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God smiles on fools, so they
say. If He does, we must have given Him a good, old-fashioned
belly laugh. We became the proud owners of 'an old, brick farmhouse'
and began do-it-yourself renovating forty-three years ago when
we innocently bought a home we could afford. We weren't caught
up in the restoration rage that swept the country . . . we led
the pack. Long before it became fashionable to go 'country',
we went country. Frankly, we were poor and it was the best we
could afford. To the outside world, we wanted to be different.
And were we ever different. Crazy is what it could have been
called.
We were tired of paying rent,
and many of our friends were buying houses, the nice kind. The
kind that sat on a nice, landscaped lot with other houses just
like it on both sides of the street. Housing developments, dream
homes for young families. We looked, but we really didn't want
what builders called a starter home. With two small children,
we already filled one of those houses, and we didn't feel we
could afford one of them without stretching the budget to the
max. What we really wanted was a house in the country.
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We wanted one house that we could
stay in until our family was grown, so we began to think in terms
of an older home. Never inclined to do things by half-measures,
we decided to look at homes that were at least fifty years old.
Back then, the older the better because it would be cheaper.
Somewhere in the dark recesses of my mind or heart also lurked
an unknown love of old houses, something I wasn't aware of at
the time. I had always enjoyed touring old houses on our vacations
and felt that those places had a unique charm and homey quality
not found in new houses. |
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Little did I know where that was
about to take me. Never did I consider the inconveniences. Never
did it occur to me that water, electricity and telephones weren't
part of life when those houses were built.
And so the search began. We looked
and looked and looked some more. The ones that were for sale
weren't what we had in mind. The ones we wanted weren't for sale.
Then one night I found an ad in the classified section of the
paper. "Older brick house for sale. About fifty years old.
One-acre lot, screened in porch, good school district. Reasonably
priced." It sounded perfect. Just what we wanted. I called
the realtor the next morning, and to my surprise, he offered
to show it to us that evening. Red flags should have gone up.
Most people like at least a day's notice before showing a house
unless they are truly anxious to catch a sucker.
With directions in hand, we set
out to find this gem. Sitting at an intersection, we looked to
our left and saw what had to be the house, an old two-story brick
with four chimneys. One of the most noticeable features was the
television antenna. It leaned strangely to one side. Actually,
it was practically bent double. In spite of that, we turned and
drove to the house. That antenna should have been a warning.
We should have bent the car and gone back the way we came. But
we didn't. There we were, on the threshold of our doom and too
dumb to know it.
The ad was right. It was an old
brick farmhouse. It sat there firm, square and unkempt, waiting
for its victims. Us. We smiled at each other, both hiding what
we might be thinking, took our three-year-old son and nine-month-old
daughter and started up the walk leading to the front of the
house. The redeeming feature of the front yard was the huge old
maple tree just beginning to turn autumn gold. It shaded the
wooden porch and the yard, as well as the entire front of the
house.
As if to forestall any flight
plans we might have had, the realtor appeared. He was a kindly-looking,
fatherly man. I trusted him. Mistake number two. Oh, he wasn't
dishonest. He just didn't offer information beyond what we ask
him. Tragically, we had no idea what kind of questions we should
ply him with. We never thought to ask how old the wiring was,
what kind of a well it had, what kind of heating system, those
simple little details. All we were interested in was the cost
of the house, the taxes and the kind of financing that was available
since the house wouldn't be eligible for VA or FHA loans. It
didn't have city water or sewer connections. Again, cheap was
the operative word.
The kindly old man guided us
in the front door directly into the living room. This room was
papered in early ugly: purple with silver flowers on the walls
and dirty beige on the ceiling. Brown and red flowered curtains
hung in the doorways to the room beside it and the room behind
it. Really went well with the wallpaper. It was at that very
moment sympathy overwhelmed any other emotions I may have had
as well as any sense of judgment.
The house didn't deserve to be
treated as badly as it obviously had been. The floor had been
painted a dark brown and 1930s linoleum graced the center of
the floor. It got worse, not better. The same condition existed
in the room next to the living room. And there was only one closet
in the entire downstairs.
Not all of it was negative. The
walls of the original part of the house, the two front rooms
and the rooms directly above them, were twelve-inch-thick brick.
The windows were original and had the deep windowsills. What
we failed to notice was the lack of storm windows to keep out
the cold air in winter. Just a minor little thing. All of the
original wide-board woodwork was still there, painted in hideous
colors. Each of the main rooms downstairs had its own fireplace,
but they were all boarded shut. It seemed that for every plus,
there was a corresponding minus.
