Monday, June 8, 2015

...old homes & pieces of history...



“Old places have soul”
~ Sarah Anderson

I adore walking around town especially to look at the old houses. I often take pictures of yard decorations, flora or fauna. And, I love finding out the history of the homes.

Last year I picked up the Ashland & Hanover County, VA Self-Guided Tour map and learned a bit about the MacMurdo House. This is a Greek Revival house built in 1858.

During the Civil War, the owner C. W. Macmurdo, who was the treasurer for the RF&P (Richmond, Fredericksburg, and Potomac Railroad), had daughters and the family hosted elaborate balls for townspeople and the Confederate troops which seems so odd considering that a war was going on. In 1862 before the Sevem-Days battle, Confederate General Stonewall Jackson stayed overnight in this home.
I’ve been thinking about this home because it’s for sale.


Built by Cunningham Waldrop MacMurdo, the Secm-Treasurer of the RF&P Railroad, this landmark Greek Revival house with its sweeping staircase sits on a double corner lot in picturesque Ashland overlooking the railroad tracks. Famed Confederate Gen. Stonewall Jackson stayed at the house in 1862, where he met with key CSA officers prior to the Seven Days Battle. The house has 4 bedrooms, 3 full baths, 8 fireplaces, a one-car garage and garden house. Much original fabric remains including random width heart pine floors. The first floor has four generously proportioned rooms each with fireplace and grand center hall opening to a rear verandah. The parlor opens to the library with extensive built-in shelving. Off the dining is a kitchen with fireplace and exposed brick. A full bath, laundry and large utility are in an adjoining ell. Upstairs are two full baths and four bedrooms, including master with en suite bath and newly renovated dressing room. The double lot is extensively landscaped with a fish pond and irrigated garden. Perfect for gardeners or history buffs, this property is beautifully maintained and well located in the center of the Center of the Universe.

I track local homes on Zillow because my fella and I are hoping to buy a home (hopefully a historic home) in the town in the somewhat near future. But this leads back to my memory of my favorite house, and oddly enough one that can still be seen on Google Maps.  Sigh. Isn’t the internet its own kind of cemetery?

As I noted, I take pictures. Here’s a picture from June 25, 2013 during my 6am walk...there is a woodpecker at the top of what seems like a tin roof. I loved this old abandoned house so much and wished every walk that I could restore it.
I loved that window!

Unlike other homes that I walk by and document, this one didn’t have much historic significance. There was just something about the energy that always made me excited.

On June 29, 2013, I took more pictures of the house and did some research because I really thought that if I could work out my finances I could buy this 1906 Stucco Colonial style house of 2,400 sqft on the corner of Duncan & Race Course (201 Race Course Street) even though the tax records had it valued at $218,000. From my pictures, I write, “I am IN LOVE with this house and whisper that every time I walk by.”

On July 11, 2013 when I was going for my morning walk, I stumbled upon the house being torn down. I cried. Neighbors said the owners wanted no part of any of it-- not the tin roof, not the spiderweb window over the door. The wife had apparently passed in 2011.







The lot just days after the house was torn down. How poignant for an old chair to be facing where the house had been.
Today the lot is still listed for sale at $189,000. I rarely walk down that street. I walk around it and hope to avoid what once was there.

10 comments:

  1. What a waste! Thinking about it makes me want to cry.

    It's a shame that the family didn't think to contract with someone to salvage the unique bits of the house before they had it demolished. I think of it as the architectural version of organ donation. The house is gone, but the useful parts could have had another life ... I guess that's why I'm such a sap for reuse of salvaged materials ... their soul comes along to the new project and adds character.

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    1. My feeling from the neighbor was that they were the *kids* who had watched their parents pass and saw the place as full of sadness and lost childhood memories... but maybe I'm just being romantic about it.

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  2. Wow, I didn't realize it had been torn down. How sad.

    If you are interested in architectural salvage, you should visit Caravati's in Richmond. They purchase from old homes like this, and resell. (At a pretty price).

    caravatis.com

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    1. Umm, thanks for the tip although I'm not sure my wallet will appreciate it :p Just fell down a hole of their pictures on their Facebook page. That's some good stuff!

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  3. I sympathize! This has happened to me several times. The most wounding was the loss of the old farmhouse we lived in, in South Dakota, where my oldest daughter spent her first year. It was a magnificent old mansion of a place and a real blow to go visit and find it gone and the gates locked. I hope someone saved the beautiful oak paneling....

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    1. Sigh. That's even worse! At least I never lived in this house.

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  4. That is sad! Such a beautiful house!!! And so much history!

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  5. There is an old house I used to like a few ks from where I grew up with a pentagonal room at the front, all white, very much American style, not Australia, I loved that house, first interesting style house I ever saw. I don't dare ever go looking for it in case it is torn down, it definitely inspired my love of Queen Anne and similar styles!

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    1. See, now I want you to go look. Maybe it's still there!

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  6. that indeed could have been a pretty house... poor thing :-(

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