Building date:
Original use:
Corner structures: Quoins are gray limestone of irregular size
Mortar application and content: Vertical pyramids. The horizontal mortar is raised in pyramids of varying precision.
Types and uses of stones: Irregular rough. The side toward the road and the two ends contain cobblestones, while the other wall is made of irregular field stones. The number of rows per quoin varies from 4 to 6, depending on the quoin. Stones are irregular in shape and color, and are generally smoothed.
Types and choice of windows: Lintels gray and red cut stone
Structures with similar masonry details:
Masons who worked on building:
Unique features:
Map views courtesy Google Maps. Address is Google Earth confirmed; 43°02'38.09"N 77°11'14.75"W. Current owner of record, Knibbs as of the 2019 Tax Roll.
Editor's Note: The Town of Palmyra map in the Roudabush Survey incorrectly places the location markers for Pal-18 and Pal-19. The Roudabush Survey Town of Palmyra map in this Cobblestone Info Base has been corrected.
Town of Palmyra and Wayne County Maps
This outbuilding an Vienna Road is set close to a house, with its door opening toward the house. In spite of its size, it has a cellar opening to the outside, with two cellar windows. The side toward the road and the two ends contain cobblestones, while the other wall is made of irregular field stones. Quoins are gray limestone of irregular size, so that the number of rows per quoin varies from 4 to 6, depending on the quoin. Stones are irregular in shape and color, and are generally smoothed. The horizontal mortar is raised in pyramids of varying precision. Roudabush Survey page 114
Wayne Historians Organization (WHO), Historic Sites Inventory Cobblestone Out Building
![]() Pal_18_1.jpg | ![]() Pal_18_2.jpg | ![]() Pal_18_3.jpg | ![]() Pal_18_4.jpg |
![]() Pal-18, Cleason 930 Vienna Rd 1.jpg ¹ | ![]() Pal-18, Cleason 930 Vienna Rd 2.jpg ¹ | ![]() IMG_1155.jpg ² | ![]() IMG_1156.jpg ² |
![]() IMG_1158.jpg ² |
¹ Photography courtesy Martin and Sheila Wolfish.
² Photography courtesy Richard Palmer.