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Posts Tagged ‘Streets’

Selkirk Street is a street running approximately 1/4th of a mile south of Exchange Street, near the railroad corridor.   The land around Selkirk Street was originally owned by Henry Box.  Box was a lawyer in Buffalo, and when his land was subdivided for development, he decided to name one of the streets after his brother-in-law, John Harley Selkirk, an architect.

Erie County Savings Bank

John Henry Selkirk was born in Connecticut in 1808.   He studied architecture and moved to Buffalo in the early 1830s.  When he arrived, the Village of Buffalo had not been fully restored after the burning by the British during the War of 1812.  Therefore, it was a good time to be an architect.   Many of his buildings were built in the Romanesque Revival style, which is most famously represented in Buffalo by the Richardson Complex near Buffalo State College (designed by Henry Hobson Richardson).

Delaware Asbury Church in the 1950s

Selkirk designed and built the Asbury Delaware Methodist Church (aka Ani DiFranco’s Church) at Delaware and Tupper, the Calvary Presbyterian Church on Delaware and Tracy Street (demolished), old Central Presbyterian Church at Pearl and Genesee (at the time the largest protestant church in town).  In addition to the churches, he designed the Buffalo Gas Works Building (now the facade of the Health Now Building on Church Street), Western Savings Bank and the Erie County Saving Bank.  He also built many homesteads including the Rumsey Homestead at Delaware and Tracy, the Rich home at Main near Dodge, and the Sheldon Thompson mansion at Niagara Street and Porter Avenue.   He also built twin houses on Niagara Street between Huron and Georgia Streets for himself and his son.  At the time, that portion of Niagara Street was one of Buffalo’s better neighborhoods.

John Henry Selkirk died in 1879.  The only remaining buildings designed by him are the Church at Delware & Tupper and the facade of the Gas Works on Chruch Street.

Buffalo Gas Works

Source:  “Named for John Selkirk”.  Courier Express Aug 21, 1939, sec 5 p2.

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Numbered Streets in Buffalo

One thing many people don’t understand is Buffalo’s numbered streets.  Sure, we don’t have a perfect numbered grid like New York City, but our radial street pattern and unique street names are important to the City of Buffalo’s identity.  (Also, it gives me a reason to blog).

While Buffalo does have some numbered streets, the numbered streets  seem not to make any sense at all.  They are scattered throughout the west side of Buffalo in a seemingly random fashion.  We have the following numbered streets:

  • 4th
  • 7th
  • 10th
  • 14th
  • 15th
  • 16th
  • 17th
  • 18th
  • 19th

Why do they start with number 4?  Why do they skip numbers?  Why don’t they make any sense?

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Did you go to the concert tonight on Bidwell Parkway?  Do you shop at the Elmwood-Bidwell Farmer’s market on Saturday mornings?   Bidwell Parkway is one of the Olmsted Parkways, designed as an entranceway into Delaware Park.  The Parkway serves as a meeting ground for the community in the vibrant Elmwood Village.

But do you know who Bidwell was?

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Letchworth is a small street, running about one-tenth of a mile between Grant and Dart Streets, behind Buffalo State College.  Most people know of Letchworth as a park in Genesee County, but did you who it’s name after?

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Bird Avenue runs approximately 1.5 miles between Delaware Avenue and Niagara Street, just south of Forest Avenue.

Buffalo has Eagle Street and Swan Street.  It’s natural to assume that Bird Street was named after the birds that make their home along the Niagara River.  Well, it’s not named after our fine feathered friends, but there were some Birds who made their home along the river…

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Gates Circle is a part of the Olmsted Parks and Parkways System that Buffalo is known for (so is Symphony Circle, which we’ve already talked about).  It’s one of two traffic circles on Delaware Avenue.  The Circle has beautiful light fictures, two water-spout fountains, and a granite bench which circles the larger center fountain.   It’s a neat design, because the fountain is sunken down, so from the inside of the circle, you can’t really see cars on the street, so you feel like you’re actually in a park, not surrounded by Delaware Avenue, which can get busy, traffic-wise.

It’s been hot in Buffalo this week.  Maybe you’ve driven, biked or walked down Delaware Avenue and thought, “I really want to hop in the fountain at Gates Circle.  But then, out of the corner of your eye, you notice the sign….NO WADING OR SWIMMING IN THE FOUNTAIN.

Darn.

But swimming and wading wasn’t always forbidden….

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Typically, it seems as if streets are named in memorial after people have died.  Unless, of course, you’re one of the richest men in the city, or you use a street as your cow’s shortcut.   Sometimes, people are honored even before their deaths.  Copeland Place is a short, less than a tenth of a mile, road near the intersection of Ontario and Tonawanda Streets in the Riverside Neighborhood of Buffalo.  What an honor and surprise it must have been for Copeland Place’s namesake to be called into a real estate developer’s office and see his name place on a map!   (more…)

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I’ve been really busy doing research and have several really interesting posts planned, but I only have time for a quick entry today.

Symphony Circle was originally named The Circle.  The Circle was built in 1868, over the former Black Rock Cemetery.    A mansion was built in the 1890s on 3.5 acres adjacent to The Circle by Truman Avery.   The family offered their property in 1938 for the new music hall.   Also, in 1939, the center island we removed from The Circle because it was believed to be an impediment to traffic.  Because of the association with Kleinhans Music Hall and the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, The Circle was renamed Symphony Circle in 1958.

In 1992, a committee was formed to look at options for restoring the center island to the circle.  By 2002, Symphony Circle was restored to as close to the Frederick Law Olmsted original plans.

Source:  Kleinhans Community Association  (http://kleinhansca.org/index.html)

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When I was in 5th grade, I was cast as Gracie Shinn, the Mayor’s daughter in The Music Man.  In my moment of theatrical glory, I got to run across the stage yelling “Daddy Daddy Daddy, the Wells Fargo Wagon is Coming”.  Talk of the Wells Fargo Wagon stirs up feelings of old-timey nostalgia for the days when you couldn’t just order things overnight delivery on amazon.com.  Waiting for the stagecoach must have been excruciating!    For those who don’t know what I’m talking about, here’s a video from the 2003 movie.

ANY CHARACTER HERE

Did you know that Wells Fargo has its roots in Buffalo? (more…)

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