Courtesy, James V. Brown Library, Williamsport, PA
419 West Fourth Street
The picture on the left is from the 1920's. The picture on the
right was taken May 2016.
The house was built in 1873 for $14,000 by Frederick Hartshorn who owned a planing mill at the time. By 1898, Benjamin McCarthy, owner of Williamsport
Valve & Hydrant Co, resided there. The next known occupant was Albert Bubb, Nathaniel Burrows Bubb's son. But this postcard picture is of the house
while it was the Garrett Cochran Post 1 American Legion, Pennsylvania's first American Legion Post.
Today, it is being restored to it's original beauty after spending years with a block commercial front, which has
now been removed.
Below are pictures of the commercial front, just recently removed.
Courtesy, James V. Brown Library, Williamsport, PA
West Fourth and Cemetery Street
The picture on the left was taken in 1945. The picture on the
right was taken May 2016.
The building on the left was originally two homes attached to offices and a scale for the Stuempfle Coal Yard. Behind this building
were two coal sheds and railroad tracks going into them. By 1945, the time of the left picture, it had been
Hamlin's Blue Coal and probably already out of use. Today it no longer stands and has been divided into two lots with Castle Furniture and Bedding taking up the lot on the
right and the subject of these photos. Note that the house on the far right of the picture is the same and dates
to at least 1912.
Courtesy, James V. Brown Library, Williamsport, PA
West Fourth Street at Locust Street
The picture on the left is dated 1928, the one on the right is from March 2016.
This is a section of Millionaire's Row created during Williamsport's Years as Lumber Capital of the World when
Williamsport had more millionaires per person than any other city.
The house to the far right of the picture the Emery house, one of two named that and sometimes referred to as "Emery Cottage".
This Emery house was owned by William V. Emery of Emery Lumber. His son, Eugene, and daughter-in-law Florence moved in to this house
with him by 1920 with their two sons. This is about when this picture was taken.
After the depression, Florence broke this
house into five apartments and it was said that it was done so well, preserving both front and back staircases, that one
couldn't tell it was ever a single dwelling. Today it is still apartments.
Courtesy, James V. Brown Library, Williamsport, PA
301 West Third Street
The picture on the left was taken in 1913, of a brand new building at the time. The picture on the
right was taken July 2015.
This 4 story building replaced a 3 story building that was completely destroyed by fire on Sunday, December 22nd, 1912 at 10am.
The fire burned
until the following day. It housed
F.B. Thrall & Co. Wholesale Groceries. Mr. Thrall began rebuilding almost immediately and
this 4 story building is the result. At a cost of $75,000, W.H.C. Huffman's Sons and Architect John Huffman were
awarded the contract.(American Contractor, Feb 8, 1913, p.51)
According to the insurance maps, the Wholesale Grocer
was, much earlier in time in 1891, located where the Genetti Hotel is now, on the corner of West 4th and William Streets.
Courtesy, James V. Brown Library, Williamsport, PA
869 Second Street
The picture on the left - date unknown. Picture on the right taken July 2015.
Dutchman's Inn on the corner of Maynard and 2nd Street. When it was a tavern,
there was a large windmill painted above the door, just out of the picture.
The building is very old, showing
up in an 1861 insurance map, but probably older than that. It started life as a residence, then
was broken into two residences, then by at least 1939 it was a bar with an apartment
and now it has circled back to 2 residences.
Courtesy, James V. Brown Library, Williamsport, PA
1028 West Fourth Street - Sipe & Sons Pottery
The picture on the left was probably taken in the late 1800's. The one on the right was taken
June 2015.
William Sipe started his pottery company around 1863. Located first at 316
West Fourth, then 1028 West Fourth.
The photo shows the family at their home in the
foreground and the pottery factory behind it.
Sipe manufactured
redware and supplied the country for 100 miles, being the first person in the
Lycoming County to manufacture it.
Later he was a terracotta and sewer pipe dealer and
made stoneware out of New
Jersey clay, which was considered the best in the United States.
Circa 1875 the Sipes were joined by Abram Young and Joseph Nichols and the pottery was operated as Sipe, Nichols & Co until 1877.
About that time Nichols left and joined the pottery of Logan Moore and David Hobart. The Sipe Pottery continued to operate until about 1900.
Sipe pottery is still collected by many. His sons Luther and Oscar were
the "Sons" of Sipe and Sons.
