A House victimized by Retail Expansion

A House victimized by Retail Expansion
This Victorian era house, which stood at 6917 Carnegie Avenue, was designed by Architect Sidney Badgley and built in 1895 for Rev. J. W. Malone, an Evangelical Quaker minister who founded the Cleveland Friends Bible Institute. After Malone and his family moved from the house in 1918, a commercial store was added onto the front and it became a pet shop and dog hospital operated by Considine & Powell. Later, the house and store front were torn down to make room for a larger and more modern commercial building on the property. This photograph was taken in 1944. Architect Badgley designed several other buildings on Carnegie Avenue including St. Timothy's Baptist Church on the northeast corner of East 71st and Carnegie. | Source: Cleveland State University, Michael Schwartz Library, Special Collecctions
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