Missing Along Main Street: 305 W. Main — The “White Building”

The Lowell Area Historical Museum presents a new weekly online series. Missing Along Main explores the buildings that once occupied Main Street but are no longer there.

305 West Main — The “White Building”

There once was a two storefront brick building between the Strand Theater and the former Larkins Saloon in the space that is now open.

An 1883 newspaper said that D. L. Sterling would erect a wareroom for agricultural implements just west of McGee’s Grocery. No such building appears on the 1885 Sanborn map but one did appear in 1892.

1892 Sanborn Map

The building was set back from 303 W. Main just to the east. The map said it was a Repository, the term used for agricultural implement storage or sales; it was a one-story building.

Between 1900 and 1910, the building was rebuilt. We know this because in 1910 maps show it was in line with 303 W. Main Street and was a 2-story building labelled as “storage.”

1910 Sanborn Map

This building was called the Condon building. William T. Condon had a business in Lowell from 1892-1895 involving livestock and farm produce. He then left the building for a time. Perhaps he built the second building when he moved his business back into the building in 1908. He sold a strip of land to the Strand Theater in 1937.

Prior to being white, the building to the right of the Strand had a one-story awning type roof over a loading platform, c. 1928. (Postcard image courtesy of Gordon Hubenet)

Webster Bros. Motor Sales was located here in 1929. Managed by Peter Oneill, Webster’s sold Chevrolets and Buicks. They later moved to 508 W. Main.

The barbershop of Burt A. Charles moved into this building in 1936.

Downtown Dairy was owned by Winton Wilcox who moved to this location in 1938 from Riverside Drive.

Downtown Dairy, owned by Winton Wilcox, moved to this location beginning in March 1938 and was here until the mid-1940s. Milk cans were brought to the back of the building along the driveway next to the Strand Theatre. Milk was pasteurized and bottled in this building. When Wilcox’s daughter Joyce rode into town, there was room behind the building for her pony to be tied to the tree.

Evelyn Powell (nickname Blondie) standing across Main Street with the white building in the background, 1947. The Downtown Dairy is on the sign above the front door.

The white building was demolished before 1961 so that McQueen Motor Sales, which was located across Main Street, could use the lot to display Used Vehicles.

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