.S. Library of Congress.
The survey starts at the north end of Main Street, on the east side of the street. It moves south, covering each building
on the east side of the street to the North Elba Town Hall, before crossing over to the west side of Main Street and moving
north again, building by building, to the head of the street.
As this project was being completed, so was the renumbering of houses and the renaming of streets throughout Essex
County, N.Y., to bring the county into compliance with the new E-911 automatic emergency locating system. Because all
of the research for our project was done under the old numbering system, each building’s street number in this collection is
given first under the old system; the new street number is given next to the old number, in parentheses.
And, finally, a reminder: This survey was compiled in the fall of 2006, but Lake Placid is a dynamic community, much
more so than other communities of similar size because of its identity as the Olympic Village of the Adirondacks. Almost
as soon as the last photograph was taken for this survey, buildings started changing again on Main Street — a restaurant
was redesigned, a floor was added to a commercial property, an old structure was completely refurbished. To see how
Main Street has evolved since 2006, visit Lake Placid and see for yourself!
ix
10.
11. Surviving 19th century buildings
Main Street has twelve buildings that have survived — in one form or another — from the 19th century:
1. 104-06 Main St., the core of which was built in 1880;
2. 75 Main St., built in the early 1880s, the first Main Street structure built specifically for commercial use;
3. 44 Main St. rear, the Crosby house, built in 1884;
4. 67 Main St., the Lake Placid Public Library, built in 1886;
5. 3 School St., just off Main Street across from the Town Hall, was originally located about half a mile north on Main
when it was built in 1888;
6. 76½ Main St., originally a Baptist parsonage, also built in 1888; 1
7. 3-5 Main St., built about 1890;
8. 125-127 Main St., also built about 1890;
9. 83 Main St., within which is the first Catholic church in the village, built in 1896;
10. 7 Main St., built before 1900;
11. 97 Main St., a market and carriage house built in 1900, and
12. 44 Main St., an Episcopal church first built on another site in 1900.
1
The 1888 Baptist parsonage was demolished in 2007.
xi
15. 1 (2407)
(built before 1913)
The building’s
architectural character has
been significantly
disguised by alterations
(including storefront,
windows, siding and
cornices). A field stone
retaining wall is adjacent,
at the south side of Pioneer
Park. The primary
importance of the building
in its current state is urban,
as the first structure in a
continuous row of
buildings extending to
Mid’s Park and forming an
essential street wall.
July 2006: Far Mor’s Kids
October 1988: Far Mors
Corners; Artists Café
downstairs
3
16. 3-5 (2409-2411)
Reuben Clifford Block (built ca. 1890)
One of Main Street’s oldest buildings,
this structure was built around 1890 for
Reuben Clifford. It is a symmetrical
building with a double storefront and
simplified Italianate detailing.
Originally, the building had a five-bay
façade and a one-story porch on the
front. The front section with bay
windows, a rare feature on Main Street,
was added after 1908 and probably
before 1920. Presumably, the
storefronts were added and the roof
altered at the same time. Notable
features include a pair of second-floor
bay windows on Main, multi-story
porches overlooking Mirror Lake, and
original cornices and parts of storefront
intact. The building also has a complete
tin ceiling on the first floor.
July 2006: Brown Dog Café & Wine
Bar; Lake Placid Gallery
October 1988: Pot Luck; Lake Placid
Gallery
4
17. 7 (2413)
(built before 1900)
Built before 1900, this building has not
changed substantially. It is a symmetrical
three-bay structure that may have originally
been a house. The exterior is significantly
intact, including siding, windows and
cornice. The building appears in early photos
with a gabled roof, which was apparently
altered after 1915; now, the roof is flat.
Additions made to the building include:
stair/passage on north side; rear addition with
porches; first-floor bay windows and entry
porch on street façade.
July 2006: F. Matthews luxury “roughwear”
October 1988: Mini-Swiss Shop
5
18. 9-11 (2415)
(built early 1920s)
This structure was built in the
early 1920s, after the fire of
January 1919 destroyed the
previous building on this site.
Like the Leggo Block [17-19],
this may have been constructed
on the foundations of the
previous building. It is a
symmetrical, utilitarian
commercial block with double
storefront and recessed panels
and brick cornice above.
July 2006: Ruthie’s Run
October 1988: Ruthie’s Run
6
19. 13 (2419)
(built 1990)
This is a new structure, built in
1990.
July 2006: Terry Horrocks Real
Estate
7
20. 15 (2421)
Tobin & Webb Block
(built 1922)
This structure was built for
Tobin & Webb in 1922 as a
meat market after the fire of
January 1919 had destroyed the
previous building. The building
is simple, symmetrical, and
utilitarian in character, but
nevertheless of good
proportions and integrity of
design. Changes: Upper
storefront façade, and stucco
siding. South windows infilled.
July 2006: China City Chinese
restaurant
October 1988: The Studio
8
21. 17-19 (2423)
Leggo Block (built 1919)
Built in the 1919, this structure replaced the old building destroyed in the fire in January of that year. Called the Leggo
Block, it was actually built on top of the foundation of the previous building. Changes: Second story added ca. 1979.
Storefronts altered and angled into façade; formerly, each storefront had center entry and glass transoms. Passage addition
on south. Little of the original character of the building is apparent due to these alterations; it contributes negatively to the
historic character of the street, but positively to the street wall.
July 2006: Fanfare
October 1988: Lake Placid Shirt & Shade Co.
9
23. 21 (2425)
(built 1922)
Built in 1922, this is another structure built to
replace an earlier building destroyed in the fire of
January 1919 (shown in the photo, opposite). It is an
unusually tall and narrow (two-bay) structure,
utilitarian in design but with attention to detail. It
would be a reasonable speculation to suggest that
the height of the building was intended to approach
to the scale of the adjacent No. 23, which had
escaped the 1919 fire; whether intended or not, it
does so successfully. Notable features: flat-arched
second-floor casement windows with solider
coursed lintels running between brick pilasters. The
building contributes positively to the streetscape.
The photo on the opposite page shows Lake
Placid’s Main Street coach, filled with passengers
for a posed shot in front of the building that
previously stood on the site of 21 Main. The photo is
from around 1900.
July 2006: Jimmy’s restaurant
October 1988: Jimmy’s Eating & Drinking Place
11
25. 23 (2427)
Cheesman Block (built 1901)
This structure was built in 1901 for William F.
Cheesman, a photographer who conducted a novelty,
souvenir and art shop at this location until 1924. It has
not changed substantially in the last century. The
building figures prominently in all the early photos of
Main Street and, due to its design and its scale, retains
considerable prominence today.
The eclectic gable, combining unusually heavy and
curved stickwork decoration with a Palladian window,
contributes Victorian exuberance to a street mostly
composed of more plain, utilitarian and/or serious
buildings. The substantially unaltered condition of the
building increases its historical and architectural value.
Changes: Storefront altered.
The photo on the opposite page shows young
Saranac Lake photographer William Kollecker at work
behind the counter at the Cheesman store in 1904.
July 2006: Zoe Noble clothing
October 1988: Bear Haus (skiwear, clothing)
13
27. 29-31 (2431-2433)
Stickney Block (built 1878; burned 1910)
Cautin Block (new building, 1911)
This is one of the buildings where Mary MacKenzie and Janet Null’s stories differed significantly from one another.
