My last house was a Sears kit home. Very similar to the model pictured at the top of this thread. There is no accurate date on the home I owned. Several dates are on record 1906 1910 and 1913. It was a great house.
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1908 ad for a Sears home kit
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I finished my next door neighbor's addicts last third floor as well. She had a dormer on the front and a turret. There was no Dormer above the staircase, which made it hard to enter. Her mother offer to pay to put a dormer in, but she never followed through. The roof with sloped on two sides with Gable ends. I finished space as a great room with storage closets oh, and may the turret into a child Palace.Comment
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The five houses on my block we're all different versions of this home. Mine had a roof sloped on all four sides. It had Dormers in the front and above the staircase. I had a 15 by 30 room with a walkable 12 by 25 area. When I finished it I added a 3/4 bath and a kitchenette as well as a master
I finished my next door neighbor's addicts last third floor as well. She had a dormer on the front and a turret. There was no Dormer above the staircase, which made it hard to enter. Her mother offer to pay to put a dormer in, but she never followed through. The roof with sloped on two sides with Gable ends. I finished space as a great room with storage closets oh, and may the turret into a child Palace.
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Without a doubt. My house was about 100 years old when I sold it in 2012. It was still a solid house. Build with old growth lumber true 2x4, 2x6 with masonry foundation. Hardwood floors. Original windows were still in it a century later. Some of the original plumbing and electric are still present. Original cedar shingles still on it - not covered by crappy venial siding. Unfortunately the slate roof was needlessly with asphalt shingles. 3 of the 5 houses retained the slate.Comment
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Without a doubt. My house was about 100 years old when I sold it in 2012. It was still a solid house. Build with old growth lumber true 2x4, 2x6 with masonry foundation. Hardwood floors. Original windows were still in it a century later. Some of the original plumbing and electric are still present. Original cedar shingles still on it - not covered by crappy venial siding. Unfortunately the slate roof was needlessly with asphalt shingles. 3 of the 5 houses retained the slate.
I’d be happy to live in one of those homes today. I’d like it restored to original specs along with new wiring, plumbing and HVAC, of course.
By the way, the podcast regarding these homes, that’s linked in this thread, is very informative and a fun listen.
- IanRampart, this is Squad 51. How do you read?Comment
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By the way, when a person ordered a Sears home, all of the materials needed were delivered, down to the fireplace mantle and instruction book, in sealed train car.
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I'm basically sitting in one of these houses right now. The only slight difference in the specs is we only have three bedrooms.. and there's 1980s vinyl siding on the house now
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But other than that, we've never seen any "proof" it was kit built. Some of the original trim around the house is a bit sloppy in spots, but that wouldn't necessarily mean kit.
bennetthomes1920-erie.jpg
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Mine looked the same as the one pictured outside. Inside my stairs were along the right wall and it was a 3 bedroom. We know that it and the others on the block were sears kit homes. Each were different variation of a 2.5 story 4 square home.Comment
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