Seven Gables: Difference between revisions
Migratebot (talk | contribs) Created page with " right|right|thumb||Seven Gables Antiques'''Address:''' Northeast Corner of County Route 30 and Mud Pond Road, Onchiota '''Other names:''' Seven Gables Service Station, Seven Gables Grocery, Camper's Pantry, Seven Gables Antiques '''Year built:''' 1927 '''Seven Gables''' was originally built as a gas station in 1927 by Hayden Tormey, Sr. and his son..." |
Migratebot (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[File:Onchiota%20store.jpg|right|thumb||Seven Gables Antiques]]'''Address:''' Northeast Corner of County Route 30 and [[Mud%20Pond%20Road|Mud Pond Road]], [[Onchiota|Onchiota]] | |||
'''Other names:''' Seven Gables Service Station, Seven Gables Grocery, Camper's Pantry, Seven Gables Antiques | '''Other names:''' Seven Gables Service Station, Seven Gables Grocery, Camper's Pantry, Seven Gables Antiques | ||
Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
'''Seven Gables''' was originally built as a gas station in 1927 by [[Haydon%20C.%20Tormey|Hayden Tormey, Sr.]] and his son, [[Hayden%20J.%20Tormey|Bing]], then a high school student. Behind the garage door in the picture, beneath a new false floor, the mechanic's pit is proof of the building's original purpose. | '''Seven Gables''' was originally built as a gas station in 1927 by [[Haydon%20C.%20Tormey|Hayden Tormey, Sr.]] and his son, [[Hayden%20J.%20Tormey|Bing]], then a high school student. Behind the garage door in the picture, beneath a new false floor, the mechanic's pit is proof of the building's original purpose. | ||
[[File:SEVEN%20GABLES.jpg|right|thumb||Seven Gables Service Station<br>|Over Night Cabins<br>|Free Camp Grounds<br>|Lake Shore Lots<br>|Courtesy of [[https://pjfadkmemories.com/onchiota-images/|Phil Fitzpatrick]]]]Across the intersection and across the street from the general store, the Tormey's had several, perhaps 4 or 5, [[Tormey's%20Cabins|small rental cottages]]. Two of those burned down and the others were demolished to make room for a modern residence. | |||
It has been owned by [[Audrey%20Miller|Audrey Miller]] since 2003. | It has been owned by [[Audrey%20Miller|Audrey Miller]] since 2003. | ||
Line 22: | Line 22: | ||
<span>[[Eunice%20Tormey%20|Eunice Tormey ]]<br><span>Onchiota, N.Y. 12968 <br><span>(Seven Gables Grocery) <br><span>Pub.: July 24, 31, 1981 | <span>[[Eunice%20Tormey%20|Eunice Tormey ]]<br><span>Onchiota, N.Y. 12968 <br><span>(Seven Gables Grocery) <br><span>Pub.: July 24, 31, 1981 | ||
[[File:Seven%20Gables%20Groc.jpg|right|thumb||Seven Gables Grocery, undated<br>|The sign reads:<br>|Store of 3 wonders<br>|You wonder if we have it<br>|We wonder where it is<br>|You wonder how the hell we found it<br>|Courtesy of [[https://pjfadkmemories.com/onchiota-images/|Phil Fitzpatrick]]]]'''Sources:''' | |||
* | * | ||
Latest revision as of 04:33, 17 November 2024

Address: Northeast Corner of County Route 30 and Mud Pond Road, Onchiota
Other names: Seven Gables Service Station, Seven Gables Grocery, Camper's Pantry, Seven Gables Antiques
Year built: 1927
Seven Gables was originally built as a gas station in 1927 by Hayden Tormey, Sr. and his son, Bing, then a high school student. Behind the garage door in the picture, beneath a new false floor, the mechanic's pit is proof of the building's original purpose.

Across the intersection and across the street from the general store, the Tormey's had several, perhaps 4 or 5, small rental cottages. Two of those burned down and the others were demolished to make room for a modern residence.
It has been owned by Audrey Miller since 2003.
Adirondack Daily Enterprise, July 31, 1981
PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that beer license number A-65372 has been issued to the undersigned to sell beer at retail under the Alcoholic Beverage Control law at N.E. Corner County Route 30 & Mud Pond Road, Onchiota, N.Y. 12968, Franklin County for off premises consumption.
Eunice Tormey
Onchiota, N.Y. 12968
(Seven Gables Grocery)
Pub.: July 24, 31, 1981

Sources:
[25, 2009] "Audrey Miller, A life in full bloom"
Robert Harold McGowan, Architecture from the Adirondack Foothills, Franklin County Historical and Museum Society, Malone, New York, 1977, p. 95
External link:
- For many photographs of Onchiota and environs, see [[1]] and the book, Onchiota Remembered by Phil Fitzpatrick