According to MacKenzie, Frank Stickney built the first store on Main Street on this site in 1878 [JN] or the early
1880s [MM]. It housed the first Lake Placid Post Office during Stickney’s tenure as postmaster, from May 1883 through
Sept. 1885, and again housed the post office in the early 1900s. The Stickney Building was destroyed by fire in 1910. The
present building was probably constructed the next year, 1911. This was the Lester Cautin store block for many years, and
afterward was owned by James Hadjis, who had the LeBourget Restaurant.
While Mary MacKenzie was convinced that the Lester Cautin Block, which stands here today, is a wholly new
building that replaced the Stickney Block after the 1910 fire, Janet Null believed that the Cautin Block was built using the
surviving shell of the Stickney Building. Null based her belief on several early photos (1880s, 1903, 1906, 1908) that show
part or all of the Stickney Building, “which is strikingly similar to the current building in configuration, lacking only a
story.” If Null is correct, then the Cautin Block contains the oldest extant building on Main Street — at least, according to
Null’s date of 1878, which predates the Lamoy house by two years. (MM said it was the early 1880s, making it a year or
two after the Lamoy house.)
It should be noted that pre-1910 photos show the Stickney Block as a two-story building, while the Cautin Block is a
three-story building. If the Cautin Block was built using the shell of the old Stickney Block, the builder added one
completely new story to the structure.
Architecturally, the building is a plain Victorian block distinguished only by its prominent bracketed cornice, but its
importance to the continuity and character of this section of the street is unmistakable. Changes: Storefronts altered. Upper
floors of street façade aluminum sided. One-story addition on south [Barnaby’s]; three-story addition on north [stairway?].
In 1946, two interior store spaces were combined for a restaurant [Le Bourget?].
July 2006: Bobo’s Ice Cream Parlor; Pete’s Steakhouse; Barnaby’s Wines & Liquors
October 1988: Georgeo’s Sportswear; E-Mega-Zee gifts; Barnaby’s Wines & Liquors
15
28. 33 (2435)
F.S. Leonard & Co. Department Store (1902)
The building appears to have been constructed in three sections.
Even so, the building achieved its current form and façade by 1906,
giving it the distinction of being the first neoclassical structure on
Main Street. This building and the Cheesman Block (23 Main) were
also the first large commercial structures on the street. Occupied by
the Leonard department store for many years, and housing the
telephone company switchboard on the second floor from 1901 to
1919, when it was removed to 113 (2519) Main Street. The building
became a drugstore in the 1950s.
The well-proportioned façade is symmetrical, with a wide center
bay flanked by a narrower bay on each side, all articulated by four
brick pilasters which carry a plain frieze and a bracketed cornice.
Only the storefront has been altered (albeit drastically) so that the
integrity of the façade serves to increase the considerable historical
and architectural value of the building. The steel and neon sign is also
noteworthy, not only as it is apparently the oldest extant sign on the
street, but also because it is of a type and style recognized today as
worthy of preservation on artistic and technological grounds.
Notable features: Five-story wooden porch structure overlooking
the lake.
Changes: Storefront replaced and inset from the street wall.
Original pedimented section of cornice crowning the center of the
building has been removed. Aluminum siding installed below second-
floor windows. [Also, “DRUGS” sign has been removed.]
July 2006: Lake Placid Christmas Company
October 1988: Lake Placid Drug Store
16
29. 35-37 (2437-2439)
Salisian Building/Feldstein Block (ca. 1909)
Built circa 1909 on the site of the little Henry Kaiser photography shop. Number 2439 was occupied by a drug store
for much of this building’s existence.
The first known structure on this lot was a tent, used to house the pioneer photography business of Wallace Brownell
and his partner, a Mr. Fry, shown in an undated photograph taken before 1895. Henry Kaiser replaced Mr. Fry in 1901; by
1905, Kaiser had evidently bought out Brownell himself.
By 1895, Brownell had erected a rough, narrow building with one story at street level and another below it looking out
onto the lake. By 1901, another building had gone up immediately to the north, housing the oriental rug shop of Mihran S.
Salisian. A 1903 Main Street map shows three small buildings on this site, side-by-side. Salisian acquired the lot from
Brownell in 1904.
The two (or three) small buildings were replaced in 1909 by the present three-story structure (with two more stories
below street level), which is apparently the first entirely masonry structure built on Main Street. The building was occupied
initially by Merriam’s Drugstore, then Feek’s drugs for many years.
Due to its size and its location adjacent to Mid’s Park, the building really stands out on the street. Unfortunately, the
most prominent characteristics of the building — the white stucco, the massive band of dark wood over the parapets, and
the excessive signage on the building — do not enhance the historic character of the structure [these features were all
added in 1940]. The building appears strange today because of these “improvements,” and in part because it began life as a
very unusual building for the region. The exterior walls originally were stuccoed and also surmounted by tall parapets in a
virtually Baroque form. The arched windows of the top floor (now partially infilled) echoed the curved forms of the
parapets. The 1940s storefront design is the first example of an alpine architectural influence on Main Street. Although this
renovation destroyed the original storefronts and compromised the integrity of the original design of the building, this
alpine revival must be noted as something of a local and Adirondack phenomenon.
Notable features: Five stories of wood porches on the lake side. Round-arched and flat-arched windows in top story.
Tin ceilings on first floor.
July 2006: On the Bright Side; Body & Sole (shops downstairs, too)
October 1988: The Instep; Swiss Boutique
17
30. The Brownell & Fry photo tent — the first structure to stand at 35-37 Main — in a photo taken before 1895.
18
31. This 1895 photo is captioned “Brownell Shooting Gallery.”
19
32. This photo of upper Main Street, taken in 1901, shows that Brownell has taken
on a new partner, Henry J. Kaiser. A new building has been added to the north.
20
33. This 1903 photo shows the photo business now being in the exclusive
hands of Henry Kaiser, next to the Salisian oriental rug shop.
21
34. This undated photo, captioned “Henry Kaiser, Mrs. Brownell” by Mary MacKenzie,
may provide a clue as to why Messr.s Kaiser and Brownell dissolved their brief partnership.
22
36. 51 (2453)
Eastern Mountain Sports (built 1987)
July 2006: Eastern Mountain Sports
October 1988: Eastern Mountain Sports
24
37. 55-57 [unk]
Malone Building (1929)
This structure, built for Leo Malone in April
1929, is a simple brick block enlivened by two
highly distinctive architectural features. First, the
storefront is a true classical composition that
encompasses the full width of the building;
relatively short and slender Doric anta columns
are surmounted by a very deep entablature, in
which the tall frieze becomes the sign board.
Second, the only fenestrations on the second floor
are two large and delicate windows, strangely but
effectively contrasting with the heavy brick wall.
The combination of picturesque windows and a
manipulated classical storefront looks
suspiciously like a building designed by
committee, but the result is still fascinating and
singular.
Notable features: Rear porches, upper three
floors. neoclassical, Doric storefront. Tripartite
second floor windows with projecting iron grille
work and copper roofs.
Changes: Storefront windows replaced with
aluminum. [The storefront has been completely
reworked since the 1990 survey. None of the
storefront features that so enchanted Janet Null
survived.]
