Lunsford Circle
By Carol McAlister
Lunsford Park (home to the
Corn Hill Gazebo) was originally known as "Caledonia Square", when laid
out in 1837. The names of the streets off the circle-Edinburgh and Glasgow-reflected
the interests of Scottish immigrants who settled in the "Caledonia Tract",
owned by John Greig in the 1830's. Clarissa Street, running north and
south to the west in Corn Hill, was formerly named Caledonia Street, but
renamed in 1844 as Clarissa Street, after Mayor Charles Hill's daughter,
Clarissa.
Later the square
was called "Plymouth Park" and was approached from the former Plymouth
Avenue, which ran to the circle and continued south. This two-block-street
began on Adams Street at the south end of Avery Mall (now Frederick Douglass
Boulevard) and ended at the circle park.
During a ceremony
in 1986, Mayor Thomas Ryan proclaimed Plymouth Circle Park, the "Dr. Charles
Lunsford Circle Park," in honor of Dr. Lunsford, one of Rochester's first
black physicians.
When downtown's
St. Joseph Church burned down, the Redemptorist Fathers offered a gazebo
from its garden to the Corn Hill Neighbors. The gazebo was moved here
in 1979 from its original site at the church. The restoration of this
1880's Queen Anne style gazebo, funding and relocation, was a project
of the Corn Hill Neighbors Association, made possible with funds earned
by neighborhood volunteers who organized the annual Corn Hill Arts Festival.
Colonel Henry
Cody, the engineer for the second Erie Canal aqueduct, built the Greek
Revival style house located at the northwest corner of the park. The Immaculate
Conception Catholic Church has been a landmark on the west of the circle
since 1864. The Second Empire style house, south of the church, was constructed
as a rectory in 1871. 47-57 Glasgow Street are the only surviving examples
of 19th century brick row houses remaining in Corn Hill and were built
in the 1880's by William Knight, a real estate promoter of that day.
(This article
is an informational history, which has been placed in the decorative sign
box at Lunsford Circle Park. Joe Arena has collaborated with author, Carol
McAlister in creating a photographic background for this plaque, which
will inform both residents and visitors of Corn Hill.)
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Selections from "Third Ward Traits" by Charles Mulford Robinson, 1899:
Corn Hill's Third Ward Past
Coming Home to Corn Hill
Friendliness in Corn Hill
Holidays in Corn Hill
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