
When this house rose on East Utica Street in 1866, Oswego was one of the busiest freshwater ports in America — grain schooners crowding the harbor, the canal heavy with trade, and the streets east of the river filling with the sturdy, graceful homes of the people who made the city run.
This one belonged to Charles Linsley, Oswego's respected City Engineer, and his wife Grace — daughter of David Long, founder of the Oswego Candy Works. A city builder and a candy maker's daughter: it's hard to imagine a more Oswego pairing, and the house they made reflects both — engineered to last, built to delight.
A century and a half later, The Linsley House has been restored with a preservationist's respect and a host's practicality: the Greek Revival grace and Italianate flair kept intact, the comforts thoroughly modern, nothing flattened into "renovated grey." Staying here isn't a museum visit — it's what the house was always for. People, gathered comfortably, in rooms built to last.
We're Brian and Troy, the stewards of this place, and we'd love to have you.