July 2006: Gap Outlet
October 1988: Razook’s
25
38. 59 (2461)
Lockwood Building (ca. 1920)
This structure was built around 1920 for Homer
Lockwood, who used it as his own shop. The
building contributes positively to the streetscape,
being part of a group of structures built to a
common streetline and complementary scale, but
offering variety in architectural detailing. The
second floor is distinguished by grouped
windows with multi-paned transoms and very
unusual truncated arched heads, and by a delicate
bracketed cornice. The delicacy of the second-
floor detail is contrasted effectively by the stucco
wall finish, which may be original (no historic
photos of the building have been found). The
original design of the storefront probably
complemented the upper story, but has been
completely altered and no longer contributes any
architectural value to the building.
Notable features: Top-floor rear porch on
enormous brackets. Bracketed cornice and
tripartite second-floor windows with unusual
truncated arches.
Changes: Stucco may be an alteration.
Storefront altered. Rear porch added. South side
stair addition.
July 2006: John T. Wilkins, Atty., upstairs;
downstairs, new store selling used books
October 1988: Wilkins Agency,
Realty/Insurance
26
39. 61 (2465)
(Probably pre-1908)
The construction date of this building
is not completely certain. Mary
MacKenzie believed that it was
probably built in the 1920s. Janet Null
noted, however, that the building shown
on this site from the lake side in a 1908
photo is consistent in scale and form
with the current building, indicating the
probable construction date above. The
building has the common three-bay
composition of Victorian row house
structures with plain surrounds. The
building was always very simple in
design, but the recent re-siding and the
alterations of the storefront have
nonetheless diminished its historic
character, so that its value today stems
from its age and its contribution to the
street.
Changes: Building sided. Storefront
altered. Side porches added.
Note: Either this building (61 Main) or
the one just south of it (65 Main) housed
the Lake Placid post office just before it
moved to the new Masonic Building,
completed in 1916.
July 2006: Candy Man
October 1988: Northern Insuring
27
40. 65 (2469)
(Pre-1913; rear boathouse/cottage, pre-1909)
Mary MacKenzie dated the construction of this commercial building in the early 1900s, while Janet Null dated it only
as having been built before 1913.
The bulk of the building has been essentially unaltered through its history, and it retains the original two-bay
configuration of the upper façade. The architectural character and detail (including the storefront), however, have been
completely altered, producing a mock-historical appearance. The scale of the building, however, is appropriate to the street.
The boathouse is more significant. Historically, there were numerous boathouses on the Main Street section of the
lakefront, some within the lowest level of the commercial blocks, but this is the only remaining example, although it does
not appear to be used now as a boathouse. The boathouse-cottage also possesses architectural features.
Notable features: Boathouse-cottage, pre-1909. Three-story hipped roof structure, with novelty siding central stone
chimney, decorative roof rafter ends, and pent roof at second floor. The boathouse is substantially unaltered.
Changes: Storefront altered. Building completely re-sided, including street façade, which possesses mock-classical
second story executed in aluminum siding and fascia parts. North side stair addition.
July 2006: Merrill L. Thomas Realty
October 1988: Merrill Thomas building
28
41. 67 (2471)
Lake Placid Public Library (1886)
• Built 1886. Architect: James L. Breeze, New York City. Builder: R.W. Clifford.
• Moved back from sidewalk, 1901: Seth Johnson, contractor.
• Renovated, 1950: George Bola.
Completed in 1886, the Lake Placid Public Library is one of the early libraries in the Adirondacks. This gracious little
structure survives intact, with improvements such as enclosure of porches (1941) and a 3-story extension (2000).
The Library Association of North Elba was incorporated in 1884, and the same year plans to build a library were put in
motion and a site belonging to the Adirondack Baptist Church was secured for an annual token rent of $1. The $1,200
budgeted for the building was raised through donations of money and materials, and the library opened its doors in July
1886. Lydia Wood was the first librarian. The library was transferred to the school district in 1894 and granted a state
charter (under the regents of the state university) as a school district library. The famous librarian and founder of the Lake
Placid Club, Melvil Dewey, was one of the early supporters of the library. In 1901, the new village corporation installed a
new sidewalk along Main Street and the library was moved back a few feet to accommodate it, and at the same time raised
a couple of feet off the street. In 1928, the Baptist Church sold the land on which the library is located, and after the new
owner refused to honor the original lease agreement, the school district eventually bought the land in 1935. The library has
been an important, and one of the earliest, cultural assets of the community throughout its history, as well as being one of
the earliest libraries in the Adirondacks. Moreover, it has been used by such famous figures as Albert Einstein, Kate Smith
and Victor Herbert, and it houses the Adirondack oral biographical tape collection.
The library building, in essence, is a small, Shingle Style cottage, with a gable-cum-hipped roof. It is a unique example
of the style on Main Street, and certainly one of the earliest structures on the street It contributes significantly to the
architectural variety of Main Street, and despite some renovations and routine replacement of roofing and shingles, it has
substantially retained its original fabric, and certainly its architectural integrity.
Interrelationship of building and surroundings: Free standing between 65 and 71 Main St., and set back a few feet
from the common street frontage. A garden with a view to the lake adjoins the south side of the building, and a rear garden
runs down to the lakeshore.
Notable features: Original fireplace. East porch (now enclosed) overlooking the lake.
Changes: Substantially unaltered. East porch enclosed, 1941. Shutters added. Building was moved back a few feet on
its site when Main Street sidewalks were installed in 1901. Renovations in 1950-52 included adding a reference room on
the middle lower level and a separate children’s room. West foundation wall was replaced in 1981.
29
47. 71-73 (2475)
(1932)
This is a simple commercial block, similar to other buildings on the street of the same period. (See also 9 Main St.)
While not architecturally exceptional, it contributes positively to the street and is substantially unaltered.
Interrelationship of building and surroundings: Originally free-standing but now attached to 75 Main by side passage
addition to 75. This one-story (street side) structure is one of the shortest buildings on the street, but still maintains the
street line.
Changes: Storefronts partially, but not significantly altered, including over-painting of glass transoms, and addition of
decorative roof vent with weathervane.
July 2006: Island Mountain (clothing)
October 1988: Country Store
35
48. The Charles Green drugstore, 75 Main St., possibly during the 1914 Winter Carnival
36
49. 75 (2477)
(1880s)
Built in the 1880s for Charles Green, this
is one of the oldest buildings on the street, and
apparently was the first commercial-type
structure on upper Main Street. It was occupied
as a drug store for many of its early years.
The building essentially retains its original
form, including the two-bay composition, but
alterations have diminished or obscured its
architectural character. The original frame
building was stuccoed over. The shallow hip
roof has been replaced by a shallow gable,
particularly incongruous and dominating
overtop the bracketed cornice. The windows
have been replaced and undoubtedly
reproportioned, and the storefront has also
been replaced. The result is a building of
unworkable proportions and indeterminate
character. The cornice is the only readily
apparent historic feature, but the building still
has historical value and contributes to the
streetscape.
Notable features: Simple bracket cornice.
Changes: North side addition, 1945.
Storefront altered, 1975. Building stuccoed,
windows replaced, and openings altered. Roof-
line altered — originally, very shallow hip roof.
July 2006: Adirondack Museum on Main store
October 1988: Roland Urfirer building
37
50. 77 (behind 2477)
(ca. 1962)
Built ca. 1960,the residence at 77 Main St. is a strongly characteristic, though not exceptional, Ranch Style structure
with low-hipped roof, stone chimney, and board and batten siding. Its integrity and condition are both good.
