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The former location of Wells Street is shown in red.

Wells Street is a street that is no longer extant in Downtown Buffalo.  It formerly ran for two blocks between Exchange and Seneca Street.  The former location of Wells Street is now hidden underneath the Elm Street exit ramps from the I-190.  Wells Street was once an important business center in Buffalo, serving both visitors and industry due to its location close to the railroads.

Many often believe that Wells Street is named after Henry Wells.  Henry Wells helped found Wells Fargo alongside William Fargo.  Henry Wells lived in Auhoorora in Cayuga County, New York.  Wells College is named for Henry Wells.  However, Wells Street here in Buffalo is named after Chandler J. Wells.  I could not find any relationship between Henry and Chandler, though they may be related many generations back.

The Early Life of Chandler Wells

The Buffalo Wells family – Joseph Wells and his wife Prudence – came to Buffalo around 1797 from Rhode Island.  There wasn’t much happening here in Buffalo, so they settled in Brantford, Ontario, where Prudence’s sister lived.  They came back to Buffalo around 1802.  Joseph and Prudence had their first son, Aldrich, in 1802 after returning to Buffalo.  Some reports say that Aldrich Wells was the first white male born in Buffalo, but there are several disputed claims to that title.  Joseph and Prudence had eleven children – six sons and five daughters.  Their seventh child, Chandler, is the namesake of the street.

Chandler_J_WellsChandler Joseph Wells was born in Utica, New York, in June 1814.  The Wells family had fled to Utica after the Burning of Buffalo on December 30, 1813.  During the War of 1812, Joseph Wells served as a Captain and later a Major in the militia.  Shortly after Chandler’s birth, the Wells family returned to Buffalo with baby Chandler.  The Wells family lived at 150 Swan Street.  In 1815, Joseph Wells built a tannery on Main Street near Allen Street, where he also operated a farm and made bricks.

Chandler attended private schools when he was young.  At age 17, Chandler became a joiner’s apprentice, finding employment with Benjamin Rathbun.  He later worked for John Drew, who saw potential in Mr. Wells and put him in charge of constructing a building at Pearl and Tupper Streets.

In 1835, Mr. Wells partnered with William Hart as contractors and builders.  The partnership lasted for twenty years, and they were very successful.  At one time, they owned three sawmills and built many buildings around Western New York.  Among their buildings were the State Arsenal on Broadway, built in 1857, and the Dart Mansion at Niagara and Georgia Streets.

Grain Elevator Entrepreuneur

In 1857, Mr. Wells became interested in grain elevators.  His brother William was an elevator foreman.  Mr. Wells felt he could improve Joseph Dart’s elevator design.  The Wells Elevator was built in 1857-1858 and had a storage capacity of 100,000 bushels, double that of the Dart Elevator.  It could transfer nearly six times the amount of grain in an hour.  The elevator, known as the Wells Elevator (later became the Wheeler Elevator in 1884 and was replaced by the concrete Wheeler Elevator, constructed in 1909 and now part of Buffalo Riverworks), was located across the river from the New York Central Railroad freight house on Ohio Street.

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C.J. Wells Elevator, between Ohio and Indiana Streets…now the location of the DL&W Terminal. Source: Buffalo and Erie County Public Library.

In August 1860, Chandler Wells leased what was known as Coburn Square, located at Buffalo Creek, Ohio (now South Park Ave) and Indiana Streets.  He built the Coburn Elevator here.  It was destroyed by fire in 1863.  In September 1860, he built the CJ Wells Elevator to replace the Coburn Elevator on the site with some additional property he purchased.  The CJ Wells Elevator was built with stone, brick and lumber.  It was designed to be a model elevator of its day.  It had a capacity of 350,000 bushels and could elevate 8,000 bushels an hour.  The CJ Wells elevator burned down in 1912, and the DL&W Railroad Station was constructed on the site in 1917 (now the location of the NFTA Shops/Rail Yard).

Political Career of Chandler Wells

In 1854, Mr. Wells was elected Alderman for the 2nd Ward.  He was continuously elected for seven years.  In 1861, Wells was the unanimous Union Republican candidate for Mayor.  He was defeated by William Fargo, 6,431 to 5,986 votes.  In 1865, he was again named the Union Republican candidate, running again against William Fargo, who was looking to win his third term as mayor.  On November 7, 1865, Mr. Wells defeated Mr. Fargo 5,570 to 5,348.  On election night, a group of his supporters went to Mr. Wells’ Swan Street home and saluted him with a small cannon.

Mayor Wells was mayor during the Fenian Uprising in 1866.  Thousands of Fenians gathered in Buffalo, planning to enter Canada and destroy the Welland Canal, which would have crippled the Canadian trade.  Mayor Wells kept the mayors of Hamilton and Toronto informed of the movements of the Fenians.  General Grant arrived on the Battleship Michigan to guard the Niagara River.  The situation lasted for about a week.

In September 1866, General Ulysses S Grant, President Andrew Johnson and other dignitaries were guests at Mayor Wells’ home.  Mayor Wells did not seek a second term in office, deciding instead to retire.  Following his retirement, Mayor Wells served as commissioner of the first Board of Water Commissioners and held the position for six years.  During his time on the Board, the inlet pier and tunnel were built for Buffalo Water Works.  Many people at the time opposed the plan for the waterworks, thinking it impractical.  Mayor Wells threw his time and money into the project and worked hard to get the water system built.  The City later saw the value in the water inlet, and Mr. Wells was reimbursed for his expenses.  He is sometimes referred to as “the father of the waterworks.”

