Publication and year unknown
The meaning of the term "livery" has changed with the development of the automobile. At the start of the twentieth century, a livery was a place where a horse and wagon or a coach and coachman might be hired. The Sanborn maps of 1916 and earlier show stables behind most buildings; by the 1945 maps, they are gone.
Several liveries developed into related businesses. Maddens turned into a moving and storage company; Latour's sold feed and grain, and then added firewood, coal, fuel oil and even groceries and automobiles.
As the automobile replaced the horse, a livery came to mean a cab stand, and a livery man became a cabby. Livery men, of both kinds, in Saranac Lake included
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Giles Bombard on the corner of Main Street and Broadway
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Brown's Livery at 7 Olive Street, later on Woodruff Street
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Buckley's Livery at the Grand Union
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Dan Cotter had liveries the Wawbeek and at the Hiawatha Lodge
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Merton Drury at the Riverside Inn
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Mike Egan at the Empire Hotel
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Fowler's Livery at 2 Broadway
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Greenough's Livery near the Hotel Ampersand
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Richard Johnson on Main Street, behind the Cutler Building
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Edward LaBounty at 25-27 Woodruff Street
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J.A. Latour (or Latour and Brown's) on Broadway
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Ryan's Livery at 39 Main Street
And how did people get around in the winter? Giant snow rollers packed the snow so that horses didn't founder in deep drifts. Adirondack Daily Enterprise, January 19, 2013.
Sources:
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Adirondack Daily Enterprise, November 3, 1954, "Our Town"


