Onondaga Historical Association Museum & Research Center Making History

Entries from December 2006

Third National Bank Building, Syracuse

December 23, 2006 · Leave a Comment

By Pamela Priest

Third National Bank 1893In adding old photographs to OHA’s new online Image Database, many questions are popping into my head. When I added The Third National Bank image #517, I knew nothing about this bank, its location, or whether the building still existed today. Today I added image #573 which shows a portion of the Third National Bank Building. Okay, I had to find out about this building right away. I was pleasantly surprised at the findings of my research!

A Short History of the Third National Bank Building.

The Third National Bank began business February 1, 1864. In January 1871 Lucius Gleason became President of the Third National Bank, using money gained from the sale of Syracuse salt during the Civil War to build the bank into a thriving institution.1, 6

100 North Salina StreetThe Third National Bank was the first commercial bank in Syracuse to erect its own building. It was in 1885 that the bank moved from the White Memorial building to its new home at North Salina and James streets. In 1912, the building was remodeled and the banking rooms fitted up in attractive, modern fashion.1

The Third National Bank building was closed in the early 1930’s after having consolidated with First Trust & Deposit Co.6 The building was sold several times and has been occupied by a number of tenants for varying periods of time.7 From 1956 to 1973 it housed the Community Chest, which later became The United Way of Central New York.4, 6 John F. Marsellus, Sr. of Marsellus Casket Co. owned the building before being sold to the Third National Associates.5

The former Roy Furniture store structures and the Third National Bank building were transformed into a single building by Third National Associates and is now called One Hundred Clinton.3, 4, 7 As of 1986, the newly transformed building was turned into a bank once again by the Syracuse Savings Bank, now Federal Fleet Bank N.A.7

Third National BankOn April 12, 2006 I investigated the Amos Building and Clinton Square areas, and realized I had taken a photo of the Third National Bank Building from afar. I need to visit this building someday soon. If anyone has anything to add about the Third National Bank building, please feel free to comment! And while you’re at it, check out OHA’s new online Image Database! If you want to find out more about this building, or any other building in Onondaga County, please be sure to visit OHA’s Research Center.

SOURCES:

1 Syracuse and Its Environs, by Franklin H. Chase, Lewis Historical Pub. Co., Chicago, IL, 1924, pp. 795-796

2 New York Bank History – National Bank History – Bob Kerstein, Founder, website http://www.scripophily.com/nybankhistoryt.htm, accessed 23 December 2006

3 Hueber-Breuer Construction Co. website, http://www.hueber-breuer.com/commercial.htm, accessed 23 December 2006

4 United Way warned of tough times ahead, Syracuse Herald-Journal, Wednesday, January 22, 1986, pg. B2

5 Downtown Landmark on the Block, by Dale Kusler, Syracuse Herald-Journal, Wednesday April 25, 1984, Metro, pg. B1

6 Penthouse Stripped of All But Its Reputation, by Bob Peel, Syracuse Post-Standard, September 19, 1973, pg. 13-EZ

7 Landmark, 55 years later, back to banking, by Joseph A. Porcello, Syracuse Herald-Journal, Friday, April 25, 1986, Business & Real Estate, pg. B8

8 New York Bank History – National Bank History – Bob Kerstein, Founder, website http://www.scripophily.com/nybankhistorys.htm, accessed 23 December 2006

Photo sources: Onondaga Historical Association and Pamela Priest

Categories: Bank · Building

OHA Museum & Research Center Website Now Features Searchable Image Database!

December 22, 2006 · Leave a Comment

Header

Onondaga Historical Association Museum & Research Center Website

Now Features Searchable Image Database

SkatersOnondaga Historical Association has recently expanded services available on its website to include a searchable database of images. The images depict mainly historic photographs from OHA’s collections but also features images of other collection objects such as paintings, postcards, ad cards, ads, letters, sketches, posters, etc. As digital images are made, they are routinely added to this database which currently numbers over 400 images.

City HallA “Photograph Store” clickable link to the image database may be found on the homepage of the OHA website at cnyhistory.org. Instructions for purchasing 4 x 6 inches to poster size reproductions of these images are included on the website. Users may also purchase the images in digital format. These images are for personal use only. For use of OHA images in a commercial setting, please contact OHA.

DowntownThe image database represents only a small portion of OHA’s collections. For those interested in purchasing images not yet on the website, please contact Sarah Kozma at (315) 428-1864 x 325 or email at ohareference@yahoo.com.

OHA wishes to thank volunteers Karen Grimm and Pam Priest for making this feature of the website possible.

The Onondaga Historical Association is a private, non-profit organization that operates both a public museum and research center on Montgomery Street in downtown Syracuse. The museum features two floors with seven different exhibition galleries focusing on Onondaga County and Syracuse history. For more information, call 428-1864 or visit the OHA web site at CNYhistory.org.

Categories: OHAM&RC

New State Grant Allows OHA to Continue Plans for National Exhibition

December 15, 2006 · 2 Comments

MEDIA RELEASE

 

DATE: December 15, 2006

FROM: Onondaga Historical Association Museum

CONTACT: Thomas Hunter, Interim Director

428-1864, ext. 311

ohatomh@yahoo.com

NEW STATE GRANT ALLOWS OHA TO CONTINUE PLANS

FOR NATIONAL EXHIBITION

Announcement Coincides with Acquisition of 1850s Portrait by Prominent American Artist

 

At a press conference to be held at the Onondaga Historical Association Museum in Syracuse on Monday, December 18 at 10 am, State Senator John DeFrancisco will announce the award of a $20,000 New York State grant to the Association (OHA) for use in the planning and development of a major national exhibition on the work of 19th century portrait artist Charles Loring Elliott (1812-1868). This exciting news comes, auspiciously, at the same time that the OHA Museum is formally unveiling its latest acquisition – a portrait of Syracusan George Comstock Pratt painted by Elliott in the 1850s.

