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Mackinaw Historic District Home Tour
Item 2 of 52
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103 Miami Avenue (C). A local newspaper of 1879 described plans for the construction on this house, which was probably built by the following year, even though it does not appear on the Warren County property survey of 1880. It was built for Derrick B. (“Dick”) Anderson, the oldest child of L. G. Anderson, who lived at 49 Miami Avenue. The house is in the Italianate style. It’s Italianate design elements include the tall pedimented windows and carved corbels under the eaves. A leaded glass window is on the north façade. Originally there was a delicately molded porch and entrance on the south east side of the house. But by 1913 these had been replaced by a Greek Revival porch and entrance way decorated with beveled glass sidelights on the east side of the house where there had originally been a bay window.


Until the 1890s Dick Anderson was a prominent local businessman, at one time serving as a director of the First National Bank of Franklin and president of the Eagle Paper Company. He was also, with Charles Harding (who lived at 209 Oxford Road) co-owner of a trotting horse named Nightingale [whose run of success is said to have caused a frenzy of risky betting by local fans, with predictable consequences when the horse was finally defeated in 1893.] Nightingale’s barn, located to the west of the house, was said to have been decorated with curtains. With the horse’s defeat and the failures of Dick Anderson’s businesses as a result of the national Panic of 1893, his fortunes collapsed. The 1900 census shows Anderson (with no occupation), his wife Anna, and their two sons, still living here. The house changed ownership many times until finally being sold to Alice Maloney in 1911. The 1920 census shows John and Alice Maloney, with three children, living here. John Maloney was president of the Franklin Coated Paper Company.