12th Street

From Historic Wheeling
Revision as of 16:59, 10 April 2018 by Api (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<div id="content_view" class="wiki" style="display: block"><div id="toc"> =Table of Contents= <div style="margin-left: 2em">[#x-Street Scenes Street Scenes]</div><div style=...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search

Table of Contents

[#x-Street Scenes Street Scenes]
[#x-21 12th St: National Exchange Bank 21 12th St: National Exchange Bank]
[#x-Even Numbers Even Numbers]
[#x-30-12th St 30-12th St]
[#x-32-12th St - Bank of the Ohio Valley 32-12th St - Bank of the Ohio Valley]
[#x-80 12th St 80 12th St]
[#x-100 12th St 100 12th St]

Street Scenes

12thSt-c1900-800.jpg
Looking E from Main St, circa 1900? Building on left corner was National Exchange Bank (currently United Bank). Chuck Julian postcard collection
12thStfrom Main 2004.jpg
12th St as seen from Market, 1904.(from Ohio County Public Library Flickr stream)
12thSt-W-800.jpg
Looking W about 1953 based on the cars. Tall yellowish building is [/Main%20St%20-%201200%2C%20odd%20numbers National Bank of West Virginia] on 12th and Main streets. Chuck Julian postcard collection

Odd Numbers

21 12th St: National Exchange Bank

NatlExchangeBank-1916PM.jpgNatlExchangeBank.jpg
From Chuck Julian postcard collection, dated 1916 (left). The card on the right appears to be from an earlier time than the one of the left
postmarked in 1916. The left card has two more stories and a monumental Roman entrance with massive columns. This massive entrance
no longer exists, and the normal facade continued across the 112th Street side, with the main entrance shifted to Main Street. Sad.

The structure stands 144 feet and eight inches in height, with a frontage of 47 feet on Twelfth street and 70 feet on Main street. The lower
portion is waterproof to the highest flood line... The building outside of the bank contains 67 office rooms, all well lighted. All doors in the
building open outward, leading to the halls, and everything is of mahogany finish. The building is constructed of re-enforced concrete and is
thoroughly fireproof and waterproof. The outside, fronting on Twelfth and Main streets, is of terra cotta, plain and glazed, while on the west
and south sides it is of faced brick. It sits upon a solid granite foundation.
This description is from a 1915 newspaper article available on the Ohio County Public Library website.

Here is a complete listing of all currency printed by the National Exchange Bank of Wheeling.

75-12thSt500pi.jpg

77-12thSt500pi.jpg

12thSt-Garage2-800.jpg

83-12thSt500pi.jpg

93-12th600.jpg

99&97-12th600.jpg

101-12th-600.jpg

[/75%2012th%20St%20-%20Russell%20House 75 12th St - Russell House]

[/77%2012th%20St 77 12th St]

[/79-81%2012th%20St 79-81 12th St]

[/83%2012th%20St 83 12th St]

[/93%2012th%20St 93 12th St]

[/95%20%26%2097%2012th%20St 95 & 97 12th St]

[/101%2012th%20St 101 12th St]


Even Numbers

30-12th St

Built 1945. Art deco style.
Former Union Federal Savings and Loan, now used as offices.
Offered for $325,000 in 2012, and now $200,00 in 2014.

32-12th St - Bank of the Ohio Valley

PekingGardenBldsm.jpg

Built 1890 (or 1906?); previously Peking Restaurant, built as Bank of the Ohio Valley (became part of Wesbanco in 1933). Red and black paint orientalizes former bank facade. Restaurant closed many years ago. In 2015, Interior dry and ready for reuse but significant effort required.


80 12th St

Board of Trade and Court Theater

80-12thSt-BdTrade500pi.jpg

[/80%2012th%20St 80 12th St]

Click on the address for a larger view - and space to add comments about each building.

100 12th St

Paxton House
This Romano-Tuscan house was built c 1852 by James W.Paxton, a slaveholder but also an ardent Union man. He was a member of the
May 1861 convention, which opposed the secession of Virginia, and a member of the June convention, which created the Reorganized
Government of Virginia. According to legend, next door neighbor A. Wilson Kelly, made ammunition for the Confederacy. Subsequent owners
of 100 12th Street included three generations of doctors named Robert Reed. From Friends of Wheeling meeting announcement for Nov 12, 2009.


This page has been edited 15 times. The last modification was made by - tychocrater tychocrater on May 13, 2015 1:42 pm