Lyman Treadway (1862-1919)

Lyman Treadway was a Cleveland hardware manufacture who also served as a Vice President of the Federal Reserve Bank, District 4. His mansion at 8917 Euclid Avenue was designed by Architect J. Milton Dyer. He died at a young age from heart disease. His widow lived in the mansion until 1923 when she moved to a house in Cleveland Heights, and rented the mansion to the family of Cyrus Easton. The Easton family occupied the house at 8917 Euclid for a decade, before they moved to their summer house in Northfield. Mrs. Treadway then sold the house to the Cleveland Association for the Hard of Hearing who occupied it for 12 years, selling it back to Mrs. Treadway in 1945. Mrs. Treadway then sold the mansion to the Cleveland Health Museum, which occupied it until 1968 when the mansion was razed to make room for a parking lot on the Museum site. | Date: 1908 | Source: Cleveland Public Library, Photo Collection
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