July 2006: Roland Urfirer Law Office
October 1988: Roland Urfirer residence on Mirror Lake
38
53. 81 (2483)
Bank of Lake Placid (1916)
The first bank building in Lake Placid, it has been continuously occupied by the Bank of Lake Placid [and its
successors]. It was designed by architect Floyd Brewster of Lake Placid in 1915, and construction was completed in 1916.
The continuation of the original use and ownership has resulted in the retention of the original banking hall space with
most of its original features, despite some interior renovations. The bank has been a mainstay commercial institution in the
community, and the architecture of the building is highly valued by the community as a whole — in short, it is a local
landmark. The design of the building — with its arches, quoins, cornice at the first floor, and Roman grillwork — is an
example of the Renaissance palazzo revival of the early 20th century, most often found in a more urban context. The only
major exterior alteration, the loss of the cornices, definitely detracts from the integrity and character of the building.
Notable features:
• Tall arched windows on sides and rear.
• Carved frieze with bank name and construction date.
• Arched entry on Main Street with oak pilasters, polished bronze doors, and Roman-style grillwork in the arched
window above, surmounted by a scroll-form keystone. (This type of window is sometimes known as Diocletian after
its source, the Baths of Diocletian.) This entry is one of the most widely recognized and appreciated architectural
features on Main Street.
• Wood canopy over side entrance.
• Interior: marble wainscoting and teller counter, original vault, marble and bronze clock over entry.
Changes: Rear addition, fall 1930. Cornices removed and replaced with aluminum, 1956.
July 2006: NBT Bank branch
October 1988: Bank of Lake Placid
41
54. 83 (2487)
St. Agnes Catholic Church #1 (1896)
This block started out as the first Catholic church in Lake Placid. Built in 1896 by John Shea, it was a traditional
church building but soon proved too small for the needs of the parish. A new wooden church was erected on Saranac
Avenue [1905]; Frank Walton purchased the old church in 1906, cut off the steeple, and established a hardware store in the
building.
Although several additions had been built onto the structure, the bulk of the original church remained until 2004; its
steep roof and upper façade, visible from the street, were clearly those of the original church. St. Agnes No. 1 was an
eclectic Victorian structure of considerable character.
Changes: Steeple removed ca. 1906. First-floor west elevation addition. Large, three-story rear (east) addition,
between 1908 and 1917. North side addition [Ben & Jerry’s].
[A small postcard/gift shop was located in little square building beneath the former steeple, but it was demolished
sometime prior to the construction of 89 Main St. next door. The building retained some features of the original church
until a reconstruction project in 2004 reshaped the building completely, albeit attractively.]
July 2006: Ben & Jerry’s ice cream; Alpine Meadow (high-end gifts, furnishings)
October 1988: Lake Placid Hardware
42
55. The evolution of 83 Main St. began in 1896, when St. Agnes Catholic Church was constructed. (Above, ca. 1900)
43
56. By 1940, 83 Main St. had become Lake Placid Hardware, sans steeple but with steeple annex still intact.
44
57. In April 2004, the outline of St. Agnes was still identifiable in the structure at 83 Main St. — but just barely.
45
58. A new owner had utterly transformed 83 Main St. by the time this photo was taken in September 2006.
46
59. 89 (2491)
Hart-Beattie Building (1980s)
Recently constructed (1980s) for
Nancy Hart Beattie. Full apartment
downstairs with lakefront. Office
upstairs used by Beattie’s father, Dr.
George Hart, for some years after his
retirement.
July 2006: Bookstore Plus
October 1988: Bookstore Plus
47
60. An early undated photograph of the Guild Block, 91-93 Main St., with the 95 Main St. house visible behind it.
48
62. 91-93 (2495)
Guild Block (1916)
This handsome building was erected by Forrest H. Guild in 1916 and was occupied by his exclusive men’s store for a
good many years. The house in the rear, on Mirror Lake, was also built by Forrest H. Guild; it was occupied by a book
shop for years.
This is one of the most architecturally elaborate — and best preserved — commercial buildings on Main Street. The
building is very much a product of its time, neoclassical in design and constructed of contemporary manufactured
materials: “patent stone,” fabricated metal cornice work, and copper storefronts. The structure is symmetrical in
composition, and each part or feature is rationally articulated. The decorative features of the building are fundamentally an
elaboration of function: quoins to knit together the corners of the building, dentils to “support” the cornice that finishes off
the top of the wall, and so forth. The building possesses a real integrity of design that enhances its already apparent
architectural value.
Notable features: “Patent stone” construction with brick façade and “stone” quoins. Substantial metal cornice with
dentils. Tripartite second-floor windows with cornices and caps. Copper storefront, stepping back from the street. Tin
ceilings on first floor in excellent condition. Multi-story wooden porch overlooking the lake.
Changes: Second storefront added and original door moved back on an angle. South (exterior) stair addition. Center
block of cornice may have been altered. Base of storefront and signboards altered.
July 2006: With Pipe and Book
October 1988: Julia’s; With Pipe and Book
50
63. 95 (18 Grace Way)
House behind the Guild Block (1915)
Built by Forrest H. Guild; completed the year before the business block. This building was originally a two-story
gable-roof structure, to which a third story was subsequently added; it appears in this photo to be a two-story house
because its first story is at lake side, below grade as viewed from the street side. It was originally both boathouse and
residence. The windows have been altered, a bay overlooking the lake removed, and the building apparently re-sided in its
entirety. The resulting structure bears some relationship in form to the original, but is nondescript in character. Currently
— and, probably, originally — a residence, the structure was occupied for many years by a book shop, a rare commercial
use of a Main Street “back” building.
July 2006: UNK
October 1988: Shehadi residence
51
65. 97 (2501)
Shea Building (built 1900), carriage house (same),
and residence (14 Grace Way; built 1908 to 1917)
The Shea Building was erected by James Shea 1900, four years after he had started the Shea’s Market business (May
12, 1896). The residence to the rear was built between 1908 & 1917. (Shea’s Market remained in the family until very late
in the 20th century.)
Notable features: Bracketed cornices at first and second floors. Early carriage barn with hipped roof and lantern.
Changes: Second story replaced after 1934 [fire] with shallower gable roof, and a two-story addition was made to the
front. Stair addition on south side, and passage addition north side. Large signboard added above first-floor cornice.
The fire of 1933: A front-page story in the Dec. 15, 1933 Lake Placid News described the fire that occurred on
Saturday night, about 11 p.m., Dec. 9. Four tenants in the upstairs apartment (Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Ormsby, Mrs. Paul
Ormsby, and a nine-month-old infant) were pulled out of the building by firefighters. The temperature that night was 12
below zero Fahrenheit. “It is believed that the ammonia refrigerating system with storage tank on the second floor fed the
flames,” read the News story. “The building is a complete loss, the entire structure being gutted.”
After the fire, while rebuilding was underway, Shea’s Market relocated to the empty A&P storefront in the Devlin
Block, 137 Main St.
The old store was reopened on May 24, 1934, according to a story in the next day’s LPN: “The new structure was
erected on the site of the old Shea’s market. … The building was partly destroyed by fire on the night of December 9 last
year. Reconstruction was started almost immediately under the direction of George Thew, local contractor.”
July 2006: The Market (gift shop)
October 1988: The Market
53
67. The residence behind 97 Main St., whose own street address is now 14 Grace Way, September 2006
55
68. 99-101 (2505-09)
Commercial (pre-1908)
Built for John Shea before 1908; now
owned by the James Shea family. Tremble
& Mooney operated a grocery store in this
building for many of the early years. This is
one of the best-preserved structures on Main
Street. The simplified Italianate building
retains its original form and all original
exterior features except the storefronts, of
which replacement has not compromised the
architectural value of the building. Both in
scale and architectural character, this
building contributes very positively to the
street.
