*** Welcome to piglix ***

Bateman Hotel

Bateman Hotel
Bateman Hotel Lowville NY Nov 09.jpg
Bateman Hotel, November 2009
Bateman Hotel (Lowville, New York) is located in New York
Bateman Hotel (Lowville, New York)
Bateman Hotel (Lowville, New York) is located in the US
Bateman Hotel (Lowville, New York)
Location 7574 S. State St., Lowville, New York
Coordinates 43°47′10″N 75°29′31″W / 43.78611°N 75.49194°W / 43.78611; -75.49194Coordinates: 43°47′10″N 75°29′31″W / 43.78611°N 75.49194°W / 43.78611; -75.49194
Area less than one acre
Architect Metcalf and Derring
Architectural style Italianate, Second Empire
NRHP Reference # 94000046
Added to NRHP February 18, 1994

The Bateman Hotel, previously known as Howell Hotel or Kellogg Hotel, located in Lowville, New York, is now a conglomerate of condos. At one time, it was a hotel with a kitchen, a dining room, and a saloon. The hotel is listed in the National Register of Historic Places.

The hotel was built in 1869 to replace a predecessor hotel, after the downtown area was burnt in a fire in January 1869.

A livery barn from c.1874 is a contributing structure on the property.

The hotel was owned in the 50's through 1980 by Harold and Marion Mahar. After Harold's death in the late 60's, Marion (called "Mother Mahar" by the locals) continued to run the hotel until her retirement in the early 1980s.

It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1994.

The Bateman Hotel (1869) is located on the east side of State Street just south of Shady Avenue in the commercial downtown district of Lowville, Lewis County. The surrounding commercial district, which has been identified as an eligible State/National Registers Historic District, consists of a distinctive and well-preserved grouping of mid-late 190th century architecture representing the period of Lowville's greatest growth and prosperity. The Bateman Hotel is one of the most prominent and architecturally distinctive buildings within the district, occupying the center building in a massive four-story brick commercial block which dominates the downtown street-scape. Architecturally, the design and detailing of the Bateman Hotel incorporate characteristics of the Italianate and Second Empire styles popular during the latter half of the 19th century.

The Bateman Hotel is the center building in a commercial block of unified design and construction. Its main facade is characterized by a molded cornice with decorative brackets and full-height pilasters which break up the wall surface to form a pattern of 2-12-2 bays across the front. At the north and south ends windows are paired on the second and third stories and grouped in threes on the fourth. Throughout the upper stories windows are 1/1 sash set in round arches which are accentuated by full arch crowns on the fourth story. Belt courses separate the upper stories. A contrasting yellow brick coursing follows the top of the window heads on all three stories with limestone belt coursing at the sills. The first story contains three storefronts and the hotel's public space. The Colonial Revival porte-cochere with round Doric columns resting on cut stone piers which highlights the main entry, and the large paned glass storefronts reflect c.1909 renovations to the first story. The hotel's original main entrance had only a small extended weather roof which was replaced in 1874 by a hexagonal veranda, and again in 1909 with the present porte-cochere.


...
Wikipedia

...