Friday Photos: Blues House Showcase, 2000

We do love our houses here, but we needed a little break from scanning the 1976 survey this week. A jaunt to the photo closet yielded a thick volume of Blues House photos, rife with people celebrating in what has since transformed into Piccadilly’s Public House and Restaurant outdoor patio. The celebration of sounds and colors is a perfect little springtime pick me up. Enjoy the photos on Flickr, and be sure to check out winchesterblueshouse.com for information on the Blues House Festival in July 2016.

Blues House Showcase

Friday Photos: Simon Lauck House and Extras

The Simon Lauck House, 311 S. Loudoun

PHW has added over 150 photos to Flickr, with the largest individual album being the Simon Lauck House, PHW’s first Revolving Fund property. Our original post when we shared these photos on Picasa can be found here. To quote from that post:

The plan at the time was to restore the building’s exterior to its appearance circa 1790 as a proof to Winchester that many of the “Victorian” houses in the Potato Hill area in fact contained a much older log nucleus. To achieve this, a substantial portion of the house was removed, reducing it from a duplex to a single residence and stripping most of the exterior away. PHW volunteers did a great deal of the hands-on work at the Simon Lauck house, as documented by Virginia Miller.

We have also been double checking (or finding unscanned photos still tucked in boxes) for some of the streets we previously thought were complete. This includes:

51 1976 Architectural Survey photos for West Boscawen Street
9 photos on Fairmont Avenue
27 photos from Braddock Street
As well as adding the existing 1976 photos of West Cork Street to the 1976 Survey album

All of the new photos can be found at the front of the Flickr photostream, or at the end of their respective albums. Happy viewing!

Friday Photos: Student Survey of Winchester

This week, we continued transferring images from Picasa with the 100 photos from the Student Survey of Winchester. Judging by the dates stamped on the 35 mm slides, this survey/presentation was produced sometime after 1978 but before the construction of the Joint Judicial Center (circa 1984). The goal of the presentation seems to have been to improve the walking mall, entrance corridors, and vistas of Winchester. Most of the images are from Winchester, but a few examples of good ideas from other cities were included. See just how far we’ve come in our downtown since then!

Rouss City Hall,  from East Lane (looking west across the modern location of the Joint Judicial Center).

Friday Photos: Reruns from 1976

About 100 images have been added to the 1976 Architectural Inventory album at Flickr this week, including Sharp, Pall Mall, Peyton, Piccadilly, West Monmouth, West Leicester, North Kent, and West Germain Streets, Indian Alley, and West Fairfax Lane. Some are new, while most are transfers from the Picasa album of the same name. This addition puts us at about the halfway mark for the 1976 survey images. As usual, the new additions can be found at the end of the albums. Happy viewing!

118 Fairfax Lane

Friday Photos: Back to the Past Edition

PHW brings you over 350 photos for this week’s edition, with the bulk of the images coming from the 1976 Architectural Survey of Winchester (with the majority of those having been previously posted on Picasa). Along with the new additions, we have done some housekeeping and created a few new albums to capture previously uncategorized or unidentified photos. See below for a list of the new albums.

18 E. Clifford

PHW Events
Rose Hill at Featherbed Lane
PHW Tours
PHW Annual Meeting, 1978
Blues House
Germain Street
1976 Architectural Survey (approximately 1/3 of the 1976 survey photos at this time)

Friday Photos: Three Little Albums

We have three albums for you today that have been transferred to Flickr. They may be small in comparison to last week’s extravaganza, but these albums pack a concentrated punch of history.

Construction of the Winchester Towers

“Uncovering Your Hidden Gems” Photo Contest top entries, 2012.

Construction of the Winchester Towers, images tentatively dated from 1960-1961, probably taken by E.E. Bayliss, Jr.

Artifacts from the Samuel Noakes House, photographed before the silent auction in 2013.

We had a much smaller readership in 2013, so if you missed the backstory on some of the Noakes house silent auction items, you can read these following histories:
Rumford Baking Power
Winchester Coca-Cola Bottles
Bromo-Seltzer Bottles

Friday Photos: Revisiting the Grim-Moore House

The Grim-Moore House

This week we revisit one of the largest undertakings in the history of PHW’s photo digitization project: The Grim-Moore House album. This set is nearly 550 photos taken between 1977-1982 by Virginia Miller during the renovation of this Jennings Revolving Fund house. The Millers documented almost every step they took to save the log and brick houses at 510 and 512 South Loudoun Street, from the initial walkthrough still showing the deplorable living conditions in the apartments, the Victorian details they removed to return the building to something closer to its appearance in the early 1800s, to their documentation of a building too far gone to save, and even a surprise setback when part of the foundation crumbled mid-rehabilitation. The album passed on to the new owners, Joe and Sharon Collette, and was digitized in preparation for a small PHW gathering in the home before the Collettes made some cosmetic updates and opened the house for the 2014 Holiday House Tour.

Part of what made this album both informative and challenging was Virginia Miller’s notes on the back of the photos. Her captions were extensive enough to date and explain what and where the photos were taken, but also rather idiosyncratic, making the transcription process involved. You may see in some of the captions a few unknown words or seemingly nonsensical sentences. The notes were transcribed to the best of our ability, and during the transfer from Picasa to Flicker a few typos and words were corrected.

As we noted when this album was first posted, “[t]his is a fascinating and telling example of how PHW’s Revolving Fund can save ‘junky’ properties from neglect and almost certain demolition and restore them to contributing structures in the Historic District.” If you missed it, only caught a portion of the slides during the Holiday House Tour, or just want to page through some amazing before and after photos, this album should keep you occupied this weekend.

Friday Photos: Smorgasbord Edition

Continuing our transition from Picasa to Flickr, PHW has an incredible array of photos for you this week.

Monmouth Street

Over thirty brand new additions have been made to:
North Avenue
Stewart Street
Boscawen Street
National Avenue
Indian Alley
Monmouth Street
Cecil Street
Kurtz Cultural Center Exhibits

Over 240 photos have been transferred from Picasa to the following albums:
Kurtz Cultural Center Exhibits
Salvaged Greenhouse
Kent Street
Hiram Lodge Frescoes
311 1/2 South Kent Street
Lovett Building
PHW 1973 Grand Event
1975 Chamber of Commerce Event
Cedar Creek Battlefield
Abram’s Delight

Happy viewing!

Friday Photos: Picasa Albums Migrating to Flickr

PHW learned last week that the Picasa service will be retired by May 1, 2016. In anticipation of this closure, PHW has been working to migrate the albums and photo captions to Flickr. Although PHW has no plans to remove the existing images from Picasa or their replacement service Google Photos, we want to provide a backup for as much of the information there as possible. The photos will also be consolidated into one source – always helpful for researchers.

In addition to approximately 60 new digitized slides, most in the Architectural Details and Court Square albums, we have also transferred approximately 270 photos from Picasa to Flickr:
Vanished Winchester
Willow Brook
British Embassy Trip, 1979
Commercial Winchester, 1974
Loudoun Street, circa 1980

Please note that due to the size constraints on Picasa, some of the transferred images may be of lower quality and smaller size than you have come to expect.

Vanished Winchester