Name: The Coddington Billings Williams House
Address: 1304 North Salina and 303 Court Streets
Constructed: 1834

This house has been trorourhly built over and it is therefore difficult to say much about it. The pediment pictured is almost the sole remnant, but a remnant worthy of mention. From a pure, exactly Greek standpoint, this is the nearest we have come to perfection. Chief credit is due to the mutules lining the corona, or projecting part of the pediment, which were definite characteristics of fifth century B.C. construction. This is their first appearance in the survey and they will be found hereafter until lost in the mists of Victorian brackets. Also noteworthy here are the flush clapboards in the pediment, although the half moon window is more pronounced. It may or may not be a later addition but it seems logical to assume that the Adam oval has been merely out in half. This half-moon form is also to be noted in the structure following.

Mr. Coddington Williams, a prominant salt merchant of Salina village, built the house and here died in 1881.