Archive for October, 2005

Town looks for buyer to restore, preserve historic 18th-century farmhouse

Tuesday, October 11th, 2005

5 bedrooms, 3 baths, needs work

By Joyce Pellino Crane, Globe Correspondent

The historic Red Wing Farm on Maple Road in Chelmsford is up for sale, but it’s not on any real estate agent’s listing sheet.

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The town-owned property, with a farmhouse built in the early 18th century, is being sold through a governmental bidding process, with the opening bid set at $160,000.

Though that may seem like a steal for a 3,000-square-foot house that sits on a 57,000-square-foot parcel next to wooded fields, there are several factors to consider.

For one thing, town officials expect bidders to substantially raise the price. Moreover, the property will come with a preservation restriction that requires the buyer to maintain the property to certain standards. And then, there’s all the work that needs to be done on the house.

”It’s rare that a town will [auction off a historic home] and work to make sure it is preserved in the process, by putting a preservation restriction on the property,” said Anne McCarthy Forbes, a preservation consultant who was hired by the town to help the Red Wing Farm get on the National Register of Historic Places.

Home repair hobbyists should think twice before rushing in with an offer, cautioned Dennis Lawlor, principal of Lexington-based Classic Group Inc., specializing in the restoration and construction of traditional-style homes.

Comparing the restoration process to camping in the woods, Lawlor said, ”It sounds romantic, but a week into it, it’s very difficult.”

As he toured the house and grounds last week, Andy Sheehan, Chelmsford’s community development director, savored the setting and history he found at every turn.

A former conservation commissioner from Acton, Sheehan said he has a list of potential buyers who have expressed interest in the property since the town bought it from former resident Nancy Bartleson 2 1/2 years ago.

”We’ve got about 15 people who have called us over the years about this property.”

The rundown building, which hasn’t been occupied since Bartleson moved out a few years ago, could be a dream come true for a preservation-minded developer with an eye toward history and a penchant for modern serenity.

Located in Chelmsford’s southwest corner, the property is bordered on two sides by 12.6 acres of conservation land that was purchased along with the farmhouse, and the future 7-mile Bruce Freeman bicycle trail is on the west side. The town will retain the conservation land, which is open to residents for passive recreational activities.

The house sits on a plot of overgrown shrubs, with a split-rail fence that bows when the gate swings. Sheehan pointed to the Norway and sugar maple, American elm, mulberry, and weeping willow trees on the property. Purple asters contrast with the overgrown grassy field, and here and there, milkweed, loosestrife, tall reed, and daisy-like wildflowers adorn the open space.

In June, Forbes, who has meticulously chronicled the home’s history, submitted an application to the National Register, a federal program designed to preserve historic and archeological resources. Chelmsford has four properties on the register.

The farm was founded by Richard Hildreth, who built the original farmhouse sometime in the early 1700s, said Forbes.

”The . . . absolutely extraordinary feature is . . . Sarah Hildreth writing her name in chalk on the ceiling joists” in an upstairs bedroom, said Forbes, referring to Hildreth’s granddaughter, who inherited the property when she turned 24 in 1770. ”It’s a signature dating back two-and-a-quarter centuries.”

Sarah married John Robbins III of South Chelmsford, and the couple sold the Hildreth-Robbins Home, as it is still known, in 1776. The property passed through several owners before Michael Bartleson, a doctor, purchased it in 1976. When Bartleson died in 2000, he left the property to his wife, Nancy, who sold it to the town three years later.

Through the centuries, there have been numerous additions, large and small, and today the house has five working fireplaces, five bedrooms, three bathrooms, a sunroom, and a four-stall barn. Architectural details include wide pineboard flooring, horsehair plaster walls, and original iron-hinged latches.

The center entrance and chimney are slightly off line, with two windows flanking the front door, and five running across the front on the second floor, typical of the architectural style for that period, said Frederick Lyman, president of Winchester-based American Landmarks, a real estate company specializing in sales of historic and period properties.

”Early Georgian houses weren’t always symmetrical because they often grew,” he said. ”The original house could have been a single-room house that then grew laterally.”

