The three blocks of N. 3rd Street between Center Square and Bushkill Street are largely intact with houses in the variety of fashionable revival styles popular after the Civil War. That of Herman Simon, who owned the world's largest silk, ribbon, and velvet manufacturing plant, at 13th Street across Bushkill Creek, is the grandest. His architect, William Michler, was Easton's leading designer of high-style houses at the turn of the twentieth century. After attending Lafayette College, Michler studied architecture at the
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Herman Simon House
1902, William Michler. 41 N. 3rd St.
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