The realtor, not about to let
us spend too much time in any location, hustled us upstairs.
The stairway was wide enough, but kind of steep. A door at the
bottom of the steps closed it off, and it felt rather cool when
he opened the door to take us upstairs. All of the floors were
painted a nasty dark brown, covering wide and random wood flooring
original to the house. We quickly noted three bedrooms, the back
one a step down from the two front ones. At least there was a
fairly good-sized closet in the larger of the two front bedrooms,
or so we thought. And the upstairs hall was big enough to hold
a few pieces of furniture. Everything seemed to be in at least
passable shape, except for the color scheme and the lack of electrical
outlets in some of the rooms. Each room had at least one and
how many did a bedroom need?
Hurrying us on, the realtor thought
we should check the outside before it got too dark. Yeah, sure.
But we followed him back down and through the kitchen where the
family was just finishing their dinner. The kitchen was early
congoleum, a wall covering similar to linoleum, halfway up the
walls. The rest of the walls were painted a dull, pea green,
and the floor didn't seem too level. It seemed to bow up in the
center. The kitchen had two outside doors, a doorway to each
of the two front rooms, and a door leading to the bathroom. One
outside door led to the driveway and the wooden, detached garage
sitting behind the house, the other to a screened porch. When
he took us out the door leading to the garage, we discovered
that the family dog had been hit and killed earlier that day
and was resting in a galvanized washtub awaiting interment. Our
guide quickly directed us to take a look at the yard. What we
saw was the better part of an acre plowed and planted in vegetable
gardens on both sides of the house. Not much yard for children
to play in. There was also an old outhouse sitting at the back
of the property, ready for use if needed.
But the yard did have some nice
features, even if it was apparent that chickens had once used
the garage as their home. An apple tree and a hickory nut tree
shaded the back, and there was enough room for a swing set under
the trees. That was good. Parsnips and carrots still protruded
from the ground making it difficult to walk across the yard.
That was not so good. There was a screened porch on one side,
with a milk house behind it to be used for storage. That was
a good point. What we couldn't see in the growing dusk was the
deteriorated state of the screening, brittle and rusted so that,
we would find out later, cracked easily when touched with any
pressure.
As we finished our tour, the
realtor asked us what we thought. In our youthful naïve
way, we believed that maybe this could be the right one. After
all, it was brick, it did have almost an acre of ground, and
it was in a decent school district. Best of all, we thought we
could afford it, a major factor in our decision. We were totally
unaware of the years of financial investment and deprivation
that we would be facing.
That's when we committed our
third and most lasting mistake. We made an offer slightly lower
than the asking price, but slightly more than we could comfortably
afford, a form of courage embodied only in the young. They accepted
our offer, the bank accepted our loan, and the owners held a
small second mortgage for us. Talk about anxious to unload that
house. When we made our grand announcement, our families and
our friends practically rolled on the floor laughing.
What did we care if they laughed?
We were homeowners. We had eight rooms in various states of disrepair,
a yard that had recently been turned by a plow, our own outhouse,
a myriad of small creatures that called both the yard and the
house home, including twenty-three mice who fought to keep their
residency inside with us during the first winter.
Little did we know the great
adventures that lay ahead of us, the great discoveries we'd make,
like no heat in the upstairs, the closet that wasn't a closet,
frozen water pipe survival techniques, and an old-fashioned dug
well that was only about seventeen feet deep and depended on
ground seepage and was outside so that the pipes were exposed
to the cold.
Yet we embarked on the adventure
full of hope and with a "we can do this" attitude.
We embarked on an excursion into the land of renovation/restoration
without ever getting any advice from Bob Vila, and without realizing
that in a little over eight months we would add another little
boy to the family.
Over the years, now almost a
half-century later, we are still working on this on-going project
that has become as integral part of our family, and the love
affair with the house has lasted and grown stronger over the
years. As with any good relationship, it has only gotten better
and holds more memories, good and bad, that we would never trade
for a new house. We have learned much about old construction,
including how hard it is to level oak beam braced floors and
the difficulty of pounding nails into old concrete-type plaster.
We learned that the original part of the house was constructed
between 1825 and 1835, and successive additions were T-ed behind
it in two separate stages. We have come to understand that part
of our family we call our home, and it has enriched our lives
in many ways and with a warmth only an old house can have. It
has given back infinitely as much, if not more, than we have
given it. |