Happy Valentine’s Day

219valentineFun trivia: Did you know some of the PHW Revolving Fund properties were once likely given as a Valentine’s Day present from a husband to his wife? On February 14, 1951 Joseph Hodgson “in consideration of natural love and affection” granted his wife Irene Virginia Hodgson joint ownership of five properties, including 219 South Kent Street (pictured), for the rest of “their joint lives,” as well as granting the survivor absolute ownership in the event that one spouse predeceased the other. The other Hodgson properties include three more Revolving Fund properties, 211 South Kent, 124 East Clifford, and 125 East Clifford. Thanks to our former intern Mike St. Jacques for uncovering this piece of history for us!

Journey Through Hallowed Ground Conference Registration Open

If you attended the Preservation Virginia conference last year, you may have attended a panel presented by the JTHG organization. Registration for their annual conference, which will be held May 21-22 in Gettysburg, PA, is now open. To see the schedule of events and slate of educational workshops, please visit the JTHG website at jthgannualconference.org.

Reception and Silent Auction at the Samuel Noakes House

Please join Preservation of Historic Winchester for a Reception and Silent Auction Saturday, March 9 at the Samuel Noakes House at 201 South Braddock and 101 West Cork Streets to benefit PHW. Two event times will be offered with different refreshments and auction items. Admission is $20 per person for the 3-5 p.m. event with beer and barbeque, or $30 per person for the 6-8 p.m. event with wine and hors d’oeuvres. Auction items will be added to the event page for advanced viewing.

Space is limited, so only the first 40 paid reservations for each event time can be accommodated. Don’t delay – many auction items are one of a kind gems. Buy your tickets now via Paypal through the links below, or mail in your check to PHW, 530 Amherst St., Winchester, VA 22601.

Afternoon Showing, 3-5 p.m. – $20 admission

Evening Showing, 6-8 p.m. – $30 admission

Hawthorne and Old Town Spring Building Nomination Meeting

articlehNext Monday, February 11 at 6 PM, there will be a public meeting in the Council Chambers at Rouss City Hall to discuss the National Register nomination of Hawthorne and the Old Town Spring Building on Amherst Street. These properties have been recommended as eligible for listing in the Virginia Landmarks Register and the National Register of Historic Places. You may attend the meeting in person or submit your comments before the meeting to:

Director Kathleen Kilpatrick
VA Department of Historic Resources
2801 Kensington Avenue
Richmond, VA 23221

Please click on the image of the special notice for more details and how to obtain information about this proposal.

The Samuel Noakes House, Part 21

The Samuel Noakes HouseWe continue our journey through the renovation process at the Samuel Noakes House at 101 West Cork Street/201 South Braddock Street. Updates are posted each Tuesday through the PHW blog, following the progress with virtual hardhat tours. The previous entries may be found at the PHW blog at part 1, part 2, part 3, part 4, part 5, part 6, part 7, part 8, part 9, part 10, part 11, part 12, part 13, part 14, part 15, part 16, part 17, part 18, part 19, and part 20.

In today’s installation of the Noakes house project, you can see a number of salvaged items being reinstalled in the building. As you may recall, a number of original doors were removed during the early stages of the project and tucked away for future use. They have now been reinstalled. In cases where there were not quite enough matching doors on hand, historic replacements were purchased from Maggie’s Farm architectural salvage in Front Royal. Note in the upstairs bedroom on the Braddock St. side that the closet doors have been reversed to expose the unpainted sides to the room. Several double swinging doors have been re-purposed as single closet doors. A few brand new doors have also been installed along with the historic ones — see if you can spot them!

Preparing for doors at Cork Street.Doors upstairs at Cork Street

Doors downstairs at Cork Street

Doors upstairs at Braddock Street

Doors downstairs at Braddock Street

Help Restore the Winchester Hiram Lodge

The Winchester Hiram Lodge, located at 118 North Loudoun Street, needs your help. As you may remember, in March 2012 the Lodge was vandalized during a break-in and several of the fresco paintings on the third floor were damaged.

The frescos were painted on the walls and ceiling of the Lodge in 1868 by a Mr. Ango from the Peabody Institute of Baltimore. More history and images of the treasured frescos may be viewed at the Lodge’s website www.winchesterhiram21.org. Although the vandalized artwork has since been restored, the Lodge is continuing work to preserve the rest of the undamaged frescos. The work will remove the layers of grime and soot that have accumulated over the years and return the paintings to their original luster in order to match the already restored panels. To see some examples of the ongoing restoration/cleaning process, visit the Picasa album or watch the slideshow.

Currently, the Lodge requires about $50,000 to finish the restoration work on 6 side panels. For more information on how to donate to the fresco preservation project, call Larry Renner at 540-722-0172.

Help Make Our Events a Success

The Membership and Events Committee is hard at work planning the events roster for 2013. While we have some fabulous event ideas in mind for the upcoming year, we don’t have all the supplies we need to make the events a success. The committee has generated a list of items we will need to have loaned and/or donated:

Card tables
Folding chairs
Tablecloths, preferably white, for card tables
Croquet sets
Flameless candles
Decks of playing cards

Please contact the PHW office at 540-667-3577 or phwi@verizon.net if you have these items, and let us know if these will be available for loan or for donation. As a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, items donated to PHW may qualify as a tax-deductible contribution.

The Samuel Noakes House, Part 20

The Samuel Noakes HouseWe continue our journey through the renovation process at the Samuel Noakes House at 101 West Cork Street/201 South Braddock Street. Updates are posted each Tuesday through the PHW blog, following the progress with virtual hardhat tours. The previous entries may be found at the PHW blog at part 1, part 2, part 3, part 4, part 5, part 6, part 7, part 8, part 9, part 10, part 11, part 12, part 13, part 14, part 15, part 16, part 17, part 18, and part 19.

For those who were able to tour the Noakes house during the Holiday House Tour, you may have heard the docent in the Cork Street side explaining about the future flooring plans for this area. During the tours, only the subflooring visible in the Cork Street apartment. Now the promised finished floor of cork and bamboo have been installed.

One item that had many people curious on the tour was how the access door to the basement in the Cork Street side would be handled. Instead of the open hole as we saw on the tour, the new door has been installed, creating an access hatch to the water heaters. As you can see, the cork flooring was installed on the hatch door to help it blend seamlessly into the rest of the flooring. A different shade of cork flooring was used in the rear bedroom, and bamboo finishes out the upper kitchen and dining area on Cork Street. Several nee built ins have also been installed in the Cork Street dining/living area since the Holiday House Tour.

There is also a huge change in the appearance of the floors in the Braddock Street side. The downstairs floors and stair treads have been sanded down to prepare for the finish coat. In several places, such as the hall and laundry room, you can see where the new flooring has been installed where the existing flooring had been too damaged or altered to retain. One question that came up several times on the tour was why did a circa 1810 home have such narrow floorboards. The original floor was of wide planks, but over the years new flooring was laid atop the old — as well as new ceilings installed dropped down! In the stripping process, the owner decided to stop at this layer of flooring due to its relatively good condition, as the sanding has revealed.

At this point, you may want to take a moment to remind yourself of the Noakes house flooring at the start of the project. It might be hard to believe the worn floors in the Braddock Street space could be salvaged!

New flooring and built ins at Cork Street.Flooring installed at Cork Street, with the basement hatch door and several built ins installed as well

Flooring sanded and installed on the Braddock Street side