Notable features: Bracketed cornices at first
and second floors (partly obscured by the first-
floor signs). Rear enclosed porches.
Changes: The northern one-story section
appears to be the original structure, to which
the two-story section was added. Rear
porches added. Main storefront door divided
into two entrances. Original wooden
storefronts replaced by copper-framed
windows, stucco bases.
July 2006: Bakery store; Mirror Lake
Liquor Store; Eliza Hugh
October 1988: Alpine Floral; Mirror Lake
Liquor Store; Volmrich (jeweler)
56
69. 99½ (10 Grace Way)
Carriage/boathouse (pre-1917)
The simple, two-story clapboard residence to the rear of the building at 99-101 Main St. appears to have been a
boathouse and/or carriage house with living quarters above, and still has garages on the first level. At least the eastern wing
of the building was in existence by 1917 and has not been substantially altered. The building is a simple, late Victorian
vernacular structure in good condition.
57
71. 103-105 (2511)
Masonic Building (1916)
The former Masonic Temple, completed in 1916, was designed by Lake Placid architect: Floyd Brewster, who also
designed the Bank of Lake Placid. The original cost of the building was about $30,000. The Masonic Temple rooms were
on the upper floor. The Lake Placid Post Office was in this building for 20 years, from 1916 until 1936.
One of the most architecturally significant structures on Main Street, the Masonic Building survives substantially
unaltered. Neoclassical in design, the building is symmetrical with a prominent center entrance surrounded by a stone
architrave with a “twisted” band of stone in relief and a keystone. The first-floor cornice has a frieze decorated with a wave
pattern. The central section of the upper floors is recessed behind fluted Ionic attached columns, and the window spandrels
are also decorated stone: triglyphs and metopes at the second floor, and panels with Masonic emblems and the number “1”
at the third floor. The narrower second-floor windows have stone lintels decorated with the Masonic emblem.
The surmounting attic and cornice have been altered and covered with aluminum, detracting somewhat from an
otherwise exemplary building of its era.
Notable features: Decorative stonework; prismatic glass storefront transoms.
Note: Masonic meeting rooms on second floor not available to inspection.
Changes: Original cornice removed, attic altered, 1946. Wood passageway added to north side. Minor storefront
alterations, including partial replacement of copper window frames with aluminum.
July 2006: Adirondack Trading Co.; Antiques
October 1988: Antique Center; Knit Shop
59
73. 107 (2515)
St. Eustace Parish House (1901)
Built in 1901 by the Rev. William W. Moir (d. 1902) as a Parish House for St. Eustace Episcopal Church. The Parish
Hall’s gymnasium, lecture, meeting and dance hall, bowling alleys, game rooms and boathouse provided a social center for
the young people of the village for years. The building was sold to George Stevens in 1915, who converted it for business uses.
The building is of Classical Revival design,
originally consisting of a three-bay façade with four
pilasters, entablature and full pediment with a
fanlight window. The original center entrance had a
small gable porch with columns, since replaced by
the first-floor extension. Although the original
design has been compromised by the addition and
replacement of the second-floor windows, the
building retains much of its original character and is
a notable and memorable contribution to the street.
It possesses both historical and architectural
significance.
Notable features: Largely original upper
façade with pilasters, complete pediment with
fanlight.
Changes: Second floor of façade: windows
have been replaced, and two middle pilasters
chopped off. One-story addition on the front,
bringing the first floor out to the street line,
probably ca. 1915. The storefront has since been
altered. Passage addition on north side.
July 2006: Imagination Station
October 1988: Village Emporium
61
74. 111 (2517)
(b. between 1917 and 1925)
A small, utilitarian commercial structure,
similar to the Leggo Block and others at the
north end of Main Street. These buildings (15,
17, 21 and 111) are all probably contemporary
and by the same designer or builder.
A small wooden building is shown beside the
Parish Hall (107 Main St.) in photos of 1901.
The present building at 111 Main St., built
between 1917 and 1925, may incorporate this.
No. 111, despite its modest size, contributes
111 Main St. — above, ca. 1944. Below, July 2006.
positively to this section of the streetscape by
carrying on the street wall and the variety of the
row. The storefront, especially with its lovely
ribbed glass, is a good example of commercial
fronts of its era.
Notable features: Copper-framed original
storefront with ribbed prismatic glass transoms.
Changes: Signboard panel covered with board
siding [removed since]. Entrance to side hall
infilled. Storefront door and surround altered.
July 2006: Summer Antiques
October 1988: The Summit Shop
62
75. 113 (2519)
(1917-18)
This structure was built in 1917 and 1918. The
telephone company moved its switchboard to this
building from 33 Main St. (2435 Main St.) in 1919.
The tallest of the row of historic buildings between the
Wanda and the Guild Block, this is a building of unusual
and eclectic design. Basically neoclassical, it has three
recessed brick arches on the upper stories with stucco
panels, brick circles inside the arches, and wrought-iron
balconies on the third floor. The piers of the arches have
a triangular pattern of dark brick, and the first floor has a
decorative cast-stone cornice. With its original windows
and storefront, the building must have been quite
distinctive and interesting. Now it appears muddled.
Nevertheless, it contributes positively to the streetscape
and retains much of its original architectural character.
Notable features: A portion of the original storefront
remains at the southwest corner of the building: a copper
frame and cornice with black glass base and prismatic
glass transom, with cast-stone piers at the corner of the
building. Cast-stone cornices. Wrought-iron balconies.
Wood porches on rear. Stair structure on south side,
probably original.
Changes: First-floor storefront altered. Second- and
third-floor windows replaced and partially infilled with
board siding.
July 2006: Fortunes of Time
1990: Hooty Owl (A Country Store); Lake Placid
Casuals
63
76. The Happy Hour Theater, 117-110 Main St.., in the early 1920s
64
77. 117-119 (2523)
Happy Hour Theater/Wanda Building (1912/late 1920s)
The Happy Hour Theater, Lake Placid’s first cinema house, stands as the core of the Wanda apartment building. It was
three stories high, simple, elegant, with a hipped roof, built in 1912 by Rufus Walton and Arthur Adams. The Women’s
Club had community rooms on the floor below street level.
The Happy Hour was bought by the company that built the larger, more modern Palace Theater, a few blocks up Main
Street, in 1926. The theater was closed after the Palace was opened, at which time the building was enlarged and became
the Wanda Apartments and shops. A fourth story was added, with a flat rather than a hipped roof. (Other historians have
claimed that the building was expanded to the south at this time as well, but period photographs do not bear this out.)
The architecture of the building is now plain, almost severe: brick piers at the base, large simple windows with steel
lintels, and brick facing unrelieved by any detail except a copper cornice at the first floor and a simple paneled wooden
cornice at the roof.
While architecturally plain, the building contributes positively to the street with its considerable bulk and street wall.
Notable features: Metal awning over apartment entry. Copper storefront windows and cornice, with transoms probably
extant behind the current signboards.
Changes: A fourth floor was added in the late 1920s, at which time the street façade was probably refaced to form a
unified elevation. Since then, the storefronts have been altered, probably in 1942, and the bases and transoms altered again
recently.
