Hoffman Building | |
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![]() The Hoffman Building in 1897, containing two ground-level stores: Adams & Fairchild grocers on the left, and P. H. Hoffman & Son clothiers on the right | |
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General information | |
Location | Morristown, New Jersey |
Address | 20 North Park Place |
Completed | c. 1890s |
Demolished | c. 1960s |
Owner | Philip H. Hoffman |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | John T. Allen |
The Hoffman Building, also known as The Arnold, [1] was a Morristown, New Jersey structure completed before 1896. [2] [3]
Located across the street from the Morristown Green, the three-story building housed retail and rental properties, [4] [3] most notably Adams & Fairchild grocers and P. H. Hoffman & Son clothiers. It was commissioned by Philip H. Hoffman, [4] [3] and its carpenter was John T. Allen. [3]
The inscription above the entrance hall read "The Arnold," [2] [1] in homage to the Arnold's Tavern, the historic building moved to accommodate it.
It was demolished some time before the 1960s to make room for the Reynolds & Co building, [5] in which a Charles Schwab location now stands. [6]
The three-story building appeared to have two Dutch neck gables on either side, creating a symmetrical exterior that may recall the Western-style false front and Mission Revival architecture. The second floor's windows have arched pediments.
In 1849, Philip H. Hoffman established men's clothing store and tailoring shop P. H. Hoffman & Son. [2]
By 1882, [7] the Clothiers operated out of the historic Arnold's Tavern which also housed Adams & Fairchild Groceries [8] [9] and the jewelry store of F. J. Crowell [7] as well as apartments. Circa 1882, Philip H. Hoffman owned the building, [7] along with Hampton O. Marsh. [4] In the spring of 1886, after Marsh's death, Hoffman "decided to remove the old building, and [erect] in its stead [the] Hoffman Building." [4] [3]
The Tavern's demolition was prevented by Morristown historian and lecturer Julia Keese Colles. [10] [11] To preserve the building, Colles arranged to move the building from the Morristown Green to her estate on Mount Kemble Avenue. [11]
Some time before 1896, the building was completed. That year, former tenants Adams & Fairchild Grocers moved in and advertised their relocation back to 20 North Park Place. [3] In 1899, D. Kantor photographed the Hoffman Building. [12]
As of 1904, the building was residential; a groom's family celebrated his wedding breakfast at his Hoffman Building home. [13] That year, Sidney A. Baldwin, organist and musical director of the Morristown Church of the Redeemer, had her studio where she taught pianoforte in the Hoffman Building. [14] Circa October 1910, Morristown resident Arthur Day had his bike stolen from the hall of the Hoffman Building. [15] The Hoffman Building was still standing by 1923, when it housed Morristown Typewriter Service, a typewriter business by M. J. Conroy. [16]
By the 1960s, the building and its two neighboring buildings on the left had been demolished; the source provides a photograph of the street for view. [5] The Hoffman building and its two neighboring structures to the left became the site of the minimalist brick Reynolds & Co building, which circa 1960 housed the Jodo Gift Shop, S. S. Kresge Company, and Rogers Clothing. [5]
By 2022, the Reynolds & Co building had become a Charles Schwab location. [6]