Chandler Wells also served as a founder and director of the Erie County Savings Bank, the Young Men’s Association, the Buffalo Historical Society, the Falconwood and Beaver Island Clubs, and the Buffalo Club.  Mayor Wells was also fond of horses.  He helped found the Buffalo Driving Park, one of the first organizations of its kind (horse-driving, not car-driving, FYI), and served as President for 15 years.  Mr. Wells was a founding member of the Board of the Buffalo Juvenile Asylum in 1856.  In 1862, Mr. Wells helped organize the Buffalo Academy of Fine Arts (now the AKG Museum).

The Wells Family

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Portrait of Elizabeth Wells, daughter of Chandler. Source: Buffalo Times.

Mr. Wells married Susan Wheeler in April 1837.   The Wells had two children.  The first, Theodore, died after just six weeks in 1838.  The second child, daughter Elizabeth, died of Cholera in 1854 at age 16.  Her death was one of the reasons Chandler Wells cared so deeply about clean water and invested in the waterworks.  After the death of their daughter, Susan and Chandler’s niece, Lucy Ann Wells, lived with them.  Lucy was the daughter of Chandler’s brother, John.  Lucy got married in 1847 to Merrit W Green.  Lucy and Merrit had two daughters – Jeannie and Elizabeth.  Jeannie and Elizabeth were Chandler and Susan’s grand-nieces, but they were eventually adopted by Chandler and Susan when their parents moved to Michigan.  Jeannie and Elizabeth took the Wells name and were treated as a part of the Wells family.

In 1858, the Wells family built a red brick house at 77 Swan Street (near Oak Street).  At the time, Swan Street was the fashionable neighborhood of Buffalo, but eventually, the street changed to a business district; many families began to move to places like Delaware Avenue.  In the 1860s, the Wells Family built a house at 685 Main Street.  The house on Main Street is now the location of Town Ballroom.  In 1860, the family lived with servants Mary Ann Higgins, a 12-year-old girl, and Fanny Castillo, a 20-year-old woman who worked as a cook.  In 1870, Fanny was still working for the family as a cook, along with Eliza Killian, a 21-year-old domestic servant.   In 1880, Fanny was still working for the family, along with 30-year-old Margaret O’Brien.

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Chandler Wells House on Swan Street. Source: Buffalo Times.

 

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Chandler Wells House on Main Street near Tupper. Source: Buffalo Times.

 

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Mayor Wells Grave in Forest Lawn.

Mayor Wells died on February 4, 1887, after suffering from rheumatism of the heart for more than 13 weeks.  His obituary in the Buffalo News called him “a man of quick perceptions, rare judgment and unflinching integrity, with energy and perseverance far beyond the average; a bluff and outspoken manner to strangers, behind which, however, lay a heart good humor and a kindly generous heart.”  He is buried in Forest Lawn Cemetery.  Mrs. Wells died in October 1892.  The house at 685 Main Street was sold in February 1893 to the “Business Mens Investment Association.”  The house was rented out to Dr. L. E. DeCouriander and became the Buffalo Sanitorium/Invalids’ Hotel.  The former house site is now the location of Town Ballroom.

The Great Wells Street Fire of 1889

In 1889, Wells Street was the scene of a large fire.  The fire was reported as having “no parallel in the history of the Queen City of the Lakes,” measured in magnitude by the area of the burned district, by monetary loss, and by difficulty in slowing the flames.  Newspapers reported that the only fire worse was when all of Buffalo was burned to the ground during the War of 1812.  The 1889 fire affected Wells Street, Seneca Street, Carroll Street and Exchange Street.  This area was a major business center for Buffalo at the time.  Due to its location close to the railroad stations, it was a location for several well-known hotels and lodging facilities, as well as industry that used the rail, since it was close to the depots.

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Sketch of the Wells Street Fire after Burning for more than 12 hours

The fire broke out at 2:45am on February 2nd, 1889.  A night watchman saw flames on the fourth floor of the Root & Keating Building and sounded the alarm.  The wind quickly spread the fire to the surrounding buildings.  The flames were so high they could reportedly be seen as far away as North Street.  Strong winds helped the fire to spread quickly and caused a great deal of destruction.  The fire did an estimated $2.0 to $3.0 Million in damage ($68 Million to $102 Million in today’s dollars).

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Postcard of Hotel Broezel located at the northeast corner of Wells and Carroll Streets

Guests at the Broezel House and the Arlington, two of the city’s better-known hotels, were able to escape just moments before the hotels went up in flames.  Within an hour, all of Wells Street was a mass of flaming ruins.

Forty buildings were damaged by the fire, with many destroyed entirely.  The tallest of the burned structures was the seven-story Hoffeld Building on Carroll Street.  Most of the buildings in the area were 4 to 5 stories tall.  Major Buildings/Businesses that burned included Zingsheim & Wile Clothing, Hoffeld & Co Soap and Leather, Moffatt & Bros Shoe Factory, Goldstein Boots & Shoes, A.T. Herr & Co Liquors, SS Jewett & Co Stoves and Ranges, Swift & Stantback Stoves and Tinwares, Reynolds Boots and Shoes, Campbell Hats and Caps, Sibley & Holmwood Candy Factory, Root & Keating Leather, Dentsch & Schauroth Boots and Shoes Factory, Schantz Button Factory, Hoffeld & Co Leather Belting, Anderson Harness Company, Zimmerman Saloon and Boarding House, Sheehan, French & McCarthy Saloon & Restaurant, Byers Saloon, Arlington Hotel, Grant Coffee & Spice Mill, American Express Supply Department, Broezel House Saloon and Boarding House, Egan Liquors, Ruslander Clothing, Fowler & Son Carriage and Woodwork, Churchill & Sons Groceries, Robertson Hats and Caps, Hearne Confectionary, Deuther Picture Frame Manufacturing Company, Donaldsons Stoves, S. Cohen Hats & Caps, Barmon Dry Goods and Millinery, Pinkel Dye Works, Wechter Furnishings, Brown Fancy Goods and MIllinery, Spencer & Co Tailor and the Wells Street Chapel.

