Difference between revisions of "Genesee Valley bluestone"
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== Description == | == Description == | ||
− | A fine-grain, dark, blue-gray [ | + | A fine-grain, dark, blue-gray [[sandstone]] quarried in the Genesee Valley of New York. Genesee Valley bluestone is easily worked and is used for pavers, trim, sills, buildings, and ornamental work. The bluestone quarry near Portageville was operated by the Portageville Bluestone Co (1860-1870), Genesee Valley Bluestone Co. (1894 - ?) and American Bluestone Co (AMBLUCO, 1920s-1960s). |
== Synonyms and Related Terms == | == Synonyms and Related Terms == |
Revision as of 14:24, 15 January 2014
Description
A fine-grain, dark, blue-gray Sandstone quarried in the Genesee Valley of New York. Genesee Valley bluestone is easily worked and is used for pavers, trim, sills, buildings, and ornamental work. The bluestone quarry near Portageville was operated by the Portageville Bluestone Co (1860-1870), Genesee Valley Bluestone Co. (1894 - ?) and American Bluestone Co (AMBLUCO, 1920s-1960s).
Synonyms and Related Terms
Warsaw bluestone; Erie bluestone; American bluestone (AMBLUCO); Portageville bluestone
Authority
- External source or communication Comment: Fred Gamble, submitted information, Oct. 2007
- Dictionary of Building Preservation, Ward Bucher, ed., John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York City, 1996
- Frank A. Lent, Trade names and Descriptions of Marbles, Limestones, Sandstones, Granites and Other Building Stones Quarried in the United States Canada and other Countries., Stone Publishing Co, New York, 1925
- Website address 1 Comment: Stone Magazine Vol XLIV, NO. 9, Sept. 1923 (from Stone Quarries and Beyond, Peggy Perazzo) describes AMBLUCO stone as 'natural bluestone with hard fine quartz'
- External source or communication Comment: Fred Gamble, submitted information, Oct. 2007