The House is Ours!
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Front |
If you go back to my post of 9/6/12, you will see the house I have been obsessed with for 10 months. A grand old dame built in the early 1900s, she has just about everything I had been searching for. Character, good bones, huge wrap-around porch, workable floorplan...found on craigslist and priced at $5,000 (to be moved). It took 10 months of thinking, pondering, getting bids, crying, negotiating, and saving...but finally the house is ours! We started out getting bids from house movers, but not only were the bids out of our comfort zone, but on further reflection we decided that taking a different direction would work best for our situation. There are several factors that make moving the house impractical, primarily 1) the land is not accessible and not ready, and we don't have the funds to address that right now, and 2) we also don't have the funds to immediately make the house weather proof (it would lose the roof in the moving process). In addition, it's really unlevel and parts of it are too far gone to save. Mr. D.H. is not too keen on having a roofless, unlevel, partial house, cut into three parts and then "tied" back together. Sooo, he came up with the idea of having it dismantled/deconstructed, cataloged, and stored in the barn on our land until such time as we have both the time and money resources to rebuild it on a new infrastructure. (We plan to rebuild it as an almost exact replica; we may lengthen it by a few feet and slightly reconfigure some interior walls.) This led to a whole different set of bids, with complications along the way which I won't go into, and several months of saving. Ultimately we were pressured by the church that owned the house into pulling the trigger a couple of months earlier than preferred, but finally last week we signed contracts for both the house and dismantling. Now we just have fingers crossed that the process will go smoothly!
Here's a detailed look at what was known as the Chalmers House (I will address the history of the Chalmers family in another post.) Underneath all that 60s-70s paneling and carpet are solid wood shiplap walls, wood ceilings, and wood floors, along with 10-foot ceilings and 6-inch thick walls.
Edited, 11/18/13: I have been in touch with members of the Chalmers family and found out that this house was actually known at the Rector House (Mrs. Chalmers' parents). The Chalmers lived down the street.
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Porch |
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Side Porch |
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Side Front |
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Side |
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Inside Front Door |
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Room Divider into Kitchen |
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Front Right Room |
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Front Right Room into Bath 1 |
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Clawfoot Tub 1 |
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Back of Divider Towards Front Door |
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"Utility" Room |
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Utility Room into Enclosed Back Porch |
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Enclosed Back Porch 1 |
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Enclosed Back Porch 1 into Bedroom |
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Enclosed Back Porch 2 |
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Bedroom |
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Bedroom |
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Clawfoot Tub 2 |