Lyman, who has restored seven historic homes, said that restoring an old house ”takes a lot more physical and mental energy than you’d think. But I find it very satisfying. When you can take a house that’s down on its heels and gone through neglect, and bring it back to its full measure of historic value, it’s incredibly satisfying.”

Lawlor said bringing a historic house up to the standards of today is extremely challenging, because the main beam often has been weakened through haphazard renovations, or because the construction of earlier eras was flawed.

”We know that anywhere there’s plumbing, somebody’s done something they shouldn’t have,” he said. ”These are the tip of the iceberg of problems with renovating older homes.”

The deadline for bidding on the property is Nov. 21 at 10 a.m., when Town Manager Bernard Lynch will read bids publicly at the Town Offices.

While the $160,000 starting price is much lower than the median price of $380,000 for a single-family home in Chelmsford, Lyman said that ”a location next to conservation land can bring the price up.

”I wouldn’t necessarily disagree with [town officials] that the price could be driven up by a low asking price. . . . I’ll often advise sellers not to be terribly aggressive on the asking price because putting it on with a reasonable price can attract buyers,” Lyman said. ”If you can get two buyers who are interested, they can drive the price up.”

The overall 13.9-acre property was purchased for $730,000, mostly with a $580,000 grant from the state’s Route 3 North Land Conservation Grant Program, designed to compensate communities most affected by the Route 3 expansion. The town borrowed the remaining $150,000, and Sheehan said officials hope to at least break even.

The land is a precious commodity in a 23-square-mile community with almost 13,000 households. Defining the abutting conservation land is a series of crisscrossing streams, creating soggy and forested wetland areas. These areas could serve as outdoor laboratories for elementary students of the Byam School, located next to the property.

”In spite of needing some work,” said Forbes, ”it’s an extraordinary example of 18th-century architecture with a wealth of intact detail in a beautiful setting.”

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Charity Auctions Firm, DiNardo & Lord Auctioneers Achieves Record Revenue for Clients

Monday, October 10th, 2005

Charity auctions firm DiNardo & Lord Auctioneers achieved record revenues for two of their charity auction clients during this last week. Tom DiNardo conducted two charity auctions in two different states over a 32 hour period for both the Stanford Home for Children and also ChildHelp USA.

Celebrity chef, Tyler Florence, was signing his new book at the event.

A huge success, the ChildHelp USA charity auction event attracted many celebrities to Knoxville, Tennessee, including Nobel Prize nominees and ChildHelp USA Founders, Sarah O’meara and Yvonne Fedderson. Celebrity chef, Tyler Florence, star of TV’s Food Network show Food 911 held a book signing for his new bestseller Eat This Book and later acted as Master of Ceremonies. One of the event’s highlights was the $8,000 bid achieved for a Margery Ryerson painting. David Purvis, ChildHelp’s Board Chairman, was elated with the record financial results. “We hope that Tom DiNardo and DiNardo & Lord Auctioneers will be back next year to help us again in furthering our organization’s efforts in raising record revenue to prevent child abuse.

The Stanford Home for Children in Sacramento places at-risk children in foster care. Their charity auction is the main fundraiser in support of their operation. The fundraising event was immensely successful with everyone in attendance having a good time. One of the featured items in the charity auction was a “vertical” (1992 - 1997) half case of Silver Oak Cabernet Sauvignon, which sold for $3,000. Eric Sternad, Executive Director, said, “Our inaugural charity auction expectations of Tom DiNardo were not only met, but exceeded by one hundred percent.

From left to right: Sean Garvey of Flora Springs winery, Robin Purvis and Thad Cox of ChildHelp USA, and auctioneer Tom DiNardo

DiNardo & Lord Auctioneers specializes in charity auctions and wine auctions. Since 1993, Tom DiNardo has presided over one thousand charity auctions for various non-profits, charities, and community organizations across the United States. Tom DiNardo holds five world records for the price of wine achieved at auction. He is a freelance writer for the Wine Enthusiast magazine, WineSquire.com, and a regularly featured writer for AuctionZip.com and GlobalAuctionGuide.com. For more information about Tom DiNardo and his charity auction company, please visit his web site at www.DiNardoandLordAuctioneers.com or www.dinardoandlordauctioneers.com/content/charity_auctions_testimonials.htm.