July 2006: 2 Harts; UNK; Newman’s News
October 1988: UNK
65
78. Alpine Mall (121-123) to 137 Main
The Alpine Mall, south of the Wanda, is a group of small businesses in a building of late construction. The date and
circumstances of its construction are unknown; it was built by 1988. LM has seen no records of what buildings stood there
before; old photos show up to the Noble Block from the south, and then northward from the Happy Hour.
The group of buildings from 137 Main (Goldberries restaurant) to the Alpine Mall has been designed or re-designed
with a pretense of “Alpine-style” architecture, so that although they maintain the wall of the street as a group, they reflect
negatively on the genuine architectural character of other sections of Main Street.
66
79. 125-127 (2533)
Noble Block (ca. 1890)
The first drug store in town was
reportedly located here, operated by
Herbert Towne. Freedom Noble, who
came to Lake Placid around 1889, worked
for Towne; by 1895, the business was
known as the “Noble Bros.” pharmacy.
The Noble Block was the first home
of the Bank of Lake Placid, May 4, 1909.
Henry van Hoevenberg set up his
Adirondack Electric shop in the basement
of the Noble Block in 1917 after parting
ways with the Lake Placid Club.
The structure at 125-127 can be seen
in a 1908 photo as a gable-roofed building
with a small extension on the north (No.
125). The north portion was enlarged after
1945, and the strange roofline of the main
building presumably reflects the original
gable roof of the 127 Main building. The
original form and detail of the building
has been completely lost due to
alterations and refacing, so that its
architectural value in its present state is nil.
Changes: Northern (one-story) section enlarged after 1945. Exterior and roofline significantly altered. The rear of the
building used to overlook Mirror Lake, but is now cut off by a wing of the Golden Arrow Motel.
July 2006: Beglin’s Jewelers
67
80. 131 (2537)
Garage De Luxe (1914-15)
The Lake Placid News of Sept. 11, 1914, said that a three-story garage was being built between the Bank of Lake
Placid and the Town Clock Livery by John McElroy and architect Max H. Westhoff of Saranac Lake. It was to be built of
concrete block and “strictly fireproof.” The property had been bought from Prime Brothers.
Completed in 1915, the Garage De Luxe had a capacity 100 cars.
In 1937, the garage was taken over by Joseph B. Williams, who also ran the garage at 90 Main St.
The original character of the brick-front Garage De Luxe building has been completely lost due to subsequent
alterations in the 1950s, as with the Noble Block next door.
July 2006: The Fallen Arch
68
81. 137 (2541)
Town Clock Livery (1903)/Devlin Block (1927)/restaurant (modern)
The Town Clock Livery, built in 1903 by Noel Feldstein, was a two-story frame building with a clock tower projecting
from the northwest corner. It burned on July 28, 1926. (In newspaper articles on a 1939 fire, mention was made that
another fire had occurred here in 1923, but no reference
to such a fire could be found in contemporary
newspapers.)
Something was built in its place the following year,
but it can’t be determined from newspaper accounts
whether it was the old Town Clock Livery building that
was rebuilt, or a new building. Two comparison photos
— one of the Town Clock Livery, the other of the new
building — are difficult to compare.
In any case, the new/rebuilt building south of the
Garage De Luxe — a two-story, flat-top roofed structure
— was called the Devlin Block after its owner, Verne
Devlin. It had upstairs apartments and commercial space
at street level. For a time, the Devlin Block housed the
“uptown” A&P grocery before providing a temporary
home to Shea’s Market in 1933 and 1934, when its own
home was being rebuilt after a December 1932 fire.
The Devlin Block itself burned in a massive fire in
January 1939.
The present restaurant building on the site of the Town Clock Livery and the Devlin Block bears no resemblance to
either of the two earlier structures.
July 2006: Goldberries restaurant (since redesigned)
March 1990: Country Kitchen restaurant
69
82. The Town Clock Livery, 137 Main St. Photo at left, date unknown. At right, detail from a colorized, panoramic photograph
70
83. 141 (unk)
Golden Arrow Motel (UNK)
This is a relatively new motel; construction date unknown.
71
84. 153 (2565)
Dr. George Hart Building (1948)
MM: Built by Dr. Samuel Volpert and completed in 1948, known to many as the Dr. George Hart building, where he
had his office in town. Now owned by Golden Arrow Motel complex. This building has architectural values.
Note: This building was significantly altered in 2007 and no longer has the appearance shown here.
July 2006: Lake Placid Clock & Watch; Lumiere Bistro; Where’d You Get That Hat
72
85. 157 (2573)
restaurant (ca. 1950)
Built by William D’Amico as a restaurant circa 1950.
July 2006: Black Bear restaurant
October 1988: Lum’s restaurant
73
86. 157½ (2575)
James D’Amico residence (1930s)
The residence behind 157 Main St. (2573 Main St.) was built ca. 1930 for James D’Amico. Although not designed in
the Shingle Style, per se, this shingled cottage has a very steep roof, upturned eaves, and an orderly shingle pattern of
alternating wide and narrow bands. The structure is not exceptional, but it is architecturally interesting and retains much of
its historic fabric and character.
Notable features: Shingle pattern at eaves and curved eave on main roof.
Changes: Rear addition, 1939. Dormers may be added. Connecting wing between house and former garage added.
74
87. 159 (2577)
Rufus Walton cottage/Northwood(s) Inn (b. between 1900 and 1908);
replaced by Favor Smith building (ca. 1960?)
The small office building now standing at this address was built by Favor Smith (ca. 1960?) on the site of “a large old
boarding house” (Mary MacKenzie). Interestingly enough, the “boarding house” was called “Northwood Inn” (singular) in
the Lake Placid News, “Northwoods Inn” (plural) in the Adirondack Daily Enterprise.
Neither name, apparently, caused anyone to confuse the small lakeshore hotel next to the Adirondack Community
Church with the larger hotel just to the north on the opposite side of Main Street which, since its opening in 1897, had been
called the Northwoods Inn. Once the Old Northwoods owner had built the new Lake Placid–Marcy, in 1927, adjacent to
the old inn, the earlier structure was referred to only as “the south wing of the Marcy.”
The (new) Northwood[s] Inn was first built sometime between 1900 and 1908 as the cottage of Rufus Walton. The
white, two-story frame house standing next to the old Methodist-Episcopal church does not appear in a panoramic photo of
the village taken in 1900 by Chester D. Moses, but it does appear in a 1912 panoramic photo by Henry M. Beach. Walton
is known to have rented the cottage to Dr. Clarence V. Bumstead in 1908.
It’s not certain when the Walton cottage was first operated as a small hotel. The first definite reference in the Lake
Placid News to the Northwood Inn dates from 1934, in Dr. Bumstead’s obituary, which says that the cottage Bumstead had
leased from Rufus Walton in 1908 was “now known as the Northwood Inn.” A December 1941 News article said that the
Northwood Inn, at Main Street and Parkside Drive,2 had been leased to William D’Amico,3 son of owner James D’Amico.4
Lake Placid newspaper briefs and ads also referred to the well-known grill — and perhaps even better-known cocktail
lounge — at the Northwood Inn.
Small classified ads in the Adirondack Daily Enterprise claimed, “The T.V. is perfect at the Northwoods Inn.”
When the “new” Northwoods Inn was demolished (sometime in the 1960s?) so that Favor Smith could have the small
building currently standing at 159 Main built, the “Northwoods Inn” moniker was once again considered available for re-
use. At some point after contractor Gregory Ruppert and corporate lawyer Barry C. Maloney bought the Marcy, in the fall
of 1986, they renamed it the Northwoods Inn.
