Jump to content

McCarthy Terrace

From Historic Saranac Lake Wiki
Revision as of 23:19, 26 July 2024 by Migratebot (talk | contribs) (Created page with " McCarthy Terrace was a short street — no longer in use — that ran roughly east-west between Shepard Avenue and Church Street, south of the Santanoni Apartments and north of what is now Fortune-Keough Funeral Home in the Helen Hill neighborhood of Saranac Lake. McCarthy Terrace was named after the Presbyterian minister of the day, <sup>1</sup> the Revere...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)


McCarthy Terrace was a short street — no longer in use — that ran roughly east-west between Shepard Avenue and Church Street, south of the Santanoni Apartments and north of what is now Fortune-Keough Funeral Home in the Helen Hill neighborhood of Saranac Lake. McCarthy Terrace was named after the Presbyterian minister of the day, 1 the Reverend Richard G. McCarthy, who apparently lived in the house in the middle of the block — 8 McCarthy Terrace. From 1924 on, it was just a dead-end lane running west off of Shepard Avenue.

Today's 51 Shepard Avenue (formerly 43 Shepard) — one of the Endicott-Johnson Cottages — faces north rather than east, and originally had a McCarthy Terrace address. Shel Damsky, who lived there, used it as the setting for one of his Saranac Lake novels.{| <tbody>|-/n|'Old Address||Post-911 Address||Building Name||Cure Evidence'/Notes|/n|-/n|

4 McCarthy Terrace;

43 Shepard Avenue||51 Shepard Avenue||4 McCarthy Terrace, ||

SLA1935, TBSBC, TBSWC, NYC1915,TBVA, DIS

[[1]]|/n|-/n|

8 McCarthy Terrace

 ||18 Church Street||8 McCarthy Terrace||DIS|/n</tbody> |}

    1. Footnotes

1. "Smoke gets in your eyes," Adirondack Daily Enterprise, March 26, 1971, reprinted November 27, 2004.