Elliott was born near Aurora, New York and moved with his family to Syracuse as a teenager. He began his career as an artist in Central New York but eventually relocated to New York City where he became one of the nation’s leading portrait painters by the 1850s.

The subjects of his over 200 surviving portraits represent a rich cross section of Americans. They include several leading citizens of Syracuse and Onondaga County. As well, Elliott captured the image of many national figures. He painted Hudson River School artists who were his friends, men such as Frederic Church and Asher Durand. His portrait of industrialist John Ericsson, father of the Civil War ironclad Monitor, now resides in the London Science Museum in Great Britain. His almost life-size, grand portrait of Samuel Colt, inventor of the famous handgun, hangs in the Wadsworth Athenaeum in Hartford, Connecticut. The artist’s monumental canvas of Matthew Vassar occupies an honored place at the college that bears his name. And Elliott’s likeness of Mathew Brady is found at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.

Other prized portraits are now located in the collections of museums throughout the United States, such as the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC and the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. The Everson Museum in Syracuse also owns paintings by Elliott, including an early self-portrait. The Onondaga Historical Association’s holdings contain 20 portraits by Elliott, however, which comprise the largest single collection of his work in the nation.

OHA has long believed that Elliott is deserving of a national exhibition for this native son of Central New York. It has been laying the groundwork for this project since 2004 when it received an initial study grant from the New York State Council on the Arts via the Upstate History Alliance (UHA). The UHA grant allowed OHA to assemble a group of advisors to explore this concept and for OHA historian Dennis Connors to travel to New York City to meet with curators from several institutions that own paintings by Elliott. The advisors included David Tatham, emeritus professor of art history at Syracuse University, Paul Schweizer, director of the Munson William Proctor Institute in Utica, Debora Ryan, curator at the Everson Museum and Roger Sharp, professor of 19th century American history at SU. There was a general consensus from several museum authorities, as well as the advisory committee, that such an exhibit was overdue and would be an important contribution to the study of American art history.

This most recent grant will allow OHA to engage eminent American art historian Professor John Davis of Smith College to prepare an outline of content for the exhibit. It will also provide for the re-cataloging of OHA’s research materials on Elliott (considered the most extensive in the nation), for the selection of initial material and designs for a catalog, and for establishing preliminary arrangements with several museums for the loan of various paintings by Elliott. The exhibit is currently projected to open in late 2009 or early 2010 in Syracuse at the Everson Museum of Art and then travel to museums in New York City and Albany.

George Comstock PrattOHA was also successful this year in acquiring a previously unknown work by Elliott, a portrait of George Comstock Pratt (1842-1853). The boy died in 1853, at the age of 11, of inflammatory rheumatism and it is believed that the portrait may have been commissioned by the family as a memorial. After George died, he was buried in Rose Hill Cemetery, but later moved to Oakwood after it opened in 1859. The portrait was discovered in Florida and purchased from a dealer in the Atlanta area.

George was the young son of Daniel Pratt of Syracuse. Daniel served as an Onondaga County and New York Supreme Court judge, plus a 2-year term as the state’s Attorney General. The family lived on Fayette Park in a house located just one block from where the portrait now resides. Judge Pratt was a law partner of George F. Comstock, who served as chief judge of the New York Court of Appeals in the 1850s. Comstock also was a close friend, whom Pratt honored by naming his son after him.

The painting was purchased with dedicated funds and sent to Westlake Conservators in Skaneateles for cleaning and minor repairs. Members of the OHA Board’s Collections Committee provided valuable advice to staff during the acquisition process. And OHA wishes to thank the local chapter of the Quarry Questers, a study club for the appreciation of antiques, for their generous $400 donation toward the painting’s conservation.

Categories: OHAM&RC · Paintings

Make Your Reservations Today to Spend Time With Some Holiday Spirits!

December 4, 2006 · Leave a Comment

Spend An Afternoon With Some Holiday Spirits

 

Walk Back Through Time

&

Celebrate the Ghosts of Syracuse’s Christmas Past!

 

Sunday, 17 December 2006

Enjoy These Nostalgic Scenes

 

Iroquois - French

Iroquois and French of Early Onondaga

 

Amos Boarding House

Immigrants at the Amos Boarding House

 

Downtown Syracuse in the Gay Nineties

Edwards Store Toy Dept.

Eastern Syracuse Suburbs in the Swinging Sixties

 

1 Hour Walking Tours INSIDE the OHA Museum

Tours at:

1:00PM, 1:30PM, 2:00PM, 2:30PM, 3:00PM, 3:30PM

 

RESERVATIONS A MUST!

 

Adults $5.00; Kids 6-12 $3.00

 

Call the Onondaga Historical Association Museum

(315) 428-1864, ext. 312 or 313

Categories: OHAM&RC

Support OHA via GoodSearch.com!

December 1, 2006 · Leave a Comment

What if Onondaga Historical Association earned a penny every time you searched the Internet? Well, now we can!

GoodSearch.com is a new search engine that donates ad revenue, about a penny per search, to the charity its users designate. Use it just like any search engine, and it’s powered by Yahoo!, so you get the same great results.

Just go to www.goodsearch.com and enter Onondaga Historical Association as the organization you want to support. Just 500 of us searching four times a day will raise about $7300 in a year without anyone spending a dime! Please spread the word!

Get started right now and download the GoodSearch toolbar - http://www.goodsearch.com/toolbars.aspx

Categories: OHAM&RC