No Longer Existing Cobblestones in Onondaga County
- Sla-8 Norman Morehouse house, Morgan Road, east side, between the Clay Town line and Commerce Blvd. Burned April 10, 1894.
- Rufus Stanton house, East Genesee Street, east of Allen Street, Syracuse. Built by 1855. Demolished before 1920. See City of Syracuse.
- Merriman house, Vine Street, Liverpool, It was demolished when Electronics Park was developed, about 1955. See Town of Salina.
- Isaac Randall House, 445 Church St, North Syracuse. Built 1856 by H. Crofford & H. Sherwood (according to date stone). The Bellwood Baptist Church was built to the east side of the house, attached to it. After a car accident and fire destroyed the sanctuary, both buildings were demolished in 2011 to build the new church.
- Mills house, north side of Route 370, east of Fenner Road, Baldwinsville. Demolished. See Town of Lysander.
- B. Davis Noxon house, Buckley Road, Liverpool, west side, south of 7th North St, built by 1852, Demolished circa 1961. See Town of Salina.
- Milk house, Harrington farm, Sheets road, Memphis, collapsed.
- Jabez Hawley house, 316 Pearl St. (formerly 49 Pearl St), Syracuse. It was destroyed by a 3 a.m. fire on August 27,1856. It was apparently rebuilt/repaired. It operated as "McCaw's Cobblestone Inn", a saloon, in 1916, but was torn down by 1924 for the addition to the Nettleton Building.
- Oswego Bitters School, Camillus Schoolhouse # 1, northeast corner of Bennett's Corners and Bitters Roads. It was replaced by a wood frame school, across the road, c. 1865.
- A lengthy article in the Baldwinsville Gazette and Farmers' Journal on February 7, 1918 entitled "On the Edgewood Road" states: "And then there was the old Cobblestone schoolhouse, on the corner of Edgewood road and the thoroughfare that leads from 'the Kingdom' past the Loverage place and the Brooks place..." Editor's Note: The location description appears to be the same as "the stone pile school", below next. Edgewood Rd. is now Conners Rd. and the 'thoroughfare' known as Bangall Rd, now West Dead Creek Rd.
- This was known as "the stone pile school". Edgewood Road is now called Connors Road. The 'thoroughfare' (also known as Bangall Road in the 19th century), is now called W Dead Creek Road. The school stood on the southwest corner and was replaced with a wooden building prior to 1920. The wooden school still stands and is a residence. The school served residents of "The Kingdom", as it is still called today. The last school was closed in 1955 and sold as a private residence.
- J.W. Pennock house, East Genesee Street near Allen Street, demolished.