Horace Reed House - Table of Contents

Exterior - Horace Reed House
94 Oakland Place, Buffalo, NY

Built: 1894
Style: Colonial Revival

Martin Wachadlo, Oakland Place: Gracious Living in Buffalo

2005 Photos

2010 Photos



An excerpt from
Oakland Place: Gracious Living in Buffalo
By Martin Wachadlo

Published by Buffalo Heritage Unlimited

Owners
94
 Oakland Place was built in 1894 for John J. McWilliams. McWilliams was the western sales agent for the Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad Company. He had the house built as a wedding gift for his daughter, Mary, and her husband, Horace Reed. A native of Ohio, Reed had come to Buffalo to attend the Bryant & Stratton Business College; he then became the private secretary to William P. Northrup, a prominent local businessman. By 1900, the Reed household had grown to include three sons: John, Horace, and Carl. With two female servants also living in the house, space was tight so the house was extended to the rear in 1913. The centerpiece of the addition was a large room known as the library; it was often used as a dining room for formal occasions. At one such event, a later hostess had a little fun with her guests: when the cover of the main course was removed, a live duck emerged and waddled across the dinner table. The dinner guests were shocked and delighted with this surprise.

Soon after moving into his new home, Horace Reed joined with his father-in-law and several other men to found the Niagara Lithograph Company in 1896. Reed was initially secretary and treasurer; he became president when McWilliams died in 1912 and he served in this capacity for more than forty years. The 1903 factory still stands at 1050 Niagara Street. After Reed's death in 1960, 94 Oakland Place was purchased by another Niagara Street businessman, George H. Hyde, president and treasurer of the Mentholatum Company.

Exterior
The Horace Reed House at 94 Oakland place is a freely rendered example of the Colonial Revival style, which was very popular in the mid-1890s. This substantial two-story house features a porch with Ionic columns; the porch covers only half the width of the house to allow more light to enter the first floor. Numerous bays and oriels project from the rectangular body of the home. The first story is constructed of buff-colored Roman brick with raised mortar joints; the original color is still visible at the chimney tops, but the rest of the brickwork was painted years ago. Subtle features of the first story include a batteredbase and elongated brick flat arches above the windows instead of the usual lintels. The second story is constructed of clapboards that gently flare out at the top of the first story. There is fine detailing on the oriels and the small brackets form a dentil course under the eaves. The hipped roof with flaring eaves is punctuated by numerous dormers with the same flaring rooflines; towering chimneys visually anchor the entire composition.



 



2005 Photos


Built 1894.                             Colonial Revival style.




Roman Ionic columns








Front entrance


 


Oak front doors




Oriel window with applied foliate ornamentation in the frieze above.                     Note supporting pair of corbels below.





Oriel window detail - 



Roman brick splayed lintel above leaded glass window




Southeastern view of the house.                     (Note French mansard roof in the house next door)




Southeastern view of the house detail




Roman brick chimney with wrought iron support





Wrought iron fleur-de-lis ornamentation on the Roman brick chimney.                (Note plain clay chimney pot)




Rear (west) elevation





Original carriage house, now located on adjoining property





Original carriage house





Original carriage house:



Original carriage house - hay lift above fanlight







2010 Photos

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Roman brick chimney with wrought iron support




Oriel window with applied foliate ornamentation in the frieze above.               Note supporting pair of corbels below.




Plaster  modillions and medallion


Roman brick splayed lintel above leaded glass window





Newly restored porch - Roman Ionic columns







Roman Ionic columns




Roman brick 




Roman brick                  Cf, Martin House and Barton House brick



 



Oak door with applied beaded leaf-and-dart molding                   Lion's head knocker




Plaster ornamentation (not antique)









South elevation





Photos and their arrangement © 2010 Chuck LaChiusa
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