period living with an artistic eye
Old House Journal|July - August 2023
Owner Deb Richards, who is quite at home in the past, continues to steward the 1740 New England house and its traditional garden.
TOVAH MARTIN
period living with an artistic eye

Steep staircases, creaky floorboards, and things that go bump in the night are status quo for 90-year-old Deb Richards, who says she's always lived with one foot in the past. Deb grew up in a historic house with parents who collected all the accoutrements to create a period interior. After she married, she raised her children in a 1737 Connecticut house. After her husband's death 35 years ago, Richards didn't think twice about moving to the coast in northern New England.

She wanted to live in a historic district. Torn between this and another First Period house, she made a practical decision. The three-storey house that she refers to as "not-exactly-center-chimney" offered ample parking and boasted two driveways and a garage. Most importantly, it was not a fixer-upper. In fact, the house had been sensitively renovated by its previous owner, who updated plumbing and electricity while conserving historic elements. Then there was the price: $12,000.

AN AUTHENTIC INTERIOR

Woodwork is original in the Georgian-era house. Windows even retain pocket shutters; hidden inside the walls, they car be pulled across the window in frigid weather. The wood-body, wire-arm chandelier burning candles is quite old.

Diese Geschichte stammt aus der July - August 2023-Ausgabe von Old House Journal.

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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der July - August 2023-Ausgabe von Old House Journal.

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