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Map of the Burned District of destroyed buildings after the Wells Street Fire. Source: Buffalo Express.

 

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Modern view of the burned district and Wells Street, both shown in red.

News of the fire was reported in newspapers across the country.  The fire began to be referred to as “the Great Wells Street Fire” or “the Great Seneca Street Fire.”  At least 20 people were injured during the fire – mostly firemen.  One fireman, Richard Marion, was trapped under fallen bricks in the Hotel Arlington when it collapsed and lost his life during the fire.  It took six hours to dig his body out of the debris.  Miraculously, no one else was killed.  Fire Chief Fred Hornung’s arm was nearly severed by a falling plate glass window.  It was estimated that 1,000 people were put out of work by the fire.  It took several weeks to clear the debris and reopen Wells Street after the fire.  Some businesses rebuilt, and some decided not to.  Hotel Broezel was rebuilt; the Hotel Arlington was not.  By August, the Buffalo News reported that the Seneca Street Burnt District was “building up better than ever.”  The Buffalo Sunday Morning News reported the day after the fire, “One beauty about Buffalo’s fires is this: there is a phoenix goes with every one of them.”

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View after the fire, Feb 10, 1889. Source: Buffalo Courier Express.

The Buffalo Fire Department referred to the Fire Alarm Box 29 at Wells and Seneca Street as the “Hoodoo Box” because it was believed to be cursed.  Several fires broke out in the area besides the Great Wells Street Fire of 1889.  In 1874, Fireman John D Mitchell was crushed to death by falling bricks at the Red Jacket Hotel fire.  In 1880, a fire occurred at the furniture factory on Carroll Street at Wells. In January 1907, a fire started at the 8-story brick Seneca Building at 103-107 Seneca Street.  Originally built as a hotel, the building had been converted into offices and a pawnshop. While fighting the fire, a collapsing wall trapped more than 20 firemen.  It took hours to rescue them.  Three firemen died – Lt William J. Naughton, Stephen E. Meegan and John R. Henky.  Another fire in 1913 at Box 29 sent two firemen to the hospital with smoke inhalation.  After so many fires at Box 29, the National Board of Fire Underwriters and insurance companies looked into the reason for so many fires in the area.  They concluded the fires were only coincidental that their location was so prevalent, determining it was due to the many factories and hazards in the area.

The area around Exchange, Wells, and Carroll Streets began to decline significantly once the NY Central Station on Exchange Street closed in 1929.  Exchange Street, once one of the most important thoroughfares, lost most of its businesses and became a ghost town after the railroad moved to Central Terminal in the Broadway Fillmore neighborhood.  Despite so many changes to the area by urban renewal projects, the “hoodoo” firebox 29 is still on Seneca Street and can be seen near where the intersection of Wells would have been.  

In 1978, Wells Street was acquired by the State of New York for the construction of the Elm Oak Arterial Highway.  Wells Street disappeared from Buffalo.  The next time you head downtown via Elm Street, you’ll be driving right over where Wells Street once was located.  When you take that ramp, think of Chandler Wells and be thankful that he fought for our water system and gave us clean drinking water.  And remember the commercial district that once existed there, wiped away by fire, urban renewal, and time.

I’ve scheduled some tours for this summer.  You can view the dates at this link: buffalostreets.com/2024/06/27/free-downtown-history-walking-tours-2/

Want to learn about other streets? Check out the Street Index. Don’t forget to subscribe to the page to be notified when new posts are made. You can do so by entering your email address in the box on the upper right-hand side of the home page. You can also follow the blog on Facebook. If you enjoy the blog, please share it with your friends; It really does help!

Sources:

  • Smith, H. Katherine.  “Wells Street a Mayor’s Memorial.”  Buffalo Courier Express.  January 15, 1939, p12.
  • “Buffalo Juvenile Asylum- Meeting Last Evening.”  Buffalo Daily Dispatch.  December 27, 1856, p2.
  • “Married”.  Buffalo Daily Commercial.  April 21, 1837, p2.
  • “Chandler J. Wells:  A Useful Life Ended.”  Buffalo News.  February 4, 1887, p1.
  • “Death of Chandler J. Wells.”  Buffalo Times.  February 4, 1887, p1.
  • Sheldon, Grace Carew.  “Wells Earned Title of Reconstruction Mayor by his Deeds in Office.”  Buffalo Times.  October 5, 1919, p50.
  • Burr, Kate.  “The Mansion that Housed a President.”  Buffalo Times.  June 27, 1926, p14.
  • “Unequaled:  A Great Business Center Burned.”  Buffalo Weekly Express.  February 7, 1889, p1.
  • Ditzel, Paul.  “The Hoodoo Box”.  Buffalo News.  May 15, 1983, p195.
  • “Notice of Appropriation of Property”.  Buffalo News.  June 14, 1978, p67.
  • “Buffalo Has A Big Fire.”  The New York Times.  February 3, 1889, p1.
  • “Extra! Fire! The Worst Buffalo Has Ever Had.”  Buffalo News.  February 2, 1889, p1.
  • “Beginning to Clear Up.”  Buffalo Courier Express.  February 12, 1889, p5.
  • “Well It Was Done.”  Buffalo Commercial.  February 21, 1889, p3.
  • “Where the Ruins Were.”  Buffalo News.  August 13, 1889, p10.
  • “Wells Residence Sold.”  Buffalo News.  February 24, 1893, p13.

Read Full Post »

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Map showing Hersee Alley in Red.

Hersee Alley is an alley that runs between Ellicott Street and Oak Street in Downtown Buffalo.  It was originally Koons Alley until March 1886, when it was renamed.  One of the reasons the street was changed was because there was confusion between Koons Alley and Koons Avenue.  Hersee Alley is named for a business that was located on Ellicott Street adjacent to the alley, Hersee Furniture Company, which was in business for nearly 100 years.

