Dysinger Cottage: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Migratebot (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
Migratebot (talk | contribs) Fix image duplication and formatting issues 🤖 Generated with Claude Code |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[File:8 | [[File:8 East Pine St.jpg|right|thumb||Dysinger Cottage]][[File:Marguerite E. Dysinger.jpg|left|thumb||1932 '']][[Canaras|Canaras]]''|: [[Marguerite%20E.%20Dysinger|Marguerite E. Dysinger]]|, "Sis", 8 East Pine Street, Prom Committee (3); Canaras (3, 4); ''|Red and White''| (3, 4); Sailor Maids (3); Speaking Play (4); Girls' Glee Club (2, 3, 4); Basketball (2, 3) ]] '''Address:''' 23 [[Forest%20Hill%20Avenue|Forest Hill Avenue]] | ||
'''Old Address:''' 8 [[East%20Pine%20Street|East Pine Street]] | '''Old Address:''' 8 [[East%20Pine%20Street|East Pine Street]] |
Latest revision as of 11:03, 18 September 2025


Canaras|: Marguerite E. Dysinger|, "Sis", 8 East Pine Street, Prom Committee (3); Canaras (3, 4); |Red and White| (3, 4); Sailor Maids (3); Speaking Play (4); Girls' Glee Club (2, 3, 4); Basketball (2, 3) ]] Address: 23 Forest Hill Avenue
Old Address: 8 East Pine Street
Other names:
Year built:
The Dysinger Cottage was one of several Saranac Lake cure cottages that employed platform tents for cure patients. Mrs. Gertrude Dysinger operated her house as a rooming and boarding cottage for many years, retiring in 1945. The house remained her home until the time of her death. When she celebrated her 100th birthday in April 1980, she was featured in a story in the Weekender edition of the Daily Enterprise.
- Comments