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Sanderson House at 301 Scottholm Boulevard (Syracuse, New York)
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Sanderson House at 301 Scottholm Boulevard (Syracuse, New York) : ウィキペディア英語版
Sanderson House at 301 Scottholm Boulevard (Syracuse, New York)

Sanderson House at 301 Scottholm Boulevard is a Ward Wellington Ward-designed house in Syracuse, New York designed in the British Regency architectural style and built in 1922. The house is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It was listed for its architecture.〔 and (''Accompanying two photos, exterior, from 1996'' )〕
The house was built for Amon F. Sanderson, an officer of the Scottholm Company which developed the Scottholm Tract in 1911. Sanderson also commissioned, for his own residence, Sanderson House at 112 Scottholm Terrace.〔
The Scottholm neighborhood is bounded by Salt Springs Road on the north; Brookford Road and East Avenue on the east; Meadowbrook Drive on the south; and Scottholm Terrace on the west. Scottholm is an affluent neighborhood with unique single‐family homes. The neighborhood is well regarded for its architectural and landscape diversity. Winding boulevards and tree-lined streets feature noteworthy historical revival examples of the Italianate, Georgian Colonial, Dutch Colonial, Federal, Norman French, Spanish, and English Tudor pre-war residential architecture. Scottholm is characterized by its Garden City town planning principles and manicured landscaping.
Development of the area began with creation of Genesee Turnpike, now Genesee Street in the 1830s, but what would become “Scottholm Estates” was sketched out in 1914 and lots were sold beginning in 1915. The survey identifies only about thirty houses as dating from 1915–1925. Most date from the late 1920s and some even from the early 1930s, suggesting the effects of the Depression took a while to by fully felt by Syracuse's white collar professionals who made up a substantial portion of the neighborhood residents.
Scottholm was designed by a landscape architect and planner Arthur C. Comey following the popular ideals for new garden suburbs easily reached by streetcar from urban commercial centers. These new developments, of which Syracuse has several notable examples, are typified by winding streets, mandated setbacks and front yards, organized tree-planting alongside sidewalks, and various protective covenants regarding ownership qualifications. The historic stone gates at the entrances to the Scottholm neighborhood on East Genesee Street remain in place.
Scottholm is eligible for listing on the New York State Historic Registry an designation as a "Local Preservation District", as well as "District" designation on the National Register of Historic Places.
==References==



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