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Well I tell ya after this many years doing this house I feel very old:D Well with 5 bedrooms in the winter even with all that work done it still cost me $500 a month to heat and that is with the upstairs heat turned off!!:eek: So when the kiddos move out completely (21,20,19,19) I will for sure sell it for something smaller on the inside and much more land on the outside:D |
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It is our goal to bring it back to it's early glory :) But with the modern conveniences of today (ac/heater, appliances, wiring etc). |
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I bought this house from my parents (I grew up here) and they bought it from their parents. Prior to that it was in the neighbors family for 2 generations...and old man Trask built it. So not bad for that long and just 2 families... |
Our house was built in 1536. The date's etched in the stone lintel over the door. |
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I've always wanted to own a castle in Ireland. Is that weird? LOL. |
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1 Attachment(s) I just saw this thread! In April we bought a 1909 (or 1918? there were two listings with two different years listed) 2.5 storey farmhouse. Luckily for us, in 1997 it had been gutted, moved into town from a farm yard, put on a new foundation, and had a main floor addition and double car attached garage built! They totally re-did all of the electrical, plumbing, drywall, siding, windows, etc. while still keeping the old features like doors, frames, stairs, banisters, and all original fir floors (not redone, just filled with character!) It's aboslutely beautiful and my dream house. We had to move 20 minutes out of the city where we work, but I'm a small town girl to begin with and I couldn't pass up the house... our realtor even told us if that same house was IN the city, it would be worth at least 1.2 MILLION :eek::eek::eek: Needless to say, we paid SUBSTANTIALLY less than that lol! But being only 20 minutes out, and both working in the engineering field and knowing our city is expanding that direction, we're sure we made a pretty good investment :D The neat thing about our house is that it's an Eaton's catalogue house. Eaton's was a huge Canadian company back in the day (bought out by Sears in the 90's) and the only way farmers shopped was through their Eaton's catalogue for clothing, household items, farm equipment, etc. And yes, they could even order houses. The blueprints and all materials needed to build the house were delivered by train. Cool, right? We have an expert on these homes right in our city and he's wrote a book on them, so we're going to contact him and see if he can give us a copy of the original blueprints, if he can figure out which design it is. I don't have any pictures here at work but I stole this one from my facebook :) I kind of hate the white siding and it is so hard to keep clean, but it's going to last for a long time so I'll deal with it lol! |
Wow Lindsey, your house is beautiful :) that's so cool that your house was moved... We have thought about having out house moved a little more out in the country to a nicer area. I just wonder how much it would cost? |
Anybody have anymore pictures of their homes? I swear I could look at old houses all day :p Maybe I need to find a forum for this! I will post more pics of our house tonight when I get home from work:) |
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If I have some time in the next few days I might find some pictures of the interior of our house! It's still a work in progress though! |
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I took some interior pictures before Christmas so I'll post a few year... ignore the Christmas decor ;) In 1&2 you can kind of see the pillars to the living room. In the dining room picture, the large doorframe has beautiful original pocket doors. This was the "parlour". The last picture is a photo we have on the wall that the previous owners had left.. it was the house in all it's original glory! |
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