Cure Cottages: Difference between revisions
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!'''Cottage'''||'''Pre-911 Address'''||'''Current Address'''||'''Notes''' | !'''Cottage'''||'''Pre-911 Address'''||'''Current Address'''||'''Notes''' | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Dr | |[[File:Dr A H Allen Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Dr. A. H. Allen Cottage|Dr. A. H. Allen Cottage]]]]||22 Catherine Street||11 Woodycrest Road||A 1909 [[Scopes%20and%20Feustmann|Scopes and Feustmann]]-designed cure cottage. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Ames | |[[File:Ames Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Ames Cottage|Ames Cottage]]]]||43 Church Street||19 Church Street| | ||
A [[Queen%20Anne|Queen Anne]] style cure cottage built about 1906. | A [[Queen%20Anne|Queen Anne]] style cure cottage built about 1906. | ||
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|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Baird | |[[File:Baird Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Baird Cottage|Baird Cottage]]]]||111 Glenwood Road||67 Glenwood Road||A virtually intact cure cottage built in 1930, near the end of the cure cottage era. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Barngalow, | |[[File:Barngalow, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Barngalow|Barngalow]]]]||108 1/2 Park Avenue||40 Cliff Road||A two-story cure cottage that was originally a barn, converted to residential use in 1910. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Bogie | |[[File:Bogie Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Bogie Cottage|Bogie Cottage]]]]||59 Franklin Street||25 Franklin Avenue||A 1908, [[Craftsman|Craftsman]]-inspired cure cottage. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Camp | |[[File:Camp Intermission, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Camp Intermission|Camp Intermission]]]]||Northwest Bay Road||Camp Colby Road||A [[Great%20Camp|Great Camp]] built for theatrical agent [[William%20Morris|William Morris]], designed by [[William%20G.%20Distin|William G. Distin]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Clark-Peyton | |[[File:Clark-Peyton Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.JPG|thumb|]][[Peyton Clark Cottage|Peyton Clark Cottage]]]]||9 Rockledge Road||36 Rockledge Lane| | ||
A [[Tudor%20Revival|Tudor Revival]]-style, cure cottage designed by [[William%20H.%20Scopes|William H. Scopes]]. The owner's wife had tuberculosis. | A [[Tudor%20Revival|Tudor Revival]]-style, cure cottage designed by [[William%20H.%20Scopes|William H. Scopes]]. The owner's wife had tuberculosis. | ||
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|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Colbath | |[[File:Colbath Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Colbath Cottage|Colbath Cottage]]]]||30 River Street||63 River Street| | ||
A [[Queen%20Anne|Queen Anne]]-style cure cottage built about 1896. | A [[Queen%20Anne|Queen Anne]]-style cure cottage built about 1896. | ||
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|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Coulter | |[[File:Coulter Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Coulter Cottage|Coulter Cottage]]]]||34 Shepard Avenue||82 Shepard Avenue| | ||
A two and 1/2 story cure cottage designed by [[William%20L.%20Coulter|William L. Coulter]] and built between 1897 and 1899 as his residence. | A two and 1/2 story cure cottage designed by [[William%20L.%20Coulter|William L. Coulter]] and built between 1897 and 1899 as his residence. | ||
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|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Denny | |[[File:Denny Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Denny Cottage|Denny Cottage]]]]||76 Bloomingdale Avenue||141 Bloomingdale Avenue| | ||
A cure cottage built about 1910. | A cure cottage built about 1910. | ||
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|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Distin | |[[File:Distin Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Distin Cottage|Distin Cottage]]]]||11 Kiwassa Road||186 Kiwassa Road||A cure cottage designed by architect [[William%20G.%20Distin|William G. Distin]] for his father, photographer [[William%20L.%20Distin|William L. Distin]]. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Drury | |[[File:Drury Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Drury Cottage|Drury Cottage]]]]||29 Bloomingdale Avenue||52 Bloomingdale Avenue| | ||
A cure cottage built ''c.'' 1912. | A cure cottage built ''c.'' 1912. | ||
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|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Ellenberger | |[[File:Ellenberger Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Ellenberger Cottage|Ellenberger Cottage]]]]||183 Broadway||212 Broadway| | ||
A [[Queen%20Anne|Queen Anne]] style cure cottage built before 1917. | A [[Queen%20Anne|Queen Anne]] style cure cottage built before 1917. | ||
