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Leavenworth Apartments

Buildings and structures in Syracuse, New YorkColonial Revival architecture in New York (state)National Register of Historic Places in Syracuse, New YorkOnondaga County, New York Registered Historic Place stubsResidential buildings completed in 1912
Residential buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in New York (state)
Leavenworth apts 1920 syracuse
Leavenworth apts 1920 syracuse

Leavenworth Apartments is a historic apartment building located in the Near Northeast neighborhood of Syracuse, Onondaga County, New York. It was designed by architect Charles Erastus Colton and built in 1912. It is a seven-story, Colonial Revival style asymmetrical building in six sections. It is a steel frame and masonry building with cast stone details. The building features stepped gable ends. It is located across from the New Kasson Apartments built in 1898.: 3 It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2011.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Leavenworth Apartments (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Leavenworth Apartments
James Street, City of Syracuse

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Latitude Longitude
N 43.054444444444 ° E -76.144166666667 °
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Address

The James

James Street 600
13203 City of Syracuse
New York, United States
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Leavenworth apts 1920 syracuse
Leavenworth apts 1920 syracuse
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Nearby Places

Church of the Saviour (Syracuse, New York)
Church of the Saviour (Syracuse, New York)

The Church of the Saviour (Syracuse) is a chapel in the Episcopal Diocese of Central New York. It is an Anglo-Catholic Episcopal parish noteworthy for its historically significant architecture and decor, which took shape in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The Church of the Saviour was first organized in Syracuse, New York in 1848 as St. James Church. It was only the second church established in the state of New York to have entirely free pews. After a series of fires, the building was replaced in 1891 with one designed by Syracuse architect Asa L. Merrick. Seven years later, after a bankruptcy auction, the parish was reorganized as the Church of the Saviour. Finally, after yet another fire, in 1912, the building interior was redesigned by the firm of Ralph Adams Cram, one the country's leading exponents of Gothic Revival architecture and proponent of Anglo-Catholic worship. The interior of the Church of the Saviour features a rood beam carved in 1913 by Johannes Kirchmayer of Boston; an altar of Caen stone and Carrara marble, by the firm of J. and R. Lamb, dedicated in 1915; and a 2,000-pipe organ built by the M. P. Möller Company in 1962. The organ was built according to an unusual design created by the musicologist Ernest F. White, the Möller Company's tonal director, who also served as the Church of the Saviour's organist and musical director in 1962–1963. The building also contains a lady chapel and a wooden columbarium. Sunday Eucharistic services at the Church of the Saviour are conducted according to rite I of the Book of Common Prayer, similar to the form of the liturgy used in Episcopal churches in the United States before 1979.