Thompson Hersee was born in Arundel, Sussex, England, on May 13, 1814.  He came to Buffalo in 1834 and engaged in the furniture trade.  Hersee & Co. was established in 1836.  Mr. Hersee was in business for a few years with Benjamin Timmerman, and the company became known as Hersee & Timmerman, but most people reportedly still called it Hersee & Co. during those years.  Mr. Timmerman left the firm in 1866 and the firm name became Hersee & Co once again.  Mr. Hersee’s stores were at 307-309 Main Street for several years.  Main Street has been renumbered; Mr. Hersee’s store was midway between Eagle and Clinton Streets.  The site of his store was later replaced with the J.N. Adam Department Store and then AM&As, which many of you may remember.

Hersee & Co. was known as a business that provided quality, quantity, service, and value.  Thompson Hersee felt that a business should never charge more than an article was worth and refused to mark prices up for some and down for others, a common business practice.

Hersee & Co. was well known throughout Western New York and Northern Pennsylvania but also sold across the country.  Following the Gold Rush in California, they’d send furniture destined for California office buildings around “the Horn” (of South America) by steamship.  They also had vessels that sailed the Mississippi River to deliver chairs and desks made by the Hersee factory.    The firm furnished many homes over the more than three generations they were in business.  They made much of their own furniture at their factory in Buffalo but also dealt with some of the best-known furniture makers in Grand Rapids and other manufacturing centers.

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Ad for the sale of 25 Linwood Avenue. Source: Courier Express, April 1902

Mr. Hersee married Annette C. Moses from Attica in September of 1844.  They had six children – Thompson Jr, William, Orton, Walter, Carrie, and Porter (who was called Benny).  The Hersees lived at 371 Washington Street, at the corner of Eagle Street.  They attended Trinity Episcopal Church.  The family later moved to 25 Linwood Avenue.  They then attended the Church of the Ascension on North Street, practically across the street from their house.

Sadly, many of the Hersee children died young.  Son Orton died in 1859 at the age of 9. Son Benny also died in 1859, one day after Orton.  Benny was just one year old.  Orton and Benny’s death notices were published together in the newspaper. The fact that the two boys died so close to each other, I wonder if they died from an illness.  Son Water died tragically at the age of 11 when he was playing on the steps of Trinity Church in 1863.  He tried to jump over the iron fence but slipped and fell onto the fence, which pierced his stomach.  Son Thompson Jr. died in 1875 at the age of 30 of rheumatism.  Son William died in 1891 at the age of 43 of congestion of the brain.

In 1849, Mr. Hersee was nominated by the Democratic Party for Mayor but lost to Henry K. Smith.

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Sherwood Mansion at 652 Main Street, Downtown Buffalo. Source: Picture Book of Earlier Buffalo

Hersee & Co. built a mill on Elm Street.  In 1870, they built a large showroom in what was then the old Sherwood Home at 652 Main Street.  We discussed this house a bit in our last post.  Hersee & Co took over the mansion and decorated the various rooms to showcase furniture – i.e., the parlor, chamber, dining room, and library were all set up as such to show examples of how people could furnish their own homes.  You could view things in the showroom, and then you could make a purchase from the store, just a few blocks away down Main Street.  This was modeled after the example of Mr. Chickering in New York City, who did something similar with a large private dwelling on 14th Street.  They also had a large upholstery department and also manufactured and finished interior fittings such as mantels, doors, wainscotings, etc.  The Sherwood house was a great place for Hersee & Co to do this, as there were 34 rooms in total in the house!

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Hersee Factory on Ellicott Street.  Source:  Buffalo & Erie County Public Library Scrapbook.

In 1872, son William Hersee took over management of the company.  The company closed the Showroom and the store on Main Street company moved to 303-311 Ellicott Street, along what would become Hersee Alley fourteen years later.  The new store included six stories of sales floor and warehouse space.  The company had a staff of 100 skilled cabinetmakers.  The factory was situated between Ellicott Street and Blossom Street, just south of what became Hersee Alley.

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1899 Sanborn Map showing the location of Hersee & Co furniture factory.

The 652 Main Street property remained in the Hersee Family’s hands after the showroom closed.  They turned the Sherwood house into a hotel called the Hersee House.  At the time, the City lacked hotel accommodations, particularly in this part of town.  Mr. Hersee also purchased land on the south and north side of the house.  He worked with Cyrus K. Porter, a well-known architect, to prepare plans for a larger hotel that would incorporate the Sherwood house into its design.  The Sherwood House would form the middle of the structure, with wings on either side, connected to the house via hallways.  The plan was for the Hersee Hotel to have 150 rooms.  Instead of building the larger hotel, the Hersee family turned the house into a boarding house.  The house was referred to as The Sherwood and also as Hersee House.

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Hersee Family Plot at Forest Lawn. Photo by Author.

Mr. Thompson Hersee died on December 1, 1884.  He died on the same day as Cyrenius Bristol of Bristol Sarsaparilla fame! Thompson Hersee is buried in the Hersee family plot in Forest Lawn Cemetery, which is the eternal home of 18 members of the Hersee family.

Son William ran the Hersee business following Thompson’s death, along with his mother Annette.  Annette Hersee also managed the Hersee’s large real estate portfolio.  They owned several properties around Symphony Circle, including the lands where St. John and Orton Places.  Annette Hersee established the grading and paving of those two streets in April 1885.  I have no documentation, but I surmise that Orton Place may have been named for Orton Hersee, who was the first of the children to die.  Annette also managed the estate of Harry Hersee, her brother-in-law, after he died in 1898.

