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A Great Neighborhood for Over 150 Years

The South Fountain Historic District is significant as the largest, intact concentration of high-style late 19th and early 20th century homes in Springfield and as the embodiment of the growth of the upper middle class and the prosperity of the industrial and business leaders who populated the neighborhood. Their economic success, during a period of intense industrial growth in Springfield, is reflected in the many distinctive homes in the area. Included are excellent examples of the transitional Greek Revival-Italianate, Gothic Revival, Italianate, Second Empire, Eastlake porches, Queen Anne, Colonial Revival, along with a number of more typical turn of the century housing. Several handsome churches, small commercial buildings and a fire station are the only non-residential buildings which are original to the area.

 A number of important business and industry leaders lived along South Fountain -especially those associated with two of the earliest and most successful early industries, the James Leffel Co. and Whitely, Fassler & Kelly (later became the Champion Co.) Warren Leffel, son of the founder lived at 7O4 and Francis Bookwalter, Vice-President and Treasurer lived at 611. Amos Whitely. a founder lived at 509, William Whitely at 1103, Oliver S. Kelly. a founder lived at 403, his son Oliver W. Kelly lived at 621 and Robert Johnson, Secretary lived at 429. Other important residents included Andrew Black, a dry goods merchant who built Black’s Opera House (353 S. Fountain), William Bayley, owner of the William Bayley Co. (521 S. Fountain), James Johnson Jr., leading attorney and mayor in 1895 (563 S. Fountain), Hector Urquhart, owner and president of the Springfield Baking Co. (1025 S. Fountain) and Edward W. Simpson, Fire Chief from 1885-1904 and owner of Simpson Lumber Co. (705 S. Fountain).