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|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Fallon | |[[File:Fallon Cottage Annex, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Fallon Cottage Annex|Fallon Cottage Annex]]]]||31 Franklin Street||83 Franklin Avenue| | ||
A 1901 cure cottage. <sup>2</sup> | A 1901 cure cottage. <sup>2</sup> | ||
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|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Feisthamel-Edelberg | |[[File:Feisthamel-Edelberg Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Feisthamel-Edelberg Cottage|Feisthamel-Edelberg Cottage]]]]||11 Neil Street||203 Neil Street| | ||
An intact cure cottage built before 1915. | An intact cure cottage built before 1915. | ||
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|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Feustmann | |[[File:Feustmann Cottage.jpg|thumb|]][[Feustmann Cottage|Feustmann Cottage]]]]||28 Catherine Street||83 Catherine Street||A private cure cottage designed by architect [[Maurice%20Feustmann|Maurice Feustmann]] for use by his own family. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Freer | |[[File:Freer Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Freer Cottage|Freer Cottage]]]]||40 Kiwassa Street||267 Kiwassa Road||A largely intact private cure cottage built before 1925 | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:E | |[[File:E L Gray Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[E. L. Gray House|E. L. Gray House]]]]||15 Helen Street||27 Helen Street||A cure cottage designed by [[Scopes%20and%20Feustmann|Scopes and Feustmann]], built between 1911 and 1913. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Hathaway | |[[File:Hathaway Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.JPG|thumb|]][[Hathaway Cottage|Hathaway Cottage]]]]||6 Charles Street||168 Charles Street| | ||
A largely intact, [[Queen%20Anne|Queen Anne]]-style cure cottage built about 1900. | A largely intact, [[Queen%20Anne|Queen Anne]]-style cure cottage built about 1900. | ||
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|[[File:Hill | |[[File:Hill Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.JPG|thumb|]][[Hill Cottage|Hill Cottage]]]]||36 Franklin Avenue||76 Franklin Avenue| | ||
A 1913 [[Craftsman|Craftsman]]-style cure cottage. | A 1913 [[Craftsman|Craftsman]]-style cure cottage. | ||
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|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Hillside | |[[File:Hillside Lodge, Saranac Lake, NY.JPG|thumb|]][[Hillside Lodge|Hillside Lodge]]]]||Harrietstown Road||2030 State Route 86| | ||
An intact cure cottage built about 1920. | An intact cure cottage built about 1920. | ||
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|[[File:The | |[[File:The Homestead, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[The Homestead|The Homestead]]]]||3 Maple Hill||17 Maple Hill Road| | ||
A boarding cure cottage built in 1890. | A boarding cure cottage built in 1890. | ||
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|[[File:Hooey | |[[File:Hooey Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Hooey Cottage|Hooey Cottage]]]]||24 Park Place||4 Prescott Pl| | ||
A 1916 cure cottage. | A 1916 cure cottage. | ||
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|[[File:Hopkins | |[[File:Hopkins Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Hopkins Cottage|Hopkins Cottage]]]]||5 Birch Street||58 Birch Street| | ||
A cure cottage built in 1923. | A cure cottage built in 1923. | ||
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|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Jennings | |[[File:Jennings Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.JPG|thumb|]][[Jennings Cottage|Jennings Cottage]]]]||16 Marshall Street||23 Marshall Street||An 1896 [[Bungalow|Bungalow]]-style cure cottage. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Johnson | |[[File:Johnson Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Johnson Cottage|Johnson Cottage]]]]||6 1/2 St. Bernard Street||46 St. Bernard Street| | ||
A largely intact cure cottage built before 1896. | A largely intact cure cottage built before 1896. | ||
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|[[File:Kennedy | |[[File:Kennedy Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Kennedy Cottage|Kennedy Cottage]]]]||26 Shepard Street||98 Shepard Avenue| | ||
A 1897 cure cottage that was used by the National Vaudeville Artists before the construction of the Will Rogers Hospital. | A 1897 cure cottage that was used by the National Vaudeville Artists before the construction of the Will Rogers Hospital. | ||
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|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Lane | |[[File:Lane Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Lane Cottage|Lane Cottage]]]]||4 Rockledge Road||5 Rockledge Road| | ||
