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Architectural style. Second Empire, Tudor Revival, Other, Victorian Eclectic. NRHP reference No. 84000353 [1] Added to NRHP. November 1, 1984. The West Sixth Street Historic District is a national historic district that is located in Erie, Erie County, Pennsylvania. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1984.
716–728 State Street. 42°07′40″N 80°05′04″W / 42.1278°N 80.0844°W / 42.1278; -80.0844 (Boston Store) Erie. Art Deco department store completed in 1931; largest and most prominent department store of the 20th century in Erie. [7] 4. Cashier's House and Coach House. Cashier's House and Coach House.
Architectural style. Greek Revival, Other, Italian Villa. NRHP reference No. 79002224 [1] Added to NRHP. December 17, 1979. The John Hill House is an historic American home that is located in Erie, Erie County, Pennsylvania. Located in the West Sixth Street Historic District, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.
History. The mansion was designed by the Buffalo architectural firm of Green & Wicks and built in 1891–1892. It is a 31⁄2 -story, two-bay, brownstone mansion in the Richardsonian Romanesque style. It features a short tower, smooth piers with decorated capitals, windows with transoms, carved tympanum, and deep-set windows.
Charles Manning Reed Mansion, also known as the Erie Club, is a historic home and clubhouse located at Erie, Erie County, Pennsylvania. The original section of the 2-1/2-story, brick mansion was built between 1846 and 1849. It was expanded with a one-story bay about 1855, a two-story bay about 1865, and a two-story extension in 1970.
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Its diocesan offices are located at 145 West Sixth Street, Erie, PA 16501, across the street from Gannon University. Its cathedral church is the Cathedral of Saint Paul, located at 134 West Seventh Street, Erie, PA 16501.
In the 1940s, when the Art Club relocated, along with the Erie Public Museum (which had occupied the basement of the Library) to the Watson-Curtze Mansion at 356 West Sixth Street. In 1956, the Art Club acquired the Wood-Morrison House, at 338 West Sixth Street, which, along with its carriage house, became known as the Art Center of Erie.
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