The Lafee Building (the exuberant facade to the right) and Clegg's Hall stood on the south side of Third Street between Main and Jefferson. These buildings, together with their neighbors, created a visually interesting street wall on Third, wich in the 19th century was as much a main street as Main itself as it led to the canal landing. The Lafee Building dated to the 1870s.

The arrow points to a fireplug. Fireplugs are about the only way one can locate a rephotography subject downtown since so much has been demolished.

...as in this case. The scene today. Note the fireplug. Nearly the entire block has been demolished. Currently a parking lot for RTA management (and there is some irony in that).
Goodbye Lafee Building? Not necessarily so...

Clegg's Hall was an "Opera House", meaning there was a stage and seating on the upper floor. Built in the 1850s by one of Dayton's pioneer industrialist families (started out in foundry work and cotton spinning). It was not so fortunate, being demolished in the late 1940s and replaced in 1950 with a cafeteria (the "Virginia Cafeteria" in the criss-cross directory).

Next door to the Lafee, between it and the American Building, was these two commercial blocks, one with an unusual neo-gothic treatment.


The Home Store remained vacant until being torn down in the early 1990s. This left only the American Building on the Main & Third corner and the old Odd Fellows Hall (?) on Third & Jefferson.
So what is there today? This building:


Recapping the south side of 3rd between Main and Jefferson: nearly the entire block removed, one very old structure (Clegg's Hall) removed, replaced, and the replacement itself removed.
And then the facades get saved, relocated, and reassembled...


If the remarking wouldn't have happened the facades would never have been re-assembled, and would have ended up as piles of useless stone.
Instead we have two lively survivors of Daytons booming 19th century.
Excellent post, Jeffery - thanks!
ReplyDeleteVery cool about the moving facades. I didn't realize that was done for anything but very famous buildings.
ReplyDeleteLove your old photos juxtaposed with current ones.
^
ReplyDeleteI'll be doing more of the juxtaposition type of posts in the future.
The source for the old pix is the Lutzenberger Collection online at the Datyon Metro Library site.
So marvelous to see the description of this. I have a photograph of The Lafee in the mid-70's. I'd enjoy sharing it with you. Downtown Dayton has been rudely dismembered and dissolved in so many ways. At least on this block we have an attempt at remembrance, if not preservation.
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