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110-116 Baldwin Street

1870

Our Properties

Our Properties

In the early 1870's when the building was first constructed, its relatively modest three story-façade was towered over by larger, ornate neighboring buildings that lined downtown Elmira's booming financial district, including the stately Hotel Rathbun, located just across the street. As the only remaining building from that time on this block, 110-116 Baldwin represents a substantial cross section of everything that once was Downtown Elmira, hosting a truly wide range of tenants and business. The row is made up of four addresses, with 110-114 built in the early 1870s, and the northernmost section of the building, 116, added soon afterward.

The building's first owner and major tenant on the 110 side, was the coal dealer J. Langdon & Co, later known as the Chemung Coal Company. The Elmira Sunday Telegram described the office as “the quaintest place of business in Elmira, a Dickensian establishment that has the atmosphere of 19th century London, an office unchanged since the Langdon's equipped it in 1873.” The Langdon Family made their fortune through the coal trade, but are better known as the family of Mark Twain's Wife, Olivia Langdon. The office headquarters at 110 Baldwin featured a well-appointed interior of black walnut trim, a fireplace, lovely walnut desks and chairs, and Langdon family portraits adorning the office walls. On the left side, there were additional desks, and dark woodwork framed a long, high counter that required three-foot stools for the clerks. One wall was lined with six ornately carved customer service booths, with bank-sized vaults in the back. To the right of the main office was an executive inner sanctum with a large round wooden table surrounded by grill-work. It was here that Elmira's first telephone was installed in late 1877! The Langdon's sold the building in 1946 to Attorney John E. Sullivan, who soon set up shop in the former coal company headquarters.

A significant early tenant of the 112 side was H.H. Billings Bookstore, which opened in 1882 and was ran by Mr. Billings until his retirement in 1914, when he passed the business to his employees, Cora and Eva Derby, who continued to run the bookstore until it suffered significant damage in the flood of 1946.

In the aftermath of the 1972 flood, urban renewal projects greatly shifted the layout of the area, demolishing more buildings, removing the 300 block of Carroll street for the Baldwin Street Parking Garage, and interconnecting the remaining buildings on the block as the now contiguous Easttowne Mall. One of the last major tenants of the building was Shreibman's Jewelry Store, which occupied the first floor space at 114-116 from 1974 to 2002. Shreibman's was already a well-established jeweler in Elmira, founded in 1893 by Louis Shreibman of Philadelphia. The original location just around the corner on East Water was damaged in the 1972 flood, causing the relocating to Baldwin Street.

Additionally, these incredibly historic buildings housed a window store, rug store, hat store, grocery store, piano store, small electrical appliance store, florist, furniture store, rug cleaner, sign maker, women's clothing store, auto-shop, slot-car racing, photo galleries, art studios, restaurants, offices of lawyers, brokers, doctors, insurers and architects, as well as meeting places for the Board of Education, Knights of Pythias, The Elmira Camera Club, and The Elmira Firemen's Association.

At nearly 150 years old, this consequential row of buildings has overseen downtown Elmira through periods of great prosperity and devastation. We are working tirelessly to breathe new life into the block, restoring historic elements wherever possible, renovating for practical modern-day living, and allowing for what is hopefully at least another 150 years of history! Learn more about this property on its website, 110baldwinstreet.com

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