Historic Corn Hill
Welcome to Corn
Hill, the heart of Rochester's oldest residential neighborhood, once known
as the Third Ward. Almost from the beginning of our city's history this
neighborhood has been one of Rochester's favorite residential districts.
Protected by the Genesee River to the east, the Erie Canal (which followed
the present route of Broad Street) to the north and the Genesee Valley
Canal (now Ford Street) to the west, the area offered early 19th century
Rochesterians the same advantages residents still enjoy today-buffered
from the heavy commercial traffic of downtown, but still close enough
to make a stroll to work or shop a pleasant and convenient experience.
Millers and merchants
built impressive homes during Rochester's first growth after the building
of the Erie Canal (1820s and 30s) while real estate investors built more
modest dwellings for sale or rent to the city's booming population. Scottish
immigrants developed the area around the Gazebo at Lundsford Circle-once
known as "Caledonia Square. This is still reflected in the neighborhood
street names of Greig Street, Edinburgh Street and Glasgow Street. Later,
former slaves came to Corn Hill and settled along Clarissa Street.
The neighborhood
was first known by its political designation as the "Third Ward", but
as more substantial dwellings in later architectural styles replaced the
earlier cottages, Rochesterians dubbed it "The Ruffled Shirt Ward" or
the "Silk Stocking District". Today Corn Hill is still a showplace for
historic architecture, featuring numerous residences of Federal, Greek
Revival, Gothic Revival, Italianate, Second Empire, Eastlake and Queen
Anne styles.
The ward was also
favored for its congeniality and commitment to improving life in the city.
Behind many of these historic doors were held the founding meetings of
such important educational and civic institutions as the University of
Rochester and Rochester General Hospital.
Changes accelerated
in the 20th century and as decades passed, the neighborhood began to experience
a decline, hastened after World War II by the general population exodus
to the suburbs. By the early 1960s, highway and Civic Center construction
had claimed many irreplaceable landmarks, and urban renewal threatened
to take what was left.
In an effort to
save an important part of our heritage and community, the Landmark Society
conducted a 1964 survey of surviving buildings and persuaded city government
officials to include a conservation area in its urban renewal plans. They
initiated a demonstration program of purchasing houses and provided house
tours, publications and advisory services to the public.
Corn Hill residents
enthusiastically organized to join the effort in preserving the architectural
legacy that remained. An Arts Festival was organized in 1968 to support
these efforts and to bring public awareness into the area. Today the Corn
Hill Arts Festival is one of the most highly respected festivals of its
kind in the United States and draws in excess of 300,000 visitors each
July. In the 1970s the Corn Hill Neighbors Association was founded and
later incorporated.
Today the Landmark
Society and the Corn Hill Neighbors Association have demonstrated that
practical preservation can rejuvenate and maintain a neighborhood. Federal,
state and city governments have recognized the architectural and historical
merit of the old Third Ward by awarding preservation district status as
a protection and well-deserved honor for Corn Hill.
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