For additional information about Mr. DiNardo you may also visit www.auctionzip.com/cgi-bin/auctionlist.cgi?vuid=271 or
www.globalauctionguide.com/

Popularity: 16% [?]

Collector’s Estate Auction Holds Much of Local Cleveland’s History

Sunday, October 9th, 2005

Thousands of items to be auctioned from the amazing estate of Larry Southworth.

Collector’s Estate Auction Holds Much of Local Cleveland’s History

The Full Story:

(PRWEB) October 8, 2005 — On Saturday November 12th, the small town of Wellington, OH will witness another fascinating auction opportunity. Antiques and Estate Auctioneers, located at 44777 State Route 18, Wellington 44090, (Also available online at www.estateauctioneers.com) will host Larry Southworth’s incredible estate auction. John Farkas and Connie Rose are your host auctioneers. An insurance salesman who had a passion for auctions and possessed enviable skill in carpentry, he built his home incorporating antiques and architectural pieces from local Cleveland’s history. His oldest son remembers that auction going was scheduled into every trip the family took, in the smallest to the largest of places, resulting in an eclectic collection of surprising proportion.

It was not from auctions alone though that the bulk of Larry’s collection accumulated. He was a pioneer at heart—departing from the tourist group during a trip to China; Southworth went with guides deeper into the remote parts of the country. There he came across a small town that makes silk rugs, each rug taking years to complete. For $14,000 he bought one of these rugs, nearly twenty by thirty feet, and brought it back to the U.S. This rug, in the company of a Gorgar pinball machine, Euclid Beach memorabilia, a horse drawn sleigh, Capodimonte clowns, railroad memorabilia, cranberry glass and Fiesta Ware will be available in the auction.

“Who wants to bid on everything else?” was the closing phrase that son, Jeff Southworth, remembers hearing at the many auctions he attended with his father. All else that did not sell individually was what Southworth would buy. Then with bolt cutters and sledgehammers in hand, father and sons would disassemble and relocate the architecture of stairwells, a bar, and an entire restaurant. An impressive example is Cleveland’s Kon Tiki restaurant, housed in the down town Sheraton Hotel. In four, 40ft. trailers he stored the wall, ceiling, and floor decorations until they could be refigured into the architecture of his home
Another famous Cleveland haunt, The Clip-Joint Bar, was similarly acquired. The Clip-Joint was a barber shop where customers were also served drinks. Southworth acquired the full decor for his wife who was a Cosmetologist and a teacher of Cosmetology, and as with the Kon Tiki the architecture of the retired bar was adapted to his home.

Southworth’s friend Barbara Sindelar remembers, “He wanted his house to be a collection of all the pieces that establish our past, that’s what antiques do, they link the past with the present. He wanted his Indian one armed bandit to greet you at the door on the right, and the old nickelodeon player piano to greet you on the left.”

Both items will be included in the auction November 12.
Southworth collected an amazing amount of items over his lifetime. His son recalls the family 4-car garage that one could never park a car in. Larry was fascinated by the history of each item, and loved to relate their tale with the ease of a storyteller. As an insurance salesman he was drawn to the stories of Fire Marks—these were an old form of fire insurance where if you hadn’t purchased a Fire Mark and your house caught on fire, well the fire brigade just wouldn’t show up. He collected many of these and was also a member of the Fire Marks Association. He collected Cigarette tins, Fire Mark tins, salesman samples, slot machines, old carnival and fun house items, and Desert Rose place settings, an eclectic collection indeed.

It would only reason to hold an auction in his honor. His highly intriguing, varied, and outstanding lifetime dedication to collecting is bound to hold many treasures for others. The Antiques and Estate Auctioneers will make this auction easy and convenient to attend in a spacious gallery with a large digital screen display, or live-internet bidding available straight from your own home. Do not miss this rare opportunity to participate in Cleveland’s history. The gallery is located at 44777 St. Rt. 18 in Wellington, OH 44090 and can be contacted at 440-647-4007. Reported by Laura Lazorski.

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