In 1888, William and Annette Hersee submitted a bid to the US Government to build a new post office on the 652 Main Street site.  There were 11 bids received.  Interestingly, none of the sites were selected for the post office building.  The Post Office ended up being built at the corner of Ellicott and South Division Streets in 1897.  The building still stands today and is home to Erie Community College.

Daughter Carrie was the only of the Hersee children to grow old.  Carrie married George Coit in 1877. George Coit was hired and rose up in the ranks at Hersee & Co., becoming Managing Partner and Director of the firm’s business policy in 1887. Carrie and George lived at 33 Linwood, next door to the Hersee home.  George Coit was the third generation of Coits in Buffalo; his grandfather was also George Coit, the one who built the Coit House, which still stands on Virginia Street and is generally believed to be the oldest house still standing in Buffalo.  Coit Street is named after the Grandpa George Coit.

When William Hersee died in 1891, Annette took over the Hersee & Co. business, with George Coit as managing partner of Hersee & Co.  Annette C. Hersee passed away on June 10, 1901.  The newspaper listed the hymns sung at her funeral at the Church of the Ascension as “Lead Kindly Light,” “Abide With Me,” and “Hark, Hark, My Soul.”

When Annette died, the entirety of the estate went to her daughter, Carrie Coit, the last remaining Hersee child.  The estate of Mrs. Hersee was estimated to be around $800,000 (about $28.6 Million in 2023 dollars).  The estate also included some of the best real estate in Buffalo, including the family home on Linwood, the Hersee factory on Ellicott Street, the property on Main Street above Chippewa Street, a building at Chippewa and Main Streets, and other properties.

A cousin of Carrie Hersee Coit, Stanford Whiting, tried to claim that he was supposed to be left a part of the estate since he had lived with the Hersees for several years as a child.  He sued for $200,000 (about $7 Million in 2023 dollars) of the estate.  He lost his fight in April 1904 when the jury voted against his claim for 1/3 of the estate.  Carrie Coit became the sole inheritor of the Hersee estate.  She and George ran the Hersee & Co. business.

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Hersee Building on Main Street.  Photo by author.

In 1902, Carrie and George decided to build a commercial structure on the property where the Sherwood Mansion stood.  The building was designed by Lansing & Beierl and took up the site of two former houses – the Sherwood Mansion and another house.  When it opened, the building was known as the Hersee Building and consisted of 8 storefronts on the first floor and offices on the second floor.  At the time, there was a trend of businesses locating in this portion of “uptown” from the city’s original business district, on Lower Main Street.  Division Street was named such because it divided the business and residential districts.  Around the turn of the century, many other residential properties in what we now call the Theater District were converted into commercial sites – such as the Spaulding Building and the Sidway Building.  The Hersee Building is still standing at 646-662 Main Street.

In 1924, the Hersee Building was leased to Shea’s Amusement Company for 60 years at a cost of about $5,000,000 (about $90 Million in 2023 dollars).    Michael Shea, head of Shea’s Amusement Company, constructed his theater with the lobby at 646-648 Main Street, just south of the Hersee Building.  The Shea’s Theater wraps around the west side of the Hersee Building along the Pearl Street frontage on what was the Hersee property.  Shea’s Buffalo opened in January 1926.

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Location of Hersee Building and Shea’s between Main and Pearl Streets. Hersee Building is outlined in red, and Shea’s is outlined in Blue.

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Interior of Laub’s Old Spain, located in the Hersee Building, as it looked in April 1936. Source: Buffalo Courier Express.

The Hersee building was the long-time home to Laube’s Old Spain restaurant beginning in 1928.  After leasing the Hersee Building in 1924, the building was eventually purchased by Shea Operating Corporation in July 1931.  The upper floor was occupied by the Hippodrome Billiard Academy beginning in 1931.  The City of Buffalo obtained the building through tax foreclosure in 1975, the same year that Shea’s closed.  In 1976, many of the interior fixtures, including leaded and stained glass windows, wrought iron, mirrors, and woodwork, were stolen during a robbery.  After Laub’s closed in 1968, two other restaurants tried to locate in the building but failed and went out of business.

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Hersee Building on Main Street 1988. Source: NYS SHPO.

In 1985, the Herseee building was purchased by George Smilanich, owner of George & Co.  The building was partially renovated by Mr. Smilanich and partly by the Swiss Chalet restaurant.  Swiss Chalet was located across the street at 643 Main Street, but their structure was destroyed by a fire in May 1984. Swiss Chalet is a Canadian chain mostly known for its rotisserie chicken.  George & Co. originally began in Buffalo as Buffalo Novelty Bazaar in 1901.  George & Co. was looking for a new space because their space across the street at 615 Main Street was being taken by the City of Buffalo for the Days Inn and Market Arcade Movie Theater project.  George & Co. and Swiss Chalet were located on the first floor of the Hersee Building.  George & Co.’s dice and poker chip manufacturing operation was located on the second floor of the building.

In 2002, George & Co. separated the business and manufacturing sides of the business.  The manufacturing moved to Florida.  George & Co. is in its fourth generation of operation and still operates as “Buffalo’s most unusual store” in Transit Town Plaza at Main and Transit(Note from Angela:  I went to elementary school with a member of the family that runs the store…if you see this, Hi Jill!)  Swiss Chalet left downtown in 1996 and closed all of the WNY restaurants in 2010.  You can still find them in Canada and can often find me there, feasting on rotisserie chicken.

The Hersee Building was purchased by Shea’s O’Connell Preservation Guild LTD in 2000.  They currently use the building for their box office, Shea’s Smith Theatre, and Shea’s Bistro & Bar.   Shea’s Smith Theatre has operated since 2000 and is a 200-seat black box theater.

Back to the Hersee furniture business – After George Coit died in 1920, the Hersee & Co. firm was managed by Carrie Hersee Coit and her son Thompson Hersee Coit.

