236 Broadway: Difference between revisions
Migratebot (talk | contribs) Created page with " right|right|thumb|[[George%20Mussen|George Mussen| homestead, 236 Broadway. Mussen was a guide and caretaker of the Polhemus Camp| on Spitfire Lake<br>|Courtesy of Adirondack Experience]]'''Address:''' 323 Broadway '''Old Address:''' 236 Broadway|Broa..." |
Migratebot (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[File:p074047%202.jpg|right|thumb|[[George%20Mussen|George Mussen]]| homestead, 236 Broadway. Mussen was a guide and caretaker of the [[Polhemus%20Camp|Polhemus Camp]]| on [[Spitfire%20Lake|Spitfire Lake]]<br>|Courtesy of [[https://adirondack.pastperfectonline.com/photo/C8210D21-4361-44DC-A1AF-687907275980|Adirondack Experience]]]]'''Address:''' 323 [[https://localwiki.org/hsl/Broadway|Broadway]] | |||
'''Old Address:''' 236 [[Broadway|Broadway]] | '''Old Address:''' 236 [[Broadway|Broadway]] |
Revision as of 03:09, 17 November 2024

Address: 323 [[1]]
Old Address: 236 Broadway
Other names: Mussen Cottage, Buckley Cottage ([[2]])
Year built:
Other information: 246 Broadway was the home of George Mussen and family c. 1900.


It was also the home of Henry Pedroni from 1925 to 1962, and of John J. Pedroni from 1948 to 1967. Earlier it is said to have been the home of Marshall Brown.
The [Keating] family with their five children, including the youngest, [Keating Seidenstein], lived here from at least the 1940s. Mr. Keating ran [Heating], a delivery business, with heating oil he bought from [Fuel Company]. A very old [cabin] in the back yard was used as a chicken coop. The house is now divided into several apartments.
Susan Moody and Alan Brown owned today’s 323 Broadway (in 2020 the site of tent maker Crua Outdoors), previously 236 Broadway. The deeds to the property begin with Milote Baker and wife to Marshall Brown in 1868. The cabin was torn down due to insurance company concerns.
- Comments