The first thing I did in 2010 was visit my past. Literally. Friday morning was bright and crisp as our family loaded up and drove a couple of miles from my grandparents' home place (where we were staying) to visit the house where I lived from birth until 1988. Fearing that it may not be standing too much longer, Dad graciously arranged to have it opened for a last walk through before we left Illinois. While I've driven by it numerous times since our family moved down the road to Green Valley (and a much newer home), I hadn't entered its premises in at least two decades.
Armed with cameras, it was oddly exciting to show this place to husbands and children who had never seen the site of so many home movies and many, many childhood stories. I thought it would be sad, but instead it was fun to see how little had remarkably not changed over the years while memory after memory flooded back. While the exterior had deteriorated considerably, much of what I remembered inside was still in tact.
(Above) Showing Els my first bedroom. As a child it had a tiny gold/cream floral striped wall paper. Yellow continues to be my mom's favorite color.
(Below) We opened the cupboards in Hannah's bedroom to find the same shelf paper and a small scrap roll of wall paper which Mom hung on one wall (the others she painted mint green) for Hannie's nursery.
Probably the best 'preserved' room was Dad's old office which he paneled in 1972 with reclaimed wood from an old barn. Those are feed sacks on the ceiling. Even the carpeting was the same! (As Nathan says, "Shag never dies.") In spite of how 'vintage?' this room was, this was were we kept our very progressive Apple II Plus, purchased in 1981. We were bemoaning how different our financial situation might be had Mom and Dad not invested the same amount of money in Apple itself!
Here we are in our living room. That wood stove changed the way we experienced cold winters in a house that seemed to have more holes than a screen door. We also fed it loads and loads and loads of firewood which we stacked in piles on the corn crib slab in the back yard.
I requested this repose of a similar photo we took the day after Hannah's birth in January 1984. While waiting for the school bus, we wrote her birthday in the snow and Dad took a photo of us by it. Funny how the view of this side of the driveway hasn't changed a bit!
Our home wasn't fancy, but my parents worked hard to make it as nice as they could and keep it tidy. It was the site of so many nice memories from searching for kittens in the haymow, to sledding in the pasture, to making up adventures down in the peat ditch. Looking out the laundry room window, I remembered mom's clothesline and how we would drape sheets anchored with old bricks to make tents. In the kitchen I remembered the unexpected Easter egg hunt that revealed not Easter eggs but long-desired Cabbage Patch dolls (I found mine sitting on top of the wastebasket in the tall cupboard by the fridge). In the front bedroom upstairs, I remembered laying on the floor and dropping missles (anything small from legos to scraps of paper) through the register vents to the living room below). While recalling these events from several hundred miles away, it seems like a long, long, time ago -- but while standing in the place where those memories took place, it seemed like just yesterday. I think that's why it will be sad when the house is really gone for good.
Unfortunately, the house was FREEZING so the little girls weren't good for long and our stay seemed too brief to capture all the photos I wanted, but there would probably never be enough time to revisit all the nooks and crannies of the place that's felt the most like HOME.
8 comments:
Man, that place was awesome.
No pics of the deathtrap staircase or vice grip shower faucet?
Oh Chad, I do have photos of that staircase. I'm afraid that Child Protective Services would have our hide, though. Do you remember what we used to do around that staircase? Ellie immediately tried it herself. It's like a kid magnet or something. And like a fool I photographed it. Sadly those are the only photos I have of the stairs. I will have to go back and look at the bathroom pics to see if the vice grips are still there...
Thanks for your comment!
This post is so neat. I find myself almost in tears - but I am a little emotional today after my family all left for their respective homes. I love old homes and the character and stories they hold within them. What a special trip down memory lane. And I love the first picture - that would look really neat in old frame.
Yeah I remember playing around the stairs on the ledges...I wouldn't let my kids try that, but I'd be proud of them for surviving.
Simply descending was adventure enough.
Is the house still owned by you guys or was it sold when you moved? If it's still yours, grab that old hardward (knobs, etc) before it's gone forever.
"Way back when" (like a hundred years ago) the house went to Grandpa Ford's aunt Nellie Whiteford (sister to Grandpa's father). It was then passed down through her family. It's been owned for several years by a distant Whiteford cousin. We lived there because Dad farmed the property on their behalf. When Mom and Dad started the ministry in Albania, they relinquished managing that farm b/c it also had livestock, a year-round commitment.
Dad has promised to express our desire to claim some mementos from the house before they tear it down, whenever the time comes. And I have requested the door knob photographed in this post (and a few other items) ;-)
Yes, Ellie walked right out on the ledge, but Nathan was there. I forgot how steep those stairs were until our visit.
Great Pictures! I'll never forget when Jenny came home from the hospital and we had to go directly to the cellar ~CREEPY~ to say the least and wait out the storm. Many more wonderful memories in that house. It is sad to see it in such shape. Glad that your Parents are taking such good care of the Farmhouse.
That looks like a quintessential farmhouse! Too bad it can't be fixed up, you just can't build character like that today!
How great for you to be able to visit your childhood home!!! It looks so homey. I never got to visit my birth place before it was torn down.
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