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J. Francis Kellogg House

1908 establishments in New York (state)Colonial Revival architecture in New York (state)Houses completed in 1908Houses in Livingston County, New YorkHouses on the National Register of Historic Places in New York (state)
Livingston County, New York Registered Historic Place stubsNational Register of Historic Places in Livingston County, New York
J. Francis Kellogg House Aug 10
J. Francis Kellogg House Aug 10

J. Francis Kellogg House is a historic home located at Avon in Livingston County, New York. It is a Colonial Revival–style dwelling with Arts and Crafts influenced detailing constructed in 1908. It is a 2+1⁄2-story, square, frame residence with a flat topped hipped roof with dormers.It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article J. Francis Kellogg House (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

J. Francis Kellogg House
Genesee Street,

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Latitude Longitude
N 42.906111111111 ° E -77.748611111111 °
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Genesee Street 285
14414
New York, United States
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J. Francis Kellogg House Aug 10
J. Francis Kellogg House Aug 10
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Murder of Tammy Alexander

Tammy Jo Alexander (November 2, 1963 – November 9, 1979) was an American teenage girl who was found murdered in the village of Caledonia, New York on November 10, 1979. She had been fatally shot twice and left in a field just off U.S. Route 20 near the Genesee River after running away from her home in Brooksville, Florida, earlier that year. For more than three decades, she remained unidentified under the names Caledonia Jane Doe or Cali Doe until January 26, 2015, when police in Livingston County, New York, announced her identity 35 years after her death.Alexander was aged 16 when murdered, though her age was not clear to investigators at the time. Most potential forensic evidence was washed away by heavy rain on the night she died, but they knew she had come to the Caledonia area from a distant, warmer locale because she had tan lines on her upper body. Advances in technology allowed investigators to make use of improving forensic techniques to evaluate trace evidence they had collected and, following a successful DNA extraction from her remains in 2005 and a palynological analysis of Alexander's clothing, they concluded that she had spent time in Florida, southern California, Arizona, or northern Mexico prior to her death. Later analysis of isotopes in her bones would lend further support to this conclusion. In addition, a portrait was made of Alexander based on a facial reconstruction, in the hopes that someone would recognize her image, and it was uploaded to an online public database in 2010. Identification was achieved based on a combination of factors; in 2014, a renewed search for Alexander by her half-sister and a close high school friend resulted in the filing of a new missing persons report with police in Hernando County, Florida, as she had not been seen or heard from since the late 1970s. Carl Koppelman, the artist of the reconstructed photo, notified the Livingston County Sheriff's Office about a potential match between the two pictures, and in 2015 a follow-up mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) analysis confirmed a match with Alexander's half-sister based on the DNA results from 2005.Alexander's case was well-publicized in the time she was unidentified, and Livingston County police continued to process thousands of leads from the public. The investigation stalled in 1980, leading county officials to arrange for her burial as "Unidentified Girl" at Greenmount Cemetery in Dansville, New York. In 1984, serial killer Henry Lee Lucas confessed to the crime, but his statement was not considered credible. The perpetrator remains unidentified.