In the early 1880s, the younger Taft brothers William Howard (Will) and Horace shared an apartment on Broadway, a short walk from Pike Street. They spent much time at Charley and Annie’s home, where they often dined and received guidance. During this time, the Taft brothers’ parents Alphonso and Louise Taft were living in Europe while Alphonso served on diplomatic missions under President Chester A. Arthur.
Will, the future president, began courting Helen (Nellie) Herron, who lived across the street from Charley and Annie. Nellie hosted regular Saturday night “salons,” which Will eagerly attended. Annie also organized many social gatherings, including amusing theatrical productions in which Will, Nellie, and other friends performed. Nellie remembered Pike Street as “a block of grey brick houses . . . the fashionable residence of the city. . . . [The street] runs down to the river on a rather steep incline and, as it was paved with cobblestones, my early memories are somewhat marred by an impression of the frequent clatter and clang of heavy wagons pulling their way up the hill from the river landing.” She described the two homes across from hers as “striking and imposing residences which lent distinction to the neighborhood, and in which, as I grew up, were formed the pleasantest associations of my life.”
In 1884, a major flood devastated the city. On February 14, the Ohio River crested at the unprecedented 71 feet and 3/4 inch, rising to just one block below Third and Pike streets. Because the gasworks were flooded, the city—then lit by gaslights—was plunged into darkness.