Then and Now #16 - The New York Store
π The New York Store π½, once at the corner of Locust and Clay Streets, was originally constructed in 1887 ποΈ after the owners of the business, Captain Archibald McVey and his various partners π€, moved their business from 614 Washington Street π¬; this was the second time the business had moved π. Architect Charles B. Clarke ποΈ designed the impressive building, along with others in town such as the 1877 city hall ποΈ. Between its founding in 1898 and 1910 π, Maupin College π, teaching a variety of humanities and business-related subjects ππΌ, operated out of the second floor πͺ. While the company was renamed in 1902 π, the building would continue to be known as the New York Store for many years π·οΈ. Around this time in the 1930s π, the building was purchased by Judge Chris Boehner βοΈ, being referred to interchangeably as the New York Store and the Boehner Building during this period π’. In the 1930s, the building was heavily modernized π οΈ with many of its most impressive details being pared down or removed altogether β, though it still retained its imposing scale π. In 1986 the building was torn down π§Ή as part of a bank expansion π¦.
Historic Photo #1 from Robert Pigg via Downtown Chillicothe Historic Tour website. Historic Photo #2 from Livingston County Library archives via Downtown Chillicothe Historic Tour website. Current picture courtesy of J.T. Baysinger June 18, 2025.
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