</img> in the 1930s. It was the tallest building between Albany and Montreal. It was torn down in 1977.
</img> is in the bow, c. 1937. Courtesy of David Marshall Billikopf.
</img>, 2010. This is roughly the central third of the original, much larger structure.
</img>.
</img> ever since.
</img>.
</img>.
</img>.
</img> for 15 years. At closing time, it was a popular meeting spot after skating, hiking or snow-shoeing, as there was usually a fire in the fireplace and a teapot on the stove.
</img>, operated the cottage in 1910.
</img>.
</img> had a large, central, octagonal cure porch with quartz windows on five sides, flanked by two smaller hexagonal bays; the quartz windows were popular for their property of admitting ultraviolet light.
</img>.
</img> and built in 1909.
</img>'s second lab.
</img>.
</img>
</img>
</img>.
</img>.
</img>.
</img> was built about 1907.
</img>.
</img>.
</img> was built in 1906.
</img> for handicapped children.
</img>, putting Saranac Lake on the map.
</img>, built in 1878, was Saranac Lake's first church.
</img> was built before 1917.
</img> was operated as a registered private sanatorium.
</img>.
</img> with his mother the last year of his life in 1936-37.
</img>.
</img>.
</img>, was built in 1899 as a summer retreat for New York Governor and United States Vice-President Levi Morton