2
Multiple help-wanted ads and liquor-license legals gave the Northwood Inn address as 159 Main St.
3
William D’Amico built a restaurant at 157 Main St. in 1950, which operates today as the Black Bear restaurant.
4
James D’Amico had built a lakeside home nearby (157½ Main St.) in the 1930s.
75
88. Rufus Walton cottage, 159 Main St., north of the Methodist Episcopal Church, from a larger 1912 photo by Henry M. Beach
76
89. 159 Main St., September 2006 — Note that this building was significantly altered in 2007-08.
77
90. 161 (2583)
[Methodist Episcopal Church (1888)]
Adirondack Community Church (1925; 1958)
The Adirondack Community Church building was designed in 1922 by architect Joseph Hudnut5 and William Distin.
The building was used by the congregation as early as 1925. The nearly completed church building (sans steeple) was
dedicated on Sept. 4, 1927.
A wooden Methodist-Episcopal church was built on this site in 1888, and appears in several of the earliest
photographs of Main Street. It was the second house of worship within the borders of what would become the village of
Lake Placid, following the Adirondack Baptist Church, built in 1882 (and since demolished).
The old wooden church was purchased by one Dura W. Jenney and, in 1923, was towed down Main Street to its
present site at 3 School Street opposite the Skating Oval. It became a restaurant, was altered considerably over the years,
and is today a nightclub.
Architect William Distin either supervised the construction of the Hudnut design for the new church, or may have
changed the design.
The tower of the church was dedicated as “The Ministers Tower” in 1935, and may not have been completed until that
date. The tower was still scaffolded during most of the construction period of the post office across the street.
The walls of the church and tower are constructed of green granite from an Au Sable Forks quarry, laid in a random
ashlar pattern. The roofs of the structure and the octagonal spire are unusual and very heavy multi-colored slate shingles of
random sizes and shapes. The building has external corner buttresses, Gothic-arched windows with limestone frames,
trefoil windows in the tower, and limestone scuppers. Both the exterior and the interior of the church are unaltered. The
interior is distinguished by Gothic-arched wood roof trusses, stained-glass windows, original chandeliers and an oak-
paneled choir. In Anglican fashion, it is conservative and somber in character.
The church possesses a strong picturesque massing, but an unusual, self-effacing siting in that it is set slightly below
street level (rather than elevated), and that the usual principal façade (the gable front) is perpendicular to, rather than
facing, the street. The churchyard is entered through a stone and iron gateway.
5
At the time Hudnut designed the Adirondack Community Church, he was professor of church architecture at Columbia University [Adirondack
Record, July 28, 1922]. In 1933, Joseph Hudnut became head of Columbia’s School of Architecture, leaving in 1935 to become the first dean of
Harvard’s Graduate School of Design.
78
91. The parish hall, known as Erdman Hall, is a brick and stucco Tudor Revival structure running perpendicular to the
west end of the church. It is apparently unaltered and barely noticeable from the street. The considerable architectural
character, the excellent state of preservation, and the surrounding garden all contribute to making this building complex
one of the most significant assets of Main Street.
Siting: The building sits a little below street level on the shore of, and visible from, Mirror Lake. It is surrounded by
lawns and gardens. The south garden and lawn provide a peaceful interlude on Main Street; they contain a monument to
Lake Placid’s World War I veterans.
The building is a highly notable structure on the street, but its prominence is diminished by its position, sitting back
from the street and away from the main traffic.
The view of this building from Main Street was greatly improved early in the summer of 2006 when the great old pine
tree standing in front of the church was removed due to infestation. The tree had been the first outdoor Christmas tree to be
decorated with electric lights in Lake Placid in the early 1920s.
Changes: A parish hall was constructed on the north in 1958.
Newspaper references:
LPN, Aug. 25, 1922 — Joseph Hudnut meets with “Adirondack Temple” committee to go over plans, which should be
finished soon.
LPN, Sept. 1, 1922 — Front-page story refers to Hudnut’s “associate, Mr. Manhart” (no first name).
LPN, Sept. 28, 1923 — Actual work started on the building this week, when building committee rejects all contractors’
bids and decides to put the building up itself. Wallace MacFarlane, of Upper Jay, was hired as construction supervisor; he
had previously built the new Lake Placid Central School. Reference made to church congregation being homeless for the
time being.
LPN, Nov. 2, 1923, page 2 — Story on the old church building’s move to School Street. Wings to be added to either
side of the front of the old building, and dormers. Upstairs, 10 bedrooms. Restaurant to seat 102 people, with on-premise
bakery. Downstairs (basement) conceived as automobile showroom.
LPN, Sept. 2, 1927 — Front-page article on church dedication ceremonies, scheduled for Sept. 4.
79
96. 161 (2583) side
World War I memorial (1929)
In a quiet little garden overlooking Mirror
Lake, on the Adirondack Community Church
grounds, stands a lovely stone monument to
the Lake Placid men who died in World War I.
The September 6, 1929 issue of the Lake
Placid News described the dedication
ceremony for this monument:
“Under Adirondack skies of smiling
September blue, 2,000 men, women and
children gathered on the plot of ground below
the Adirondack Community Church to witness
and take part in the impressive exercises
dedicating the William S. Benson memorial
cross as a gift to the Lake Placid Post of the
American Legion in honor of the memory of
the eight men from Lake Placid who gave their
lives for their country in the Great War.”
The monument was a gift of William S.
Banson, a 30-year Placid summer resident
from Passaic, N.J.
The monument was dedicated to the memory
of Mervin E. Bennett, Alfred C. Costello,
David M. Dwyer, Cecil T. Ernenwein, Albert
E. Foley, John Toohey, Edward J. Wilkins, and
Harold L. Wilkins. Inscribed above these
men’s names on the monument is the simple
legend, “Their Name Liveth for Evermore.”
84
97. 201 (2591)
Lake Placid Post Office (1936)
This first formal post office building in Lake Placid was
completed in 1936, and the staff moved in on Sept. 20. The
building is included in a National Register of Historic Places
Multiple-Resource District composed of New York state post
offices built between 1858 and 1943. It was designed by Louis
A. Simon, supervising architect for the U.S. Treasury, and
built by McDonald Construction Co., St. Louis, Missouri, Neal
A. Melick, Supervising Engineer.
The post office in Lake Placid had been located in different
commercial buildings on Main Street until the building of this
first public post office structure. In common with other federal
post offices of the period and region, this is a one-story brick
neoclassical building. Although fundamentally conservative in
design and possessing a very academic entry, this building
steps into the 1930s with a stylized and stripped-down
entablature. This consists of a frieze of very abstracted
tryglyphs and metopes, an absolutely flat attic section with
plain stone medallions, and a delightful fluted stone coping to
finish off the building.
Siting: Situated on the point of land formed by the
intersection of Main Street and Parkside Drive, adjacent to the
old firehouse and the Adirondack Community Church. This is
a significant location and building on the street; it is seen on a
frontal axis when traveling east along Main Street.
Notable features: Stone detailing. Lobby with original
marble paneling and post office boxes.
Changes: Loading docks added on south side. Windows
have been replaced with aluminum units.
