Geneva's Third Street is a major commercial street that runs north-south through the central portion of the city. South of State Street, Third Street features many residences that have been converted to commercial use, now housing specialty retail shops and restaurants. The establishment of an auxiliary commercial corridor along Third Street began in the early 1920s when Kate Raftery opened The Little Traveler in a house built by banker A. B. Moore in 1864. The Third Street Commercial Corridor was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982 as part of the Central Geneva Historic District.