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Subject: Re: A blast from the past


Author:
Boyd Percy
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Date Posted: 14:51:24 05/06/14 Tue
In reply to: Wes 's message, "A blast from the past" on 12:57:26 05/06/14 Tue

>Another column lifted from the paper:
>
>------------------
>
>A friend is looking for a new home that meets several
>specific criteria, one of which includes space for a
>large horse. It so happens that one of the houses she
>was interested in happened to be the one I was more or
>less brought up in -- my grandparents' house, in fact.
>I lived there until I was nine, and was in and out of
>the place until I was seventeen, so I have a lot of
>memories of it.
>
>I hadn't been in the house since I was seventeen --
>fifty years ago -- so when I was asked if I would like
>to go along on the showing, I didn't turn down the
>opportunity, just to see how much had changed, and how
>much I remembered.
>
>Now, this is an old farmhouse. Part of it was built in
>the 1840s, and the newer section is, at my guess,
>still over a hundred years old. If I recall correctly,
>my great-grandparents bought the place in 1912.
>
>Much had changed, of course, but much was the same as
>I remembered it, and I was surprised at how much I
>remembered.
>
>For instance, being that the house was built in
>sections separated by more than half a century, the
>basement was also in two sections. The realtor leading
>the way led the group of us into the lower section,
>and couldn't find a light switch. He was feeling all
>over in the dark, when all of a sudden a memory from
>half a century before came to me -- for some reason,
>who knows why, the light switch to that section was at
>the top of the stairs. I quickly went up and found the
>switch, amazed that I'd remembered such a mundane
>thing at all after all the years that had passed. Why
>had that memory lingered unused for so long?
>
>Some of the house had been modernized -- and some
>hadn't. I was not very surprised to discover that the
>linoleum on the floor of one bedroom was the same as I
>remembered from my youth -- and it wasn't new then,
>either. The pattern was archaic, and I wouldn't be
>surprised if it had been laying there for a century.
>Needless to say, while I wasn't up to date on the
>changes that had taken place in the half century since
>I'd been there, there was much that hadn't changed.
>
>The kitchen, for instance, was much the same as I
>remembered -- the same cabinets, and pretty much the
>same layout of appliances. It didn't take much to
>think back to many of the family dinners I remembered
>there as a kid, with many relatives around. Most of
>them are gone now, but they remain fond in my memory.
>The kitchen was really the center of the house, the
>meeting place, the common room, and the place I
>remember most fondly.
>
>Hanging from a rail at the peak of the barn was the
>old pully arrangement that my great-grandfather had
>once used to get hay up to the hay mow, still in the
>same place I remembered. I never saw it in use; it had
>been abandoned before I came on the scene. It most
>likely had been hanging there like that since before
>World War II, and has likely never been touched in all
>that time. I always thought it would have been fun to
>see it in action, with a horse or two providing the
>motive power to life the hay, but I never did.
>
>I don't know if our friend is going to wind up buying
>the house, or what. It would be nice if she did, but
>there are other things she has to be concerned about.
>In any case, I really enjoyed going through the house,
>touching the past, and discovering some of the things
>I remembered from my youth. I guess what I can draw
>out of that is that many things can change in half a
>century -- but many things don't.
>
>In a way it's sad to think that those days are gone,
>for those days represent a time when my life lay
>before me, instead of largely behind me. But still, it
>was a blast from the past that touched me more than I
>would have believed.


Thanks for sharing your column with us. I assume you don't live too far away from your grandparent's house. I live a good distance from both of mine and don't know if they are still standing. I'll have to ask my two surviving aunts about that. Did you you base the Gravengood's stone farmhouse on your recollection of your grandparent's old house?

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Replies:
[> [> Subject: Re: A blast from the past


Author:
Wes
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Date Posted: 20:06:58 05/06/14 Tue

The old farmhouse is not far away. However the Gravengood house is based on one I used to see along the road several hundred miles from here, and I thought it would have a lot of possibilities for restoration. I haven't been in that neck of the woods in years and don't know if it's still standing.

>Thanks for sharing your column with us. I assume you
>don't live too far away from your grandparent's house.
>I live a good distance from both of mine and don't
>know if they are still standing. I'll have to ask my
>two surviving aunts about that. Did you you base the
>Gravengood's stone farmhouse on your recollection of
>your grandparent's old house?
[> [> [> Subject: Re: A blast from the past


Author:
bytemangler
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Date Posted: 22:32:15 05/08/14 Thu

Sounds like you have stumbled into what I like to call 'architectural archeology' - going into an old house and dating things [and subsequent remodeling projects] by the building structure [beams and timbers, etc.] as well as stuff like knob and tube electric wiring [for example] or plumbing stuff.

Different in this case because of your personal memories of the house, but still relevant.


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