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Moving - Easton, Pennsylvania
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Please enjoy this brief history of Easton. PA. We hope to
hear from you.
A Brief History of Easton, Pennsylvania
The Lafayette Inn
The elegant mansion which is now The
Lafayette Inn was built as an investment property by
Elizabeth Wagner Leary in 1895. The land was part of the
Wagner farm owned by one of the families that helped settle
Easton three generations earlier in the mid 1700s.
By the late 19th century, development of College Hill was
booming and the former Wagner farm properties on the west
side of Cattell St. were very desirable. As a former winding
country road, Cattell St. became the main thoroughfare from
the north to downtown Easton. It was widened during the
summer of 1885 and in 1890 was the route of Easton's first
trolley.
The first known tenant and eventually the owner of 510
Cattell St. was George Elder (1862-1930), superintendent of
Ingersoll Iron Works later the Ingersoll Rand Co. The Elder
family renovated and enlarged the house around 1917, and
owned it for another twenty years.
George Elder died in 1930 and his will bequeathed the
contents of the home to his married daughter Emily Fillmore
and her husband Theodore. According to the Bureau of Wills,
the first floor had living and dining rooms, a sun parlor,
kitchen, library, and a card room in the basement. On the
second floor were four bedrooms and a den. The third floor
had two bedrooms and attic space.
The Depression of 1929 must have hurt the Fillmores
financially and the building was carved into smaller
apartments.
In 1937 it was sold at a Sheriff's sale and over the next
two decades changed hands several times.
In 1958 it was purchased by the Sigma Chapter of Pi Lambda
Phi, a Lafayette fraternity. During the 1970s, the
fraternity itself declined and by 1980, it had disbanded and
the once grand house was left vacant.
Early in 1986, a local builder and a group of architects,
recognizing the abandoned building's beautiful proportions
and potential, purchased and renovated the property. Less
than one year (and nearly one million dollars later), on
December 19, 1986, the completely refurbished mansion, now
The Lafayette Inn, opened its doors.

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