Difference between revisions of "Widow McKenzie, Boarding House"

From Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Created page with "The Hunter family vacated the southern two addresses of lot 10 after 1806 (New York City Directories 1805-1806, Assessed Valuation of Real Estate). From 1807-1812, these house...")
 
 
Line 1: Line 1:
 
The Hunter family vacated the southern two addresses of lot 10 after 1806 (New York City Directories 1805-1806, Assessed Valuation of Real Estate). From 1807-1812, these houses were occupied by a variety of tenants, with 135 Greenwich Street possibly containing a boarding house (tax records indicate a Widow McKenzie paid real estate taxes for the address but did not live there, yet a number of unrelated men were living on the property) (Assessed Valuation of Real Estate). From 1808–1812, a single tenant, Gabriel V. Ludlow, a counsellor, occupied the middle address on the lot  (New York City Directories 1808-1812, Assessed Valuation of Real Estate).
 
The Hunter family vacated the southern two addresses of lot 10 after 1806 (New York City Directories 1805-1806, Assessed Valuation of Real Estate). From 1807-1812, these houses were occupied by a variety of tenants, with 135 Greenwich Street possibly containing a boarding house (tax records indicate a Widow McKenzie paid real estate taxes for the address but did not live there, yet a number of unrelated men were living on the property) (Assessed Valuation of Real Estate). From 1808–1812, a single tenant, Gabriel V. Ludlow, a counsellor, occupied the middle address on the lot  (New York City Directories 1808-1812, Assessed Valuation of Real Estate).
 +
 +
[in 1808, 1809 taxes on the property paid, in part by [[John Parsons Foote|John P. Foot]]
  
 
In 1811, Robert Hunter, Jr. moved back to his family's property. [it was renumbered 147 Greenwich St. –dff]
 
In 1811, Robert Hunter, Jr. moved back to his family's property. [it was renumbered 147 Greenwich St. –dff]

Latest revision as of 18:31, 30 January 2020

The Hunter family vacated the southern two addresses of lot 10 after 1806 (New York City Directories 1805-1806, Assessed Valuation of Real Estate). From 1807-1812, these houses were occupied by a variety of tenants, with 135 Greenwich Street possibly containing a boarding house (tax records indicate a Widow McKenzie paid real estate taxes for the address but did not live there, yet a number of unrelated men were living on the property) (Assessed Valuation of Real Estate). From 1808–1812, a single tenant, Gabriel V. Ludlow, a counsellor, occupied the middle address on the lot (New York City Directories 1808-1812, Assessed Valuation of Real Estate).

[in 1808, 1809 taxes on the property paid, in part by John P. Foot

In 1811, Robert Hunter, Jr. moved back to his family's property. [it was renumbered 147 Greenwich St. –dff]