Conklin Mountain House

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Location304 E. State St., Olean, New York
Coordinates42°4′38″N 78°25′33″W / 42.07722°N 78.42583°W / 42.07722; -78.42583
ArchitectConklin, William C. and Dewitt
ArchitecturalstyleSecond Empire
Conklin Mountain House
Conklin Mountain House, September 2016
Conklin Mountain House is located in New York
Conklin Mountain House
Conklin Mountain House is located in the United States
Conklin Mountain House
Location304 E. State St., Olean, New York
Coordinates42°4′38″N 78°25′33″W / 42.07722°N 78.42583°W / 42.07722; -78.42583
ArchitectConklin, William C. and Dewitt
Architectural styleSecond Empire
NRHP reference No.98001386[1]
Added to NRHPNovember 19, 1998

Conklin Mountain House is a historic home located at Olean in Cattaraugus County, New York. The above ground portion of the main house is a 4,500 sq. ft Second Empire style wood frame dwelling built in 1886. The front facade features a three-story tower with mansard roof and a wraparound porch. The exterior of the home features extensive overhanging eaves, decorative brackets and balustrades. The house sits on top of a 2,000 sq. ft full-height stone basement. The property also includes a 1,600 sq. ft two-story carriage house.

The interior features elaborate and extensive woodwork, quarter-sawn oak floors throughout the house, one of the longest cantilevered staircases on the East Coast of the United States, a large and ornate antique Eastlake-style chandelier in the dining room, and the only known existing installation of M.H. Birge & Sons block-printed peacock wallpaper ca. 1915. The home was constructed by the owners of Conklin Wagon Works, one of Olean's most important industries in the late 19th century. It was subsequently owned by the Mountain family, who operated the Mountain Clinic Infirmary, and is currently an owner-occupied single family residence not open to the public. On the morning of October 8, 2023 the house caught fire, resulting in the residents being displaced and a total loss of the historic interiors.[2]

It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1998.[1]

The home caught fire the morning of October 8, 2023, and subsequently demolished in 2025.

The home was built in 1886 by William H. Conklin. Mr. Conklin was born on December 21, 1811, in Greenfield, Saratoga County, New York. In 1860 he moved his wagon-making business to Olean; the famous Conklin Wagon Works. It became one of Olean's most important industries at that time, eventually growing to employ 50 skilled laborers with an output of 2000 wagons per year. The wagon works was located closer to the Allegheny River than the house itself, which sits some 600 feet away. This was for purposes of using the river systems for transportation of materials and completed wagons.

First Floor

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