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Hersee Ad from January 1924.  Source:  Buffalo Courier Express.

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Carrie and George Coit’s graves.  Photo by author.

Carrie Hersee Coit died in 1930.  Carrie’s estate was valued at $1,000,000 (about $18 Million in today’s dollars) and was to be evenly divided between her six children.  The heirs decided to sell several of the properties and close Hersee & Co. to settle the estate.  This is also when the Hersee Building was sold to Michael Shea.  The Hersee heirs listed the Hersee & Co. property for sale in November 1930.  They had a sizeable going-out-of-business sale.  After 94 years in business in Buffalo, Hersee & Co. closed in January 1931.

Fun fact:  Downtown Buffalo used to be home to many furniture companies.  Today, the only remaining furniture business is Scherer Furniture, which actually got its start with Hersee Furniture.  Frederick Scherer began working with Hersee & Co. in the 1890s.  On April 7, 1897, he established his own firm at 156 Genesee Street.  He did business at that site until 1937 when he bought the present location of Scherer Furniture at 124 E Genesee Street.  Scherer is currently run by the fourth generation of the Scherer family.

The Hersee & Co. building on Ellicott Street was demolished in 1932 by the Liberty Housewrecking Company.  Many of the building materials from the building were salvaged to be resold by the Liberty Housewrecking Company at their site at the corner of Seneca and Oneida Streets.

Hersee___Co_before_demolition

Hersee Co. on Ellicott Street before demolition.  Source:  Buffalo Times.

A parking lot was established at 303 Ellicott Street in 1933 by James A Watt and Hector MacDonald.  They developed three parking lots in the Ellicott and Oak Streets area.  The lot was later operated by Gusto Mattioli and then his wife, Mary Mattioli.  In 1951, the site was looked at as a possible location for a parking ramp.  The ramp ended up being constructed across Ellicott Street, which is still the site of the Mohawk Ramp today.  The parking lot has been owned since 1968 by Ferguson Electric, which operates its business out of the buildings north of the parking lot.

1702258885068-8cc124fb-0c1f-430c-9a8b-6f07c1b6e5b2_

The only known picture of the Hersee Family’s Main Street Orchard.  The orchard is where Holy Trinity is now. Source: Holy Trinity.

What happened to the Hersee Estate on Linwood?  The Main Street portion of their property was formerly their orchard.  The orchard was a popular place for the Hersees to host parties.  The orchard portion of the property was sold to Holy Trinity Lutheran Church in 1899, which opened its “new” church on the site in April 1905(note from Angela:  this is my church).  Holy Trinity Church was designed by Lansing & Beierl, the same architects who designed the Hersee Building on Main Street.

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Holy Trinity, located at 1080 Main Street, the former location of the Hersee family’s orchard.  Photo by Author

1899Sanborn

The 1899 Sanborn Map shows Hersee Property outlined in red, with the houses along Linwood.  The orchard was located along Main Street.

1951Sanborn

1951 Sanborn Map with the former Hersee Property outlined in red.  Note Holy Trinity Church along Main Street and the two houses still standing along Linwood Avenue.

The Hersee Family house at 25 Linwood was sold in 1911.  The house stood until the early 1960s. The Coit family heirs converted Carrie and George Coit’s house at 33 Linwood into a rooming house.  The 33 Linwood House was purchased by Holy Trinity in 1946.  The house was used as a parish house and as a meeting space for various groups.  I have been trying to find pictures of the house, but I have not yet been able to.  I have contacted a former resident of the house and one of the Hersee-Coit descendants.  If I can find a picture, I will add it to the post and share it on Facebook.  I was, however, able to talk with a long-time member of Holy Trinity, David Hehr, who was able to provide me with this great description of the house:

“A grand shingle style mansion, 3 stories high, and very dark green colored in its last iteration.  It had a protruding three-story side entrance that was circular in shape, and surmounted by a cupola, I recall.  This columnar shaped appendage contained the side stairwell that went all the way up to the third floor.  You ascended a short flight of maybe 6 or 8 rickety wooden steps up to the porch that led to the side entrance door.  Just inside the side entrance door there was a foyer.  Believe it or not, in those Baby Boom years, all of the Sunday School classrooms in the rooms above the church offices were filled to capacity, so 33 Linwood was used for overflow classrooms.  Three rooms on the first floor of the mansion were used.  The front room, along the south and east (possibly the dining room and adjoining kitchen?), was where I had my 5th grade class.  The front room, along the south and west side, was where we had my 6th grade class.  There was also a room in the middle, which led from the foyer off in a northerly direction, and which had no windows.  Each of these three rooms fanned out from the side entrance.  I recall white marble fireplaces in each of the three rooms.  Each room also could be closed in from the foyer by pocket doors containing multiple panel grid-like glass lites.  Directly behind 33 Linwood, between the mansion and the church offices, the Sunday School created the “Garden of Praise,” a nice flower and shrub garden with a picket fence, curving trellis with roses and ivy climbing up it, etc.”

trinitytowers

Trinity Towers at 33 Linwood Avenue

The Coit House at 33 Linwood Avenue was demolished in 1970 to build Trinity Towers, an 83-unit senior housing complex.  The $2 Million apartment building, Trinity Towers, opened in 1971.  It was the first private development in Buffalo in which financing through the New York State Housing and Urban Renewal Commission was combined with federal interest subsidy loans.  Trinity Towers still operates as affordable senior housing today.

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Modern view with Former Hersee property outlined in red. Holy Trinity Church along Main Street and Trinity Towers along Linwood Avenue.

