April 29, 2012

Montgomery Ward Mount Vernon that Survived a Tree Falling on it

306 S. Edward Street, Mount Prospect



Montgomery Ward Mount Vernon.


This Wardway Mount Vernon was built in the spring of 1927.

Actually, it might not be a Mount Vernon, but an identical twin house offered by the Gordon-Van Tine Company called the Cabot. The best way to tell would be to get inside the house and look for marked lumber.

The Cabot from Gordon-Van Tine. Same house, different names.



The Gordon-Van Tine Company of Davenport, Iowa sold kit homes. From 1917 to 1932, Montgomery Ward subcontracted Gordon-Van Tine to manufacture its Wardway homes. After 1922, Gordon-Van Tine and Montgomery Ward offered identical homes for sale in their catalogs, although the naming differed. So the Wardway Mount Vernon from 1927 is identical to the Gordon Van-Tine Cabot.

Based on the number of Wardway homes in this area, I'm going with Montgomery Ward as the manufacturer, just for simplicity's sake.

The Mount Vernon was sold in the years 1927-1931. It was a very popular model for Wards. It's a Colonial bungalow with a dramatic center entrance covered by a carved pediment with twin Doric columns on either side. Two distinguishing features of the Mount Vernon are the multi-paned sidelights and the clipped-gable roof. The original flower boxes remain intact.

This house is lacking the fireplace and the medallion decoration above the front door. Both of these are common modifications.

There's been a lot of death associated with the house. (Actually probably all houses built in 1927 have had a dead body in them at some point since people often died at home or their funeral was held in the living room.)

The original owner was George E. Zirkelbach. He and his family moved to Mount Prospect in the spring of 1927 and occupied the home on Edward Street. George was an assistant comptroller of the Colgate-Palmolive-Peet company in Chicago. In 1932, George died at age 38 of an infected gallbladder. The Zirkelbach family soon moved out of the house, and rented it to the Wilder family in 1933.

The Wilder family consisted of William Halsey (father), Hazel Wilder (mother), Roger Wilder (son), Nelson Budd (son), and Dorothy (daughter). They did not live on Edward Street very long. Hazel Wilder died suddenly of a heart ailment in February 1934 and the remaining family moved back to Chicago at the end of the year.

The Widow Zirkelbach sold the home to Norman and Florence Humphries (and daughter Helen) in 1937. Florence Humphries died in 1958 (not in the home) and Norman continued to live in the house. In 1967, Mr. Humphries died in the bathroom in a fire at age 92. Norman was a very popular resident on South Edward Street. Even into his 90's, he tended his garden and did all his own housework.

In 1968, Jim and Grace Schmit moved in. They lived in the house until 2003. Right before the house was sold in 2003, a tree fell on it! According to the Daily Herald, "a towering, 40-foot maple tree next to the driveway split. A 2-foot-long limb pierced the left side of the roof above the bathroom." According to the same article: "The house on Edward Street in Mount Prospect is a 76-year old Sears catalog house." I guess we can't expect the reporter to get everything right.





April 20, 2012

Neighboring Sears Vallonias in Des Plaines

I drive to Des Plaines every day to drop off my daughter at Science and Arts Academy. The neighborhoods around the Des Plaines downtown are blanketed with Sears homes. Des Plaines did not have the vast number of teardowns in the last decade that some communities experienced, which is good news as far as Sears homes are concerned. You can drive down certain streets and see one Sears home after another.

Besides the fact that fewer old homes were demolished, another reason for the large number of Sears homes in Des Plaines is the Blume brothers, local contractors who would quickly build Sears homes for their clients. Throughout the 1920's, the Sears Modern Homes catalogs featured letters by Elmer M. Blume about how easy it was to assemble pre-cut homes. Elmer and his brother, Oscar, built dozens of Sears homes in Des Plaines, as well as some in Libertyville, Park Ridge, and other suburbs.


Testimonial from the 1925 Modern Homes catalog.


So yesterday on my afternoon drive I saw a perfect Sears Vallonia and returned with my camera to get a shot. When I looped around the block I saw another Vallonia.

622 Arlington, Des Plaines. Original railings... check. Original porch intact... check. Original porch columns... check.

Sears Vallonia.


500 Webford, Des Plaines.


The Vallonia was a popular model for Sears. It was sold from 1921 to 1939, and apparently it never went out of style. I have no idea whether the Blume brothers built these particular homes. These homes were definitely built after 1922 because Sears changed the look of the dormer in that year.

The architectural firm that designed the Vallonia was Nimmons, Carr & Wright.

The 1928 Modern Homes catalog featured an interior tour of the Vallonia.





Des Plaines needs to do a Sears home walking tour!





April 18, 2012

Montgomery Ward Essex

121 W. Fremont, Arlington Heights.

Wardway Essex from the 1925 catalog




Arlington Heights has a hidden treasure on Fremont Street right across from the library. A one-and-a-half story California bungalow from the Montgomery Ward catalog--the Essex.

I never could have identified this one on my own. Author Rebecca Hunter had this in her master list of catalog home locations.

Gordon-Van Tine, a kit house company in Davenport Iowa, sold the exact same house and called it No. 504. (Gordon-Van Tine fulfilled all Montgomery Ward house orders.)  There was a Wardway Homes sales office in Arlington Heights, so I would guess that this house is from Wards, rather than Gordon-Van Tine. 

The Essex was sold by Montgomery Ward in the years 1922-1929. Wards also called this house the Van Dyke in certain years. 
The house on Fremont first appeared in the census and telephone directories in 1930 and was initially occupied by renters. 




In the Essex, the front door opens directly into the living room.



Original front door.















I could not dig up any information on the original owners. The only thing I found was this real estate ad from 1938, calling the house the "best buy in Arlington Heights". It was listed for $5,000.





There is only one Wardway Essex listed on the national database--this one in Arlington Heights.






April 9, 2012

Picture-Perfect Harris Brothers Roselle

4 N. Maple, Mount Prospect
























Harris Brothers Roselle, from the 1928 catalog.

 
Another catalog home from Harris Brothers of Chicago, built in 1926 or 1927. This is the Roselle model. And it is a picture-perfect match to the catalog picture, down to the flower box. They built a sensitive addition to the rear of the house and tried to make it blend with the original structure.

Love the arch!