George A. Bessellieu House
Contributing, ca. 1920.
Two-story Four Square style house with a hip roof and shed roof dormer. Original weatherboard siding. Attached wraparound porch with paired columns on brick piers. Central chimney has been stuccoed. One-over-one windows; casement in dormer. Door is single light-over-panel. George A. and Ollie B. Bessellieu lived here from 1939 to 1940. Naylor C. Foster, with Foster Poster Advertising Company, occupied the house from 1941 to 1946. M. Pascal, lived here from 1948 to at least 1951. Helen S. Pascal was a secretary at the Chamber of Commerce.
(Sanborn maps, city directories)
Raymond C. Staton House
Contributing, 1913.
One-and-one-half-story bungalow with a side gable roof, knee braces, and a shed roof dormer. Shingle siding of varying sizes. Recessed entry in front center bay. Exterior end chimney. Three-vertical-over-one and casement windows. Modern door. Raymond and Virginia Staton, with Staton Insurance and Realty Company, lived here from 1937 to at least 1951.
(Sanborn maps, city directories, owner)
Fifth Avenue Clinic
Non-contributing, ca. 1952.
One-story plus basement modern building with a side gable roof and central portico. Brick veneer. Two interior brick chimneys. Six-over-six windows and modern doors. Vinyl siding on columns. According to the Sanborn maps, this building appears to have originally been part of the Curtis House at 731 Fourth Avenue West (#172). Built as the Fifth Avenue Clinic, ca. 1952. Dr. Richard A. Porter, Dr. Fred O. Trotter, Dr. Lester B. McDonald, Dr. Charles R. Deeds, and Dr. Joe G. Crowell were some of the first occupants. By 1954, the Fifth Avenue Laboratory occupied a portion of the building. This was one of the first medical office buildings constructed away from the hospital.
(Sanborn maps, city directories, owner)
Mark A. Kollack House
Contributing, ca. 1920.
One-and-one-half-story bungalow with a front gable roof and shallow front gable roof over porch. Asbestos walls. Attached wraparound front porch with bungaloid details. Exterior end brick chimney with a stepped shoulder on the east. Eight-over-one windows and multi-light door. Mark A. Kollack lived here by 1926 through 1943. George S. and Harriet Dixon, of Skyland Cleaners and Laundry, lived here from 1944 to 1945. Lawrence B. and Louise B. Prince lived here from 1948 to at least 1951. Prince was a lawyer.
(Sanborn maps, city directories)
Office Building
Non-contributing, 1970s.
One-story modern office building with a side gable roof, stone veneer and masonite walls, and a covered entry. Six-over-six windows, modern door. Large lot, set way back from street. This building replaces an earlier structure known as the Conner House and later the Fifth Avenue Hotel, on the same lot.
(Sanborn maps, city directories)