A 1923 cure cottage built by Edward Shaw for his wife, who had tuberculosis. The Shaws had two young children; fearing that they would contract TB from Mrs. Shaw, a separate house was built for them, nearby. | A 1923 cure cottage built by Edward Shaw for his wife, who had tuberculosis. The Shaws had two young children; fearing that they would contract TB from Mrs. Shaw, a separate house was built for them, nearby. | ||
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|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Larom | |[[File:Larom Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Larom Cottage|Larom Cottage]]]]||112 Park Avenue||247 Park Avenue||A cure cottage built between 1905 and 1910. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Larom | |[[File:Larom Welles Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Larom-Welles Cottage|Larom-Welles Cottage]]]]||110 Park Avenue||50 Cliff Road||A 1905, cure cottage, built for the priest of [[St.%20Luke's%20Church|St. Luke's Church]], later the home of Dr. [[Edward%20Welles|Edward Welles]], a pioneer in thoracic surgery. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Dr. | |[[File:Dr. Henry Leetch House, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Dr. Henry Leetch House|Dr. Henry Leetch House]]]]||3 Johnson Road||12 Labrador Lane||A 1932 cure cottage designed by [[William%20G.%20Distin|William G. Distin]] for Dr. [[Henry%20Leetch|Henry Leetch]], who specialized in treating tuberculosis, and who had the disease himself. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Leis | |[[File:Leis Block, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Leis Block|Leis Block]]]]||3-5 Bloomingdale Avenue||12 Bloomingdale Avenue||A 1902 commercial building with apartments built with "cure porches", it originally housed Henry P. Leis pianos and a pharmacy on its first floor. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Leis | |[[File:Leis Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Leis Cottage|Leis Cottage]]]]||26 Algonquin Avenue||401 State Route 3||A private, shingled cure cottage built about 1906. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Lent | |[[File:Lent Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Lent Cottage|Lent Cottage]]]]||18 Franklin Avenue||114 Franklin Avenue||An apartment house, built about 1920 as a cure cottage | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Little | |[[File:Little Red of the Adirondack Cottage Sanitorium.jpg|thumb|]][[Little Red|Little Red]]]]||Algonquin Avenue||154 Algonquin Avenue||The original cure cottage of the [[Adirondack%20Cottage%20Sanitarium|Adirondack Cottage Sanitarium]] founded by Dr. [[Edward%20Livingston%20Trudeau|Edward Livingston Trudeau]]. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Magill | |[[File:Magill Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.JPG|thumb|]][[Magill Cottage|Magill Cottage]]]]||37 Riverside Dr.||74 Kiwassa Road||A cure cottage built about 1911. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Marquay | |[[File:Marquay Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Marquay Cottage|Marquay Cottage]]]]||6 Slater Street||67 Slater Avenue||A 1914, [[Queen%20Anne|Queen Anne]]-style cure cottage built of rusticated cast-concrete blocks, with an octagonal corner tower. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Marvin | |[[File:Marvin Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Marvin Cottage|Marvin Cottage]]]]||15 Franklin Street||119 Franklin Avenue||A cure cottage built about 1900. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:McBean | |[[File:McBean Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[McBean Cottage|McBean Cottage]]]]||89 Park Avenue||192 Park Avenue||A [[Colonial%20Revival|Colonial Revival]] cure cottage with [[Craftsman|Craftsman]]-style touches, built between 1915 and 1925. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Morgan | |[[File:Morgan Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Morgan Cottage|Morgan Cottage]]]]||100 Park Avenue||211 Park Avenue||A 1915 [[bungalow|bungalow]] designed by [[Scopes%20and%20Feustmann|Scopes and Feustmann]] as a cure cottage. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Musselman | |[[File:Musselman Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Musselman Cottage|Musselman Cottage]]]]||25 Riverside Dr.||60 Kiwassa Road||A boardinghouse-style cure cottage built about 1907. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Saranac | |[[File:Saranac Lake Cure Cottage.jpg|thumb|]][[Noyes Cottage|Noyes Cottage]]]]||16 Helen Street||35 Helen Street||A cure cottage built in 1898. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Partridge | |[[File:Partridge Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Partridge Cottage|Partridge Cottage]]]]||15 South Street||30 Clinton Avenue||A 1925 [[Colonial%20Revival|Colonial Revival]] apartment house, with three apartments used as a cure cottages for three families. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Pittenger | |[[File:Pittenger Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Pittenger Cottage|Pittenger Cottage]]]]||14 Forest Hill Avenue||494 Forest Hill Avenue| | ||