The next time you drive past Hersee Alley, think of the nearly 100 years of a furniture business that operated here in Buffalo.  Check the back of any old furniture pieces; you can still find Hersee pieces occasionally.  If you have a piece, I’d love to see pictures of it!  Here’s a link to an example of one of their pieces:  https://www.chairish.com/product/8404637/early-1900s-hersee-co-furniture-american-empire-period-flame-mahogany-veneer-mirrored-tall-chest-of

Want to learn about other streets? Check out the Street Index. Don’t forget to subscribe to the page to be notified when new posts are made. You can do so by entering your email address in the box on the upper right-hand side of the home page. You can also follow the blog on Facebook. If you enjoy the blog, please share it with your friends; It really does help!  Interested in getting even more content from me?  You can become a Friend of Buffalo Streets on Patreon, where I post unique extra content at least once a month.   You can go to https://www.patreon.com/buffalostreets/ to join.

Sources:

  • “Died.”  The Buffalo Advocate.  July 30, 1863, p3.
  • “Died.”  Buffalo Courier Express.  August 16, 1859, p2.
  • “Death of William M. Hersee.”  Buffalo Courier Express.  October 1, 1891, p5.
  • “George Coit’s Sudden Death a Great Shock”.  Buffalo Times.  January 22, 1920, p1.
  • “85th Birthday of Hersee Co.”  Buffalo Times.  September 30 1931, p4.
  • “Plumbing and Building Supplies at Low Prices.”  Buffalo Times.  February 20, 1932, p14.
  • “Hersee & Co to Close Forever on Wednesday”.  Buffalo Courier.  January 18, 1931.
  • “Hersee & Co Closing up After 94 years in City”.  Buffalo Courier.  October 19, 1930.
  • “Old Established House of Hersee and Co Still Leads for Best Goods in All Grades.”  Buffalo Express.  March 23, 1902.
  • “Thompson Hersee.”  Buffalo Times.  September 3, 1921.
  • “Incorporation Papers Are Filed By Local Concerns.”  Buffalo Courier Express.  April 21, 1932, p22.
  • “New Building On Main Street”.  Buffalo Commercial.  April 29, 1902, p9.
  • “A New Feature.”  Buffalo Commercial.  May 18, 1879, p1.
  • “A Model Establishment – The Furniture Exhibition Rooms of Messrs T. Hersee & Co.” Buffalo Commercial.  April 29, 1870, p3.
  • “New Hotel Enterprises – The Hersee House.”  Buffalo Courier Express.  March 8, 1873, p1.
  • “Corporation Proceedings.”  Buffalo Times.  April 21, 1885, p3.
  • “The Sites Offered for the New Buffalo Post Office.”  Buffalo Commercial.  April 25, 1888, p3.
  • “Notice to Creditors.”  Buffalo News.  May 12, 1888, p25.
  • “Funeral of Mrs. Hersee.”  Buffalo Commercial.  June 12, 1901, p9.
  • “Seeks Part of Hersee Estate.”  Buffalo Enquirer.  April 12, 1904, p6.
  • “Lost His Fight for a Fortune.”  Buffalo News.  April 16, 1904, p1.
  • “Parking Privilege Nearly Upsets Main Street Deal.”  October 12, 1924, p86.
  • “Chippewa and Tupper Streets Fashionable Center When Main Street Was Van Stophorst Avenue.”  Buffalo Courier.  October 26, 1924, p68.
  • “Laube’s Building to Be Renovated.”  Buffalo News.  February 12, 1985, p32.
  • “Old Spain Renovation Has May Target Date.”  Buffalo News.  March 4, 1980, p35.
  • “Mrs. Mary P Mattioli.”  Buffalo Courier Express.  July 23, 1963, p13.
  • “Lux Baffled by Associates on Ramp Votes.”  Buffalo Courier Express.  July 11, 1951, p1.
  • “Furniture Man Reviews his 50 Years in Field.”  Buffalo Courier Express.  November 19, 1944, p39.
  • “Building Permits.”  Buffalo News.  February 28, 1936, p37.
  • “Hersee Home Sold.”  Buffalo Times. March 16, 1911, p13.
  • This Faith Tremendous.  Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, Buffalo, 1979.
  • “Coit Will Disposes of $1,000,000 Estate.”  Buffalo News.  July 9, 1930, p14.
  • “Site Embracing Shea’s Buffalo Changes Hands.”  Buffalo Courier Express.  June 7, 1931, p35.
  • “Linwood Rezoning Asked by Church for Elderly Housing.”  Buffalo News.  June 25, 1970, p38.
  • “Holy Trinity Lutheran Battles City Blight.”  Buffalo News.  October 10, 1970, p5.

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blossomBlossom Street is a street in Downtown Buffalo that runs between East Huron Street and Broadway.  It is cut in half by Hersee Alley.  It functions mainly as an alley for buildings along Ellicott and Oak Streets these days, but it is still designated as a street by the City of Buffalo.  Buildings along the street have windows and doorway entrances that once looked out onto Blossom Street, but are now bricked over.

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Street sign that has seen better days

 

20200301_154105It is not named for flowers, but for Ira Allen Blossom.  Mr. Blossom served as right hand man to Joseph Ellicott. Mr. Blossom’s family were pioneers in Monmouth, Maine, where Ira was born in 1789.  In his 20s, Ira moved to Meadville Pennsylvania for work.  When he was 26, he came to Buffalo as Joseph Ellicott’s assistant.

Mr. Blossom started as Joseph Ellicott’saide in 1821 and was later a Subagent for the Holland Land Company following Joseph’s resignation.  Mr. Blossom was connected to the Holland Land Company until the company was sold to the Farmer’s Loan & Trust Company in the 1840s.  He was then appointed receiver of the Buffalo branch of the United States Bank.  He was also made receiver of the Commercial Bank.  While working for the Holland Land Company and the banks, he was known for being lenient with giving credit to promising young men to start their businesses.  A number of businessmen in Buffalo attributed much of their success to Mr. Blossom’s confidence in them and expressing his confidence through credit.

