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[[File:Bowling%20Grill.jpg|right|thumb|''[[Adirondack%20Daily%20Enterprise|Adirondack Daily Enterprise]]''|, September 14, 1945 ]] [[File:Duprea%20Bros%20ad.jpg|left|thumb|''[[Adirondack%20Enterprise|Adirondack Enterprise]]''|, November 15, 1926 ]]'''Address:''' 11 [[Bloomingdale%20Avenue|Bloomingdale Avenue]]
[[File:Bowling Grill.jpg|right|thumb|'']][[Adirondack Daily Enterprise|Adirondack Daily Enterprise||, September 14, 1945 ]] [[File:Duprea Bros ad.jpg|left|thumb|]][[Adirondack Enterprise|Adirondack Enterprise]]''|, November 15, 1926 ]]'''Address:''' 11 [[Bloomingdale%20Avenue|Bloomingdale Avenue]]


'''Old Address:''' 8 Bloomingdale Avenue
'''Old Address:''' 8 Bloomingdale Avenue

Latest revision as of 01:09, 18 September 2025


Adirondack Daily Enterprise||, September 14, 1945

Adirondack Enterprise|, November 15, 1926 ]]Address: 11 Bloomingdale Avenue

Old Address: 8 Bloomingdale Avenue

Other names: Duprea Brothers (1926), Fisher Motor Company (1933), Saranac Lake Bowling Academy, Bowling Grill (1945), Mar-Mac Bowling Center (1955), Romano's Saranac Lanes (2006)

Year built: Before 1895

Other information: There is a residence shown at 8 Bloomingdale Avenue on the earliest, 1895 Sanborn Map. On the 1908 map, it is labelled "Boarders, Printer & Paper Hanger", while the 1916 map labels it simply "Boarding".

A stable is shown behind it at 8 1/2 Bloomingdale Avenue that on the 1908 map is labelled J. H. Buckley, livery. This space became an auto garage by 1924, and was later combined with 8 Bloomingdale Avenue to create the bowling alley.

Other historic properties

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