A cure cottage with five cure porches, built about 1920. | A cure cottage with five cure porches, built about 1920. | ||
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|[[File:Pomeroy | |[[File:Pomeroy Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Pomeroy Cottage|Pomeroy Cottage]]]]||26 Baker Street||55 Baker Street||A [[Craftman|Craftman]]-style house built about 1910, it may have been designed as a private cure cottage by [[William%20G.%20Distin|William G. Distin]]. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Radwell | |[[File:Radwell Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Radwell Cottage|Radwell Cottage]]]]||2 Charles Street||178 Charles Street||An intact 1896 cure cottage. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Ryan | |[[File:Ryan Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Ryan Cottage|Ryan Cottage]]]]||62 Algonquin Avenue||29 Algonquin Avenue||An 1893 [[Queen%20Anne|Queen Anne]]-style cure cottage. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Sarbanes | |[[File:Sarbanes Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Sarbanes Cottage|Sarbanes Cottage]]]]||72 Bloomingdale Avenue||129 Bloomingdale Avenue||A cure cottage built about 1930. | ||
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|[[File:Orin | |[[File:Orin Savage Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Orin Savage Cottage|Orin Savage Cottage]]]]||33 Olive Street||117 Olive Street||A cure cottage built about 1910. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Schrader-Griswold | |[[File:Schrader-Griswold Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Schrader-Griswold Cottage|Schrader-Griswold Cottage]]]]||49 Riverside Dr.||116 Kiwassa Road||A 1906 [[Queen%20Anne|Queen Anne]]-style cure cottage. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Seeley | |[[File:Seeley Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Seeley Cottage|Seeley Cottage]]]]||27 Olive Street||127 Olive Street||An intact cure cottage built in 1890. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Sloan | |[[File:Sloan Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Sloan Cottage|Sloan Cottage]]]]||21 View Street||31 View Street||A [[Coulter%20and%20Westhoff|Coulter and Westhoff]]-designed single-family cure cottage built in 1907. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Smith | |[[File:Smith Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Smith Cottage|Smith Cottage]]]]||12 Jenkins Street||25 Jenkins Street||A cure cottage for a single patient built about 1903. | ||
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|[[File:Saranac | |[[File:Saranac Lake - Stevenson Cottage.jpg|thumb|]][[Stevenson Cottage|Stevenson Cottage]]]]||Stevenson Ln.||44 Stevenson Lane||A cure cottage used by [[Robert%20Louis%20Stevenson|Robert Louis Stevenson]] in 1887. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Stonaker | |[[File:Stonaker Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.JPG|thumb|]][[Stonaker Cottage|Stonaker Cottage]]]]||Glenwood Road||92 Glenwood Dr||A private home built in 1916 for the president of Northern New York Telephone who used it as a cure cottage. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Stuckman | |[[File:Stuckman Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.JPG|thumb|]][[Stuckman Cottage|Stuckman Cottage]]]]||6 Clinton Avenue||17 Fawn Street||A cure cottage built between 1897 and 1900. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:The | |[[File:The Walker Cottage.jpg|thumb|]][[Walker Cottage|Walker Cottage]]]]||67 Park Avenue||134 Park Avenue||A 1904 [[Colonial%20Revival|Colonial Revival]]-style house that evolved into a cure cottage. <sup>2</sup> | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Wilson | |[[File:Wilson Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.jpg|thumb|]][[Wilson Cottage|Wilson Cottage]]]]||8 Williams Street||21 William Street||An intact [[Queen%20Anne|Queen Anne]]-style cure cottage. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Witherspoon | |[[File:Witherspoon Cottage, Saranac Lake, NY.JPG|thumb|]][[Witherspoon Cottage|Witherspoon Cottage]]]]||3 Kiwassa Road||164 Kiwassa Road||A boardinghouse-style cure cottage built in 1910. | ||
|} | |} | ||
Latest revision as of 10:57, 18 September 2025
Between 1873 and 1945, Saranac Lake became a world renowned center for the treatment of [[1]], using a treatment that involved exposing patients to as much fresh air as possible under conditions of complete bed-rest. In the process, a specific building type, the Cure Cottage developed, built by local residents seeking to capitalize on the town's fame, by physicians, and often by the patients themselves. Many of these structures are still extant, and their historic value has been recognized by listing on National Register of Historic Places.1
Fifty-nine of these structures named below are listed on the National Register of Historic Places as individual cure cottages. Others can be found in National Register-listed Historic Districts. Many others exist in Saranac Lake and surroundings, but were not listed on the National Register.
