An article which appeared in the
December 31, 1922 issue of the Sandusky
Register stated that to William T. West and Abel K. West, “Sandusky is indebted for its first
boulevard, its first cement pavement, the first open front store, the first
mansard roof, even its first mahogany chairs.” W.T. and A. K. West operated
a general store in Sandusky in the 1840s. Theirs was the only store that
remained open during Sandusky’s cholera epidemic in 1849. The West brothers
were the owners of the West House Hotel which was opened to the public in 1858. At one time the West House was the largest hotel between Cleveland and Toledo. It was five stories high, and was located at the corner of Columbus Avenue and Water Street, in downtown Sandusky. It was open in time to accommodate the crowds who came to the Ohio State Fair, hosted in Sandusky in 1858.
William T. West became a resident of Sandusky quite
by accident. In 1837, he planned to go from Buffalo to Detroit. He stayed
overnight in Sandusky, Ohio. In the morning the hotel keeper forgot to waken
him. When he woke up, his ship had already left. He threw himself into the water, and swam
after the vessel. After it was determined that his baggage had stayed in
Sandusky, he returned to Sandusky and settled here. During the Civil War,
William T. West and a partner, Philander Gregg, received a contract to build
prison buildings and officers’ quarters at the prison on Johnson’s Island.
Because the proximity of the West House to the confederate prison at Johnson's
Island, the hotel was almost always filled to capacity during the Civil War.
Government officials who had dealings with the prison often stayed overnight at
the West House after taking care of war business during the daytime.
William T. West and Abel K. West were
key individuals in Sandusky’s early days. Abel K. West died on April 16, 1880.
William T. West died at the West House on June 13, 1899. His obituary in the
Firelands Pioneer stated that the greater part of William T. West’s eighty-four
years “were devoted to business and the
erection of buildings in the city of Sandusky.”
2 comments:
Typo - William T West died in 1899, not 1809
Thanks for catching that.
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