The former Sipe's homestead has been renovated and is now apartments.
Courtesy, James V. Brown Library, Williamsport, PA
West Fourth and Maynard Street
This is the present site of Way's Garden. This picture on
the left was taken between 1866 and early 1900's. The picture on the right,
taken January 2015, is slightly closer, which was necessary in order to avoid a
number of cars parked along Maynard.
Note that many
of the trees are still there, most obviously the crooked one on the left, older
but with the distinctive crook on the bottom.
Here stood the mansion of Robert Faries and later John White, complete with
elaborate gardens. The house was raised on a terrace of
mounded earth and centered on a 237 x 319 foot lot. It was made of bricks
and stucco, fashioned to resemble stone.
In 1913, Roman Way purchased the property and had the mansion razed so that
nobody could break it into apartments or a boarding house, his mansion
being across the street. The land was later given to the city, with an
endowment to maintain it as a public park, with one stipulation; money may
never
exchange hands within the boundaries of the park - and that is still honored
today. During the exhibits and festivals that take place each year,
you can see the people who wish to do business transactions walk outside the
park fence to do so.
Courtesy, James V. Brown Library, Williamsport, PA
West Fourth and Campbell Street
The date on the picture on the left is unknown, the picture on the right was taken November 2014.
Anne Weightman was married to Robert J. C. Walker and the Walkers owned most of
the bankrupt Peter Herdic's Williamsport properties.
Walker was a business partner
of Anne's father, William Weightman, of Philadelphia, and Peter Herdic's biggest
creditor when he declared bankruptcy
in 1878. The entire Weightman Block, formerly known
as the Herdic block, was purchased including the larger apartment building, diagonal to this one,
the Herdic House Hotel,
and a park.
320 Elmira Street - YMCA
The photo on the left was taken between 1915 and 1930. The picture on the right
was taken in September of 2014.
Although it looks very much the same in 2014, the YMCA is building new facilities
and this entire area is planned for change.
Courtesy, James V. Brown Library, Williamsport, PA
634 West 4th Street
Home of Moses Ulman in 1898, picture on the right was taken September 2014.
Historically known at the Smith/Ulman House and previously used as the rectory of
Annunciation Church,
this 1889 house with Italianate influence was built by Isaac Hobbs and is now the
law firm of Raup, Wiley, and Mott.
West Third and Rose Street - The Greystone
The photo on the left was taken in the 1960's of Jay's Diner, part of the Greystone
Building. The picture on the right was taken in September of 2014.
You can still see the foundation of the building.
*A side note of interest - Jay still makes the best breakfasts in all of Williamsport,
at an undisclosed location.
707 West Fourth Street - The Rowley House
The photo on the left was taken in 1889, just one year after the house was built,
showing it in its original condition.
The picture on the right was taken in September of 2014. Besides the porte
cochere being removed, the house is very much as it was originally.
What you don't see in the picture is that the inside of the house has been restored
and preserved into the original condition also.
To see pictures of the inside, click here: The
Rowley House at Developing History
Courtesy, James V. Brown Library, Williamsport, PA
639/641 West 4th Street
In 1886 A. Laedlein, Confectioner erected this building on the corner of Walnut
and Fourth streets, where he built up quite an extensive business.
He was the leading confectioner and caterer in the city. The modern picture
was taken May of 2014.
Courtesy, James V. Brown Library, Williamsport, PA
The corner of West 4th and Campbell Streets.
The photo on the left was taken 1900, the photo on the right was taken May of 2014.
Courtesy, James V. Brown Library, Williamsport, PA
Corner of West 4th and Hepburn St.
The picture on the left was taken some after 1891 but before 1912. The picture
on the right was taken May 2014.
In the modern picture, the Sun-Gazette Building, built in 1912, sits on the left.
City Hall, on the right side of the street in both pictures, was originally the
Post Office and Federal Building.
Courtesy, James V. Brown Library, Williamsport, PA
951 West 4th Street
The house was built in 1865, the picture on the right was taken June 2014 and is
the same house, though greatly changed.
The earliest recorded occupant of the house was Robert McCormick Foresman. The brick
mansion with Mansard style roof was a
combination of Italian Villa and French Second Empire design. In the early 1880's,
a fire destroyed the original shallow Mansard roof
and Foresman added a third floor, a very ornate Queen Anne roof, a portico
and various other embellishments.
After the remodeling the house contained more than fifty rooms! It is now
apartments.