Wil-9, Beh, Gas Station, 4051 Ridge Rd. Williamson

    Documentation

    Building date: 1838

    Original use: Garage (present use 1975-80)

    Corner structures:

    Mortar application and content: Vertical pyramids

    Types and uses of stones: Small, various colors

    Types and choice of windows: Lentils wood

    Structures with similar masonry details: Hur-1 Fowler, Hur-2 Klueber, Pal-12 Harris, Pal-16 Lyon, Wal-4 Zion Evangelical

    Masons who worked on building:

    Unique features:

    Map Location

    Map views courtesy Google Maps. Address is Google Earth confirmed; 43°13'26.18"N 77°11'18.76"W. Current owner of record, DiGiulio as of the 2019 Tax Roll.

    Town of Williamson and Wayne County Maps.

    Comments, Additional Information, References

    "The Cobblestone Houses of Upstate New York", compiled by Dorothy Wells Pease. Research done in collaboration with Hazed B. Jeffery, supplemented with material furnished by Carl F. Schmidt, 1941. Reference the seventh paragraph on page 33.

    "Cobblestone Structures of Wayne County" Cobblestone Gas Station excerpt, 1955, Verlyn Edward Klahn, pages 358 and 359. Essay submitted for Hoffman Foundation, Wayne County History Scholarship, awarded 1955. Reprint permission granted by Wayne County Historian.

    Bennett-Ward House history sheet. From the personal research of cobblestone historian Karen Crandall.

    The Cobblestone Repair Shop is Closed, courtesy the Tom The Backroads Traveller blog.

    This cobblestone house at 4051 West Main Street (Ridge Road), Williamson, built in 1838 as the home of Dr. Josiah Bennett, who died in 1850; later Dr. Westel Willoughby Ward, who had his office nearby. About 1931 the house became a gas station. In 2019 it was close to being a pile of rubble and has since collapsed. Richard Palmer blog and email 7/5/2020. From the book "Wayne County: The Aesthetic Heritage of Rural Area" 1979, by Stephen W. Jacobs, page 77.

    Built in 1838 by Dr. Josiah Bennett. Later became a Texaco gas and service station. Known as the "Old Cobblestone Garage".       Reference photograph "Image 1760.jpg" below: In a brief interview published in the Williamson Sun on December 1, 1948, Ed Ver How said, "I've laid up a few cobblestones, but I don't know anything about it!" He said he had never seen a real cobblestone mason a work, but at the request of the owner, head had constructed the cobblestone peak on the local Cobblestone Service Station by simply following the pattern of the main building.
          Demonstrating with pencil and paper, he showed how the little egg shaped stones were laid in rows with lines of mortar above and below as well as between the individual stones, so that they would protrude a bit to give that characteristic cobblestone texture. The masons in the old days must have had a special to to do that with, he said. "Just how they laid the stones all so perfectly, I don't know! Of course the cobblestones were just used as facing, with the main part of the wall behind them constructed of common field stones and mortar."
          A subsequent scrutiny of the facade of the cobblestone service station on West Main Street, one could not tell the difference between what was done a century before and what Mr. Ed Ver How had added. Richard Palmer email 7/5/2020.

    John Kucko Digital, a 2/9/2023 visit to the ruins of the Behs Texaco Station. John Kucko is a Rochester NY television broadcast veteran who spent 30 years as a sports anchor before transitioning into digital content development. He travels throughout western New York State posting daily Facebook photographs and videos of interesting structures and landscapes.


    The Cobblestone Society & Museum Tours:

    Bennett - Ward House 4th Annual 06/06/1964
    Wayne Historians Organization (WHO), Historic Sites Inventory Cobblestone house - gas station


    "Cobblestone Masonry", 1966, Carl Schmidt: Name reference, Bennett - Ward House
    Pages 194 - 195

    Photographs

    Bennett-Ward House Dr Ward & Wife 1920
    Bennett-Ward House Dr Ward & Wife 1920.jpg ¹ This 1920 photo shows Dr. Ward and his wife, Mary.
    Bennett-Ward House 1
    Bennett-Ward House 1.jpg Charles Hopkins c. 1930
    Bennett-Ward House 2
    Bennett-Ward House 2.jpg Charles Hopkins c. 1930
    Bennett-Ward House 3
    Bennett-Ward House 3.jpg Charles Hopkins c. 1930
    Bennett-Ward House 4
    Bennett-Ward House 4.jpg * Charles Hopkins c. 1930
    Bennett-Ward House 5
    Bennett-Ward House 5.jpg * Charles Hopkins c. 1930
    Wil-9 Behs Texaco Station 6
    Wil-9 Behs Texaco Station 6.jpg Pease Collection 1940-41
    Image 1760
    Image 1760.jpg ² 1940's
    Wil_9_1
    Wil_9_1.jpg
    Wil_9_2
    Wil_9_2.jpg
    Wil_9_3
    Wil_9_3.jpg
    Wil_9_4
    Wil_9_4.jpg
    Wil_9_5
    Wil_9_5.jpg
    Wil-9 Behs Texaco Station 7
    Wil-9 Behs Texaco Station 7.jpg ³
    Wil-9 Beh 4051 Ridge Rd 1
    Wil-9 Beh 4051 Ridge Rd 1.jpg 4
    Wil-9 Beh 4051 Ridge Rd 2
    Wil-9 Beh 4051 Ridge Rd 2.jpg 4
    Wil-9 Beh 4051 Ridge Rd 3
    Wil-9 Beh 4051 Ridge Rd 3.jpg 4
    4051 Ridge Road, Williamson
    4051 Ridge Road, Williamson.jpg 5
    HS 14-034 IMG_3388
    HS 14-034 IMG_3388.jpg 5
    DSC01189
    DSC01189.jpg 6 03/29/2020
    DSC01199
    DSC01199.jpg 6 03/29/2020
    DSC01200
    DSC01200.jpg 6 03/29/2020
    DSC01201
    DSC01201.jpg 6 03/29/2020
    Bennett-Ward-west end wall on 220828
    Bennett-Ward-west end wall on 220828.jpg 7 August 28, 2022
    Bennett-Ward-floor gone on 220828
    Bennett-Ward-floor gone on 220828.jpg 7 August 28, 2022
    Bennett-Ward-rear elevation on 220828
    Bennett-Ward-rear elevation on 220828.jpg 7 August 28, 2022
    IMG_2090
    IMG_2090.jpg 8 11/20/2024
    Click to access additional 11/20/2024 site photographs.

    ¹ Image courtesy Williamson Town Historian.
    ² Image courtesy Richard Palmer blog. Attribution not provided.
    ³ Image courtesy Cobblestone Museum.
    4 Photography courtesy Martin and Sheila Wolfish.
    5 Photography courtesy Richard Palmer.
    6 Photography courtesy Chris Clemens.
    7 Image courtesy Karen Crandall.
    8 Image courtesy Gene Bavis, Walworth Town Historian.
    * Scan reproduction of very faded print. Required significant adjustments and retouching of artifacts in Photoshop.

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