Building date: 1830s or 1840s
Original use:
Corner structures:
Mortar application and content: Vertical heavy
Types and uses of stones:
Types and choice of windows:
Structures with similar masonry details:
Masons who worked on building:
Unique features:
Map views courtesy Google Maps. Address is Google Earth confirmed; 42°58'34.80"N 76°53'03.97"W. Current owner of record, Grillone as of the 2019 Tax Roll.
Town of Junius and Seneca County Maps
Editor's Note: An unusual situation with the street address whereas in the tax roll 1027 is listed as the residence address and 1079 is listed as acreage; however, both street numbers appear on the same mail box. The National Registry of Historic Places states 1027 Stone Church Road as the address of record matching the tax roll.
Gassner farm house at 1079 Stone Church Road, Junius, built in the 1830s or 1840s, has a panoramic view of the countryside. Richard Palmer blog.
Cobblestone Buildings in Seneca County, photographs and text by Walter Gable, Seneca County Historian, revised 10/25/2019.
"Historic Tales of Seneca County, New York, by Walter Gable, Pages 61-62, Seneca County Historian, Arcadia Publishing, July 10, 2017.
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![]() Waterloo Historical Society-cobblestone buildings, June 1960_05.jpg ¹ June 1960 | ![]() GP Seneca Junius Jun-4 1-1 P.jpg ² 8/21/1971 | ![]() GP Seneca Junius Jun-4 2-1 P.jpg ² 8/21/1971 | ![]() Sen_4_1.jpg |
![]() Sen_4_2.jpg | ![]() Sen_4_3.jpg | ![]() Sen_4_4.jpg | ![]() Sen_4_5.jpg |
![]() Sen_4_6.jpg | ![]() Jun-4 Grillone Sen-4 1.jpg ³ | ![]() Jun-4 1027 Stone Church Rd 1.jpg 4 | ![]() Jun-4 1027 Stone Church Rd 2.jpg 4 |
![]() Jun-4 Grillone Sen-4 2.jpg ³ 6/22/2003 | ![]() 1079 Stone Church Road Junius 2.jpg 5 | ![]() 1079 Stone Church Road 2.jpg 5 Rear view of the Gassner farm house with interesting window arrangement. | ![]() 1079 Stone Church Road 4.jpg 5 View of north and west sides of Gassner Farm house. |
![]() 1079 Stone Church Road 3.jpg 5 Smoke house at the rear of the house at the Gassner farm. |
¹ Photography courtesy Waterloo Library and Historical Society.
² Photography courtesy Gerda Peterich. Cobblestone Museum.
³ Image courtesy Cobblestone Museum.
4 Photography courtesy Martin and Sheila Wolfish.
5 Photography courtesy Richard Palmer.