Note: The name assigned to each of these cottages gives the impression that it was called by that name throughout its service as a cure facility. In fact, it was common for a house to be operated by several different people over time, and the name of the cottages changed accordingly. We have tried to assign the name each cottage was best known by, but some idea of the history of the property can be gained by looking at the "Other names" entries. See the discussion at Disinfection Records for more on the sources of this information.
See also Cure Cottage History
Cottage | Pre-911 Address | Current Address | Notes |
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22 Catherine Street | 11 Woodycrest Road | A 1909 Scopes and Feustmann-designed cure cottage. |
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43 Church Street |
A Queen Anne style cure cottage built about 1906.
| |
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111 Glenwood Road | 67 Glenwood Road | A virtually intact cure cottage built in 1930, near the end of the cure cottage era. |
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108 1/2 Park Avenue | 40 Cliff Road | A two-story cure cottage that was originally a barn, converted to residential use in 1910. |
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59 Franklin Street | 25 Franklin Avenue | A 1908, Craftsman-inspired cure cottage. |
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Northwest Bay Road | Camp Colby Road | A Great Camp built for theatrical agent William Morris, designed by William G. Distin |
9 Rockledge Road |
A Tudor Revival-style, cure cottage designed by William H. Scopes. The owner's wife had tuberculosis.
| ||
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30 River Street |
A Queen Anne-style cure cottage built about 1896.
| |
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34 Shepard Avenue |
A two and 1/2 story cure cottage designed by William L. Coulter and built between 1897 and 1899 as his residence.
| |
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76 Bloomingdale Avenue |
A cure cottage built about 1910.
| |
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11 Kiwassa Road | 186 Kiwassa Road | A cure cottage designed by architect William G. Distin for his father, photographer William L. Distin. |
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29 Bloomingdale Avenue |
A cure cottage built c. 1912.
| |
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183 Broadway |
A Queen Anne style cure cottage built before 1917.
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31 Franklin Street |
A 1901 cure cottage. 2
| |
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11 Neil Street |
An intact cure cottage built before 1915.
| |
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28 Catherine Street | 83 Catherine Street | A private cure cottage designed by architect Maurice Feustmann for use by his own family. |
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40 Kiwassa Street | 267 Kiwassa Road | A largely intact private cure cottage built before 1925 |
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15 Helen Street | 27 Helen Street | A cure cottage designed by Scopes and Feustmann, built between 1911 and 1913. |
6 Charles Street |
A largely intact, Queen Anne-style cure cottage built about 1900.
| ||
36 Franklin Avenue |
A 1913 Craftsman-style cure cottage.
| ||
Harrietstown Road |
An intact cure cottage built about 1920.
| ||
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3 Maple Hill |
A boarding cure cottage built in 1890.
| |
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24 Park Place |
A 1916 cure cottage.
| |
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5 Birch Street |
A cure cottage built in 1923.
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16 Marshall Street | 23 Marshall Street | An 1896 Bungalow-style cure cottage. | |
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6 1/2 St. Bernard Street |
A largely intact cure cottage built before 1896.
| |
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26 Shepard Street |
A 1897 cure cottage that was used by the National Vaudeville Artists before the construction of the Will Rogers Hospital.
| |
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4 Rockledge Road |
A 1923 cure cottage built by Edward Shaw for his wife, who had tuberculosis. The Shaws had two young children; fearing that they would contract TB from Mrs. Shaw, a separate house was built for them, nearby.
