Siding

The siding project is beginning. 

A neighbor stopped by and expressed sadness that we were removing the old siding. We would love to just have it scraped and painted but after many years of neglect, unfortunately, it is shot. There is water running down the walls on the inside and it is damaging the plaster in several rooms. When it rains out, it rains in our parlor.  Time to start anew. 

We are going with Hardi-plank, which is a cement fiberboard warranted for 50 years. It comes preprinted and we chose the closest color they had to what is there now – Boothbay Blue. 

The stripping is just beginning. 


Oh and we removed the “dog house” – the portico that was covering the beautiful front door entrance. It looks so much nicer without it!


Today’s treasure

While sorting through old books today I opened a book entitled , “Newburyport’s Rufus Sargent, An Architect Rediscovered” by Betsy H. Woodman, and saw it was signed and inscribed to the previous owners and included, “thanks for the loan of the photo!”

hmmm what photo.

Flipping through, I found an amazing photo from just after the fire in 1894 !! In addition, she describes the history of the original build and some of the rebuild. What a find!!!

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So my Dad was right, the roof is definitely turn-of-the-century construction, since we can see here that originally there was no 3rd floor.  He could tell by the rough hewn beams and sawdust insulation in the attic

 

Sorting

Sorting through treasures and trash.

Getting to “know” the prior owners through the task.

Antiques, clocks, pilot, glass, lamps, dolls, ballet, plants

Today I am beginning to tackle the third floor…

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UPDATE:

2 days later, here we are.  Don’t worry, I saved the “interesting” stuff and consolidated it with the other 3rd floor items in the ballet studio. 


Leaded Glass

Hand to heart, “Wow, look at that leaded glass”.

This is when I fell in love with 112 High St.

On a whim I had looked on zillow.com to see what was available in Newburyport.  For years it has been my dream to live there.  On our last visit we had dubbed it “Nantucket on the mainland”.

A couple of days later we decided to spend Saturday visiting the area- a much needed February mini-vaca.  My sweetie said, “hey how about I call to view that house we saw online, why not?”.  Robin, the real estate agent warned us, it needs a LOT of work.

She was right.  But it has lovely bones.  Ten foot ceilings, crown moulding, lots of fireplaces, a great layout with potential to update without changing too much.  And a dumbwaiter! I was imagining the servants, cooking at the wood stove in the basement “summer kitchen” so they didn’t heat the house, and sending the food up to be served in the 1st floor dining room. Who were they, what were their lives like?  Andie will love it.  I hope.

After some more research and the enthusiastic nod from our real estate agent we took the plunge and made an offer.  So very excited at the thought of this becoming our home.