85
98. 209 (unk)
Lake Placid Firehouse (1912)
Erected in 1912 as the village firehouse, the building
remained in that use until sold by the village in the 1980s
(as seen at left). It now houses a ski shop, and the signage
on the building detracts from its architectural value. The
building is a simple structure, with a modicum of brick
detailing on the front (quoins and paneled piers), that
retains its integrity. Its most distinguishing feature is the
hose tower, which is intact and visible from a considerable
distance along Main Street.
Notable feature: Siren and hose-drying tower.
Changes: One-story concrete block south addition, after
1945. Firehouse doors replaced by storefronts. Cornice
altered.
July 2006: Cunningham’s Ski Barn
October 1988: Cunningham’s Ski Barn
86
100. 213 (n/a)
Restaurant (former garage, filling station) (b. post-WW2))
At this address, there was formerly a small garage and filling station that had been converted into a restaurant, built
after 1948.
A new restaurant building (2004-05), located between the former firehouse and the Adirondack Inn, now stands on the
site.
July 2006: Torn down to make way for Nicola’s On Main and Grill 211 restaurant
October 1988: Golden Swan Chinese restaurant
215 (n/a)
Private residence (orig. early 1900s)
At this address was a private home, believed built early 1900s, which had been altered and enlarged. Like the building
to the north, it was demolished in 2004 to make way for a new pair of restaurants.
July 2006: Torn down to make way for Nicola’s On Main and Grill 211 restaurant
October 1988: Big O Donut Café
88
101. Nicola’s on Main and Grill 211, September 2006, took the place of the buildings formerly located at 213 and 215 Main St.
89
102. 217 (2625)
Adirondack Inn (post-WW2)
The Adirondack Inn, built after 1948.
90
103. 221 (unk)
restaurant (post-WW2)
A restaurant, built after 1948.
July 2006: Jack Frost’s
October 1988: Adirondack Cafe
91
104. 223 (2647)
Cobbler’s Shop (b. 1910-20)
This structure, built ca.
1910 to 1920, was originally a
two-story, L-shaped house.
Much of the original form of
the house is still evident, but
the front façade as well as the
scale of the house have been
obliterated by the shop
addition, which has no inherent
architectural value.
Changes: All but two of the
windows of the house replaced.
The house has been sided with
asbestos shingles. An addition
has been built onto the rear, a
one-story addition on the north,
and a large shop addition on
front. Dormers probably added.
July 2006: After cobbler
Salvatore Bimonte died in
early 2006, his son put the
building on the market.
October 1988: Bimonte house;
Cobbler’s Shop
92
105. 229 (2653)
Fireside Steak House (b. post-WW2)
Relatively new; built after 1948.
July 2006: Fireside Steak House
October 1988: Fireside Steak House
93
106. 233 (parking lot)
Majestic Hotel & Restaurant (b. by 1916)
Former site of the Majestic Hotel & Restaurant, operated by Goodman Kelleher. Ripley’s “Believe It or Not” featured
Kelleher on Jan. 10, 1936, as “The Cook’s Cook,” as he had been cooking his help’s breakfast every morning for 20 years.
Kelleher died in 1953.
94
109. 237 (2663)
Prime Building (b. pre-1916)
The Prime Building was built before 1916. Papaw’s Grocery moved into this building in 1916 and occupied it for
many years. An opera hall was said to have existed on the second floor, but no documentation of this use has been found.
Neither have any early photographs been found to indicate the original architecture of the building. The exterior of the
building has been completely altered in recent years so that the original character is no longer apparent.
Note: The Prime and Berg buildings (adjacent to the south) stand on the site of a very early double building which
appears on a 1903 map of Main Street.
July 2006: Hockey Plus; Hunan Oshaka Japanese restaurant
October 1988: Woodshed Restaurant
97
110. 239-241 (2665)
Berg Building (1926)
The Berg Building, built in 1926 for
Louis Berg, is the only commercial
building on this block of Main Street that
has not been drastically altered. Its historic
character stands out from its neighbors and
contributes positively to the street. The
disproportionate height of this small
structure gives it a strong presence despite
its size. The façade is unusual in its
eclecticism and in that the entire second-
floor fenestration consists of a single-bay
window. The detailing is very conservative
for a commercial structure of this date, but
gives the building notable character and
visual interest.
Notable features: Second-floor bay
window with fanlight above. Virtually
complete original wood storefront.
Changes: Rear section probably added.
July 2006: Tradewind gifts, ammo
October 1998: Conway building;
Tradewinds
98
111. 243 (2669)
(late 1920s, early 1930s)
This was originally a one-story commercial building similar in design to several structures on upper Main Street that
were built around 1920 (No.s 9-11, 15, 17-19, 21, 111, and possibly 55-57 and 71-73). The storefront has brick piers (now
hidden) with a simple cornice, and recessed brick panels above in what would have been the parapet wall.
Although the original storefront might be retrieved, the second-story addition is completely at odds (in form, scale,
materials and detail) with the historic character of the building. Therefore, the architectural importance of the building
today is debatable; likewise, its contribution to the streetscape.
Changes: An entire second floor has been added, ca. 1987. Storefront completely altered. North elevation stuccoed.
July 2006: Terry Robard’s Wine & Spirits
October 1988: Bertrand’s Wine & Spirits
99
112. 245 (2673)
Weeks Store (pre-1915)
This building was erected in the early 1900s. A “school and candy” store owned by the Weeks family, fondly
remembered by old-timers, moved into this building around 1915. No early photographs of the building have been found,
and the alterations of later years have made the original architectural character indiscernible.
Changes: Roof altered, building completely resided, at least some windows altered.
July 2006: Aniello’s Pasta & Pizza
October 1988: “Cure the Blues” restaurant
100
113. 249 (2679)
Central Garage (1978)
The old filling station on this site was torn down in 1978 to make way for the building that stands here now.
101
114. 301 (2693)
North Elba Town Hall (built 1903; burned 1915; rebuilt 1916)
The first formal Town Hall was completed on this site in 1903. It was called “The Tin Playhouse” for two reasons:
because it was sheathed in tin (a fact that greatly contributed to its demise), and because the “Opera House” theatrical
space was located in one of its upper floors. The 1903 building burned down in 1915.
The present replacement building was completed in June 1916, designed by architect Floyd Brewster of Lake Placid.
This building is a straightforward neoclassical design with six brick pilasters sitting on a basement story and surmounted
by a full entablature. A second, matching façade facing Mirror Lake Drive is of matching design. The building is
deliberately monumental, a character enhanced by the tower.
The offices of the local staff for the 1932 Olympic Winter Games were housed here.
The interior was completely gutted in 1977-78 and rebuilt to serve again as offices for the 1980 Olympic Winter
Games. Other changes included replacement of windows and spandrel panels with aluminum units, alteration of the front
entrance, addition of a porch, and removal of the front stairs. The result is a modern, efficient building with the outside
intact and maintaining its period values.
A new dome and clock tower, in character with the existing architecture, replaced the old, deteriorated dome in 1986.
Despite the replacement of the windows, the building substantially retains its original architectural integrity (on the
exterior). It is important, then, on several fronts: historical, architectural, urban and cultural.
Siting: On the southeast corner of Main Street and Mirror Lake Drive, overlooking the Sheffield Speed Skating Oval,
the North Elba Town Hall is one of three major public structures (along with the Oval and the High School across the
street) on this section of Main Street. It is a highly prominent structure on the street.
Notable features: Clock tower, massive metal cornices with dentils, and compatible neoclassical entry porch.
102