March 31, 2015

A Little Piece of Georgia in Wheaton

Sears often would name the Modern Homes after areas in which the company sold a lot of houses. For instance, there are models called the Pittsburgh, the Cleveland, the Albany, the Detroit, and the Trentonjust to name a few.

Americus is a small city in Georgia that evidently was the location of many Sears kit homes because Sears named a house after it. The Sears Americus is a Craftsman take on the Italian style.

The Sears Americus from 1923.


The Americus is one of the most distinctive designs that Sears ever sold, which makes it easy to identify "out in the wild". The house, with low-pitched hipped roofs and an asymmetrical facade, is loaded with Craftsman details.

You can find this little piece of Georgia in Wheaton.

March 24, 2015

A Sears Elmwood on the Move

2606 Park Lane, Glenview. 

The Sears Elmwood.

This Sears Elmwood was built in 1917. It has had both the front porch and sleeping porch enclosed but otherwise looks much as it did when it was first built. It still retains the original tapered columns and much of the original trim work.

The architect of the Elmwood is William Arthur Bennett.


March 17, 2015

Sears Milford in Wilmette

There were very few housing starts in 1933, the heart of the Great Depression. In Wilmette, there were only a handful of residences constructed that summer--and this Sears Milford was one of them.
 

2038 Beechwood, Wilmette.


The Sears Milford, from the 1936 Modern Homes catalog.



  
The Milford in Wilmette was constructed for a cost of about $10,000. The house has a brick veneer facade rather than the standard red cedar shingles.

The Milford had two floor plans. The house in Wilmette has the larger floor plan with the breakfast alcove.


The architect of the Milford was Alexander H. Bacci.

The original owners were Robert A. Simon and his wife, Irene. Robert worked for the Cooter Brokerage Company in the Merchandise Mart. The Simons owned the house until at least 1972.

The Milford recently sold for $815,000.






March 10, 2015

Sears Homes Featured in Children's Books (Part 2)

Turtle in Paradise by Jennifer L. Holm is a Newbery Honor Book published in 2010. The story takes place during the Great Depression, and, in it, 11-year-old Turtle has to move to Key West to stay with relatives she has never met.




My daughter informs me that Turtle in Paradise is recommended reading at her middle school and that several of her friends are doing reports on it for their classes.

I noticed that my 
article about the Sears Bellewood house was getting an inordinate number of hits and finally realized that it was because of students doing research on Turtle in Paradise.

In the novel, the family's dream house is the Sears Bellewood. Now kids all over the country are curious to know what the Bellewood looks like.


March 3, 2015

Sears Homes Featured in Children's Books (Part 1)

407 Pine Street, Rolfe, Iowa. Built 1913. Photo courtesy of Ruth Agle.


The No. 146 from Sears, later renamed the Saratoga.


The original owner of the Sears No. 146 in Rolfe was Jerome D. Hollenbeck. Mr. Hollenbeck lived in the house only a year--he moved because his wife died, his daughter planned to attend college, and he couldn't keep up the big house alone.

Another shot of the house. Capture from Google Streetview.


Owner Ruth Agle purchased the house in 2006. When she discovered it, the house had been vacant for many years. "It was a 1913 Sears house with all of the original woodwork and it still even had its wavy glass windows and wood siding, " writes Ruth on her website. "Nobody wanted it because it needed repairs."

Ruth fell in love with the house after seeing on a real estate website. She bought the house, packed up her things, and moved to Iowa. 

 
The original fireplace and mantle. Photo courtesy of Ruth Agle.


Original bronze Sears door hardware. Photo courtesy of Ruth Agle.




Ruth loved her Sears house so much she decided to feature it in her new children's book: Hazel Twigg & the Hollyhock Hideaway. The No. 146 is the Hollyhock Hideaway in the story.

The cover illustration with the No. 146 in the background. Scan courtesy of Ruth Agle and illustration by Nina Khalova.


Hazel Twigg & the Hollyhock Hideaway is the first in a series of seven books written by Ruth and illustrated by Nina Khalova.

The book centers around Hazel Twigg, a little girl who is almost eight years old. Her overly cautious mother suddenly puts Hazel on a train to meet a relative she's never before met. Together Hazel and her slightly odd relative (Ruth) search for a house in the middle of nowhere called "The Hollyhock Hideaway." Once they are in possession of the house, strange things start to happen. Old dolls come to life, fairies dance just out of sight and there is magic afoot...


But the evil Realtor that sold them the house is now just as eager to get them out of it by any means possible. And Hazel's mother--who never let her out of her sight except to go to school--is nowhere to be seen.


Scan courtesy of Ruth Agle and illustration by Nina Khalova.

   
Scan courtesy of Ruth Agle and illustration by Nina Khalova.


"I do not mention in the book that my house is a Sears home, but every other facet of the house is in full display," wrote Ruth in an email. "For example, the fact that the windows in the attic are called 'Priscilla' windows is frequently mentioned. [The Sears catalog says that "ornamental Priscilla windows are specified for the attic"--Ed.To Hazel, they resemble spiderwebs and she imagines that the spider who wove them must be a huge, evil creature named Priscilla."


"Also in the book, the house is much older than my house actually is for story reasons. My home was built in 1913."

Update!
Since 
Hazel Twigg & the Hollyhock Hideaway has been released, Ruth's Sears house is getting attention from readers. One person from Ruth's town posted this awesome photo on Facebook. It shows Ruth's house under construction.
 

Charles C. Seifert was a carpenter in Rolfe, Iowa. He built the house for Jerome Hollenbeck. The house is unfinished--the Stonekote cement plaster has not yet been applied to the porch columns. Photo courtesy of Ruth Agle.






 

Ruth recognized the name of Charles C. Seifert--she had seen it before in the attic of her house just over the Priscilla windows.

Photo courtesy of Ruth Agle.


See Also
Part 2 of the Sears Homes Featured in Children's Books.