309 Miami Ave - Lydia Croll Home
Introduction
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Lydia Croll bought the lot from James Chamberlain in 1875 for $1000 and built the house soon after, because the home appears on the Warren County Atlas of that year. The home is the Italianate style and has the characteristic tall pedimented windows and corbels under the cornice. The projecting central bay has a circular attic window in its gable. The house’s three bay front porch, with heavy paired columns, and north porch with detailed, ornate frieze, may both be original. The north and south gables have bull’s eye windows.
Backstory and Context
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Lydia Croll was the wife of William H. Croll, the son and partner of Levi Croll, in a Franklin coal, grain, and lumber business. When the elder Croll died in 1885, William became embroiled in a dispute with the other Croll heirs and soon moved away to Indiana. Lydia owned the house until 1892, when it was sold to Harry McAdams, who sold it to W. S. Van Horne the following year. Van Horne was a real estate agent. The 1900 census lists Van Horne, his wife Flora, and their seven children and in-laws living here. When the Van Hornes were here, the address was 13 Oxford Road. In 1900, the property was sold to S. J. Gregg, a tobacco dealer, and the 1910 census shows Gregg and his wife Sarah, and some Van Hornes living here. The house’s current gray color is probably similar to the color the house was originally painted.