| |
![]() |
112 Park Avenue | 247 Park Avenue | A cure cottage built between 1905 and 1910. |
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110 Park Avenue | 50 Cliff Road | A 1905, cure cottage, built for the priest of St. Luke's Church, later the home of Dr. Edward Welles, a pioneer in thoracic surgery. |
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3 Johnson Road | 12 Labrador Lane | A 1932 cure cottage designed by William G. Distin for Dr. Henry Leetch, who specialized in treating tuberculosis, and who had the disease himself. |
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3-5 Bloomingdale Avenue | 12 Bloomingdale Avenue | A 1902 commercial building with apartments built with "cure porches", it originally housed Henry P. Leis pianos and a pharmacy on its first floor. |
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26 Algonquin Avenue | 401 State Route 3 | A private, shingled cure cottage built about 1906. |
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18 Franklin Avenue | 114 Franklin Avenue | An apartment house, built about 1920 as a cure cottage |
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Algonquin Avenue | 154 Algonquin Avenue | The original cure cottage of the Adirondack Cottage Sanitarium founded by Dr. Edward Livingston Trudeau. |
37 Riverside Dr. | 74 Kiwassa Road | A cure cottage built about 1911. | |
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6 Slater Street | 67 Slater Avenue | A 1914, Queen Anne-style cure cottage built of rusticated cast-concrete blocks, with an octagonal corner tower. |
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15 Franklin Street | 119 Franklin Avenue | A cure cottage built about 1900. |
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89 Park Avenue | 192 Park Avenue | A Colonial Revival cure cottage with Craftsman-style touches, built between 1915 and 1925. |
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100 Park Avenue | 211 Park Avenue | A 1915 bungalow designed by Scopes and Feustmann as a cure cottage. |
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25 Riverside Dr. | 60 Kiwassa Road | A boardinghouse-style cure cottage built about 1907. |
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16 Helen Street | 35 Helen Street | A cure cottage built in 1898. |
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15 South Street | 30 Clinton Avenue | A 1925 Colonial Revival apartment house, with three apartments used as a cure cottages for three families. |
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14 Forest Hill Avenue |
A cure cottage with five cure porches, built about 1920.
| |
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26 Baker Street | 55 Baker Street | A Craftman-style house built about 1910, it may have been designed as a private cure cottage by William G. Distin. |
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2 Charles Street | 178 Charles Street | An intact 1896 cure cottage. |
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62 Algonquin Avenue | 29 Algonquin Avenue | An 1893 Queen Anne-style cure cottage. |
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72 Bloomingdale Avenue | 129 Bloomingdale Avenue | A cure cottage built about 1930. |
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33 Olive Street | 117 Olive Street | A cure cottage built about 1910. |
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49 Riverside Dr. | 116 Kiwassa Road | A 1906 Queen Anne-style cure cottage. |
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27 Olive Street | 127 Olive Street | An intact cure cottage built in 1890. |
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21 View Street | 31 View Street | A Coulter and Westhoff-designed single-family cure cottage built in 1907. |
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12 Jenkins Street | 25 Jenkins Street | A cure cottage for a single patient built about 1903. |
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Stevenson Ln. | 44 Stevenson Lane | A cure cottage used by Robert Louis Stevenson in 1887. |
Glenwood Road | 92 Glenwood Dr | A private home built in 1916 for the president of Northern New York Telephone who used it as a cure cottage. | |
6 Clinton Avenue | 17 Fawn Street | A cure cottage built between 1897 and 1900. | |
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67 Park Avenue | 134 Park Avenue | A 1904 Colonial Revival-style house that evolved into a cure cottage. 2 |
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8 Williams Street | 21 William Street | An intact Queen Anne-style cure cottage. |
3 Kiwassa Road | 164 Kiwassa Road | A boardinghouse-style cure cottage built in 1910. |
There were many more houses that were used as cure cottages in Saranac Lake. Many of them can be found on the pages of this site: see Streets.
For other properties on the National Register of Historic Places, see Other historic properties.
WATCH Curiously Adirondack: The Adirondack Mountain Village of Saranac Lake Remembers Its Curative Past produced by [Clement] and Ed Kanze.
Most of us have heard William Faulkner's famous line about the past not being dead. His wisdom is nowhere more apparent than in the Adirondack Mountain village of Saranac Lake. Here, from the 1880s to the 1950s and a little bit beyond, tuberculosis patients arrived from near and far to rest on porches, breathe crisp pine-scented mountain air, and get well or die trying. Antibiotic therapy eventually put the village's sanitariums and cure cottages out of business. Still, in architecture, memory, story, and a heart-breaking poem penned by a brilliant young woman who didn't get well, the village's rich past remains vibrant and alive.
- Comments
2013-08-29 18:29:29 I want to see the Williams Cottage —174.108.78.123
- Footnotes
1. National Register of Historic Places Multiple Property Documentation: [[https:/
pgallery.nps.gov
RHP/GetAsset
RHP/64500466_text|Cure Industry Resources in the Village of Saranac Lake, Essex and Franklin Co., NY]], 291 KB, John A. Bonafide, Mary Hotaling, and Rachel D. Bliven
2. Gallos, Philip L., Cure Cottages of Saranac Lake, Historic Saranac Lake, 1985, ISBN 0-9615159-0-2.