 

Mr. Blossom partnered with Mr.Lewis Allen to lease what is now the site of the Ellicott Square Building.  In May, 1829, they secured a 63 year lease for the property bounded by Main, North Division, Washington and Swan Streets.  They were able to get the lease at a bargain.  This land had been set aside for Joseph Ellicott by the Holland Land Company in 1816 to build his home, but the Village Trustees interfered and straightened the path of Main Street.  Joseph was disgusted and gave the land to Joseph Ellicott the younger, his nephew.  For the first 21 years, they paid only $700 ($16,000 in today’s dollars) per year, for the second 21 years $850 ($19,000) a year, and for the third 21 years, they paid $1,000 ($23,000) a year.

It was written of Mr. Blossom and Mr. Allen at the time, “the magnitude of their enterprise frightened every conservative in town.” They saw the potential of the site and built a block of fourteen 2-story buildings on the site.  The first legitimate theater in Buffalo was built on the site in 1835.  This theater, William Duffy’s Theater, was on South Division Street between the alley at Washington Street.  It burned down in the 1840s.  The Young Men’s Association (which became the Buffalo Public Library) leased and occupied the upper part of the Theater building.  Reverend Cicero Stevens Hawkins worshiped in the theater in the late 1830s with a group of Episcopalians.  These worshipers later formed Trinity Church, on Delaware Avenue.  Other buildings on the site were filled with businesses as well.

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Buildings located at what is now the Ellicott Square Building

Mr. Blossom and Mr. Allen’s lease on the Ellicott Square ran out in 1892, after both men had died.  On March 1, 1893, the properties were all purchased by the Ellicott Square Company for a fee of $1,080,000 (about $33,583,730 today).   By 1895, when they were planning to construct the Ellicott Square Building, the buildings on this property were described as “the sorriest exhibit of business buildings in the city.”  The planned Ellicott Square Building was expected to cost 2 Million to construct.

Mr. Blossom married Eunice Hubbard.  They lived at the triangle at Franklin, Swan and Erie Streets, across from St. Joseph’s Cathedral.   The famous naturalist Audubon was a guest at their home.  Mr. Audubon was thought to have painted portraits of the Blossoms in 1825, which the family treasured.  The house stood in a garden and was framed by majestic trees of the primeval forest.  The Blossoms had one daughter, Anna.

In 1831, Mr. Blossom, along with John Beals, Samuel Callendar, Elizah Einer, James McKay and Noah Sprague met to organize a parish of the Unitarian church.  The congregation grew and constructed its first building in 1833, at the corner of Franklin and Eagle Street.  The building is still standing today, having been remodeled into a commercial building by the Austin Family. 

In 1832, Mr. Blossom was elected to Buffalo’s first Board of Alderman.  For two terms, he represented the old Third Ward on the board.  He was offered other public offices, but he declined them.  He helped to incorporate the University of Buffalo and was on the university’s first council.

He also was known for giving generously to public projects he believed would benefit Buffalo.  He was known for his hospitality.  He was also known for taking care of the poor, at a time when the indigent were not considered a general public responsibility; his gifts and kindness helped many families.

blossom grave 2He died in 1856.  Mr. Blossom’s tombstone read “a man who never turned his back on his honor, a loyal citizen, a generous friend.”  He is buried in Forest Lawn Cemetery.

After Mr. Blossom died, living across from the Cathedral and hearing it’s carillon inspired Mrs. Blossom to become a Catholic.  She gave the house to the church.  On the site of the house, St. Stephen’s Hall was built.   Mrs. Blossom and Anna moved to New England.  When Mrs. Blossom died in 1875, she was buried along with her husband in Forest Lawn.

Portraits of Mr. Blossom can be found in the collection of the Albright Knox Art Gallery and the Buffalo History Museum, both portraits are the same painting.  The portrait in the Albright Knox Collection was attributed to John James Audubon and was believed to have been painted in 1825. The Albright’s  portrait was donated, along with a portrait of Mrs. Blossom, in 1943 by the grandson of the Blossoms, Ira A.B. Smith.  The second portrait, was donated to the Buffalo Historical Society at a later date by the estate of one of Mr. Blossom’s associates in the Holland Land Company office.  This second portrait was accompanied by Mr. Blossom’s journals.  The 1835 journal reveals that an associate (Mr. Johnson) commissioned the painting, along with a copy, for his colleague in 1835.  The paintings are both believed to have been done by Samuel Bell Waugh and not by Audubon as had been originally thought.  Both museums attribute the painting to Waugh now.  The picture of Mr. Blossom in this article is a newspaper copy clipping of the painting.

To learn about other streets, check out the Street Index.   Be sure to subscribe to the blog so that new posts are sent directly to you – you can do so on the right hand side of the home page.  You can also like my blog page on facebook at facebook.com/buffalostreets.

Sources:

  1. Winner, Julia Hull.  “The Puzzle of Buffalo’s Two Ira Blossom Portraits that Look Just Alike”.  Buffalo Evening News Magazine.  December 1, 1962, p 1.
  2. “Centennial Planned for Unitarian Church”.  Buffalo Evening News.  November 21, 1931.  p 4.
  3. Buffalo Changes:  The Old Buildings Now on Good Business Sites, and the New Structures which are to Replace Them.  Buffalo Express.  Feb 3, 1895.
  4. Audubon Works Are Acquired by Art Gallery.  Courier Express , Nov 19, 1939, sec 5 p3.
  5. Goldberg, Arthur.  The Buffalo Public Library:  Commemorating its first century of service to the citizens of Buffalo – 1836-1936.  Privately Printed, Buffalo New York, MCMXXXVII (1937).
  6. Smith, Katherine.  Named for Ira Blossom. Courier Express Nov 19, 1939, sec. 5, p3.

 

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