I attended an estate sale this morning, which was located in a subdivision called "Morningside" - a subdivision that was built about 1955/1956 and consisted totally of National Homes. This particular house was a total survivor! I'm guessing it was built about 1956 (I do not find the exact floor plan in my 1955 catalog) and was apparently purchased (new) by a retired military family, who occupied the home until the parents' death and then was passed down to a son, who has since passed away.
The house was packed full of the parents' stuff and the son moved in and added some of his own stuff, but the house was never remodeled. I would say the only "updates" consisted of the addition of central AC and the addition of a separate clothes dryer (these houses originally featured a combination washer/dryer, located in an interior space, the buyer could select either a GE or a Bendix unit). The original kitchen is still there - Youngstown cabinets and countertop (base cabinets have painted metal doors, wall cabinets have flush birch doors and one has sliding panels), the kitchen floor is still the original 9 x 9 asphalt tile, the overhead track for the sliding bamboo door between the kitchen and the dining room is still there but the curtain is missing. The bedroom closets still have their original floor-to-ceiling Modernfold accordion doors; original bath and half bath are there. The house is built over a crawl space and has 2-1/4" oak flooring. There is even what is probably the original refrigerator from when the house was built - a Frigidaire.
Apparently the occupants of the house were smokers big time. ALL of the walls and ceilings were coated with nicotine and even with the a/c running the house had a very musty, dated smell. I was completely captivated by this time capsule house. I might have to go back tomorrow and take some more pictures. I am sure the house will go on the market once it's cleaned out. Very tempting to think about what could be done with it. Could make a very fun project for me, although I have no idea what the goal would be - live in it? flip it? rent it out? Sill me, I just want to make a museum out of it. LOL
Here are the pics I took this morning.
lawrence




The house was packed full of the parents' stuff and the son moved in and added some of his own stuff, but the house was never remodeled. I would say the only "updates" consisted of the addition of central AC and the addition of a separate clothes dryer (these houses originally featured a combination washer/dryer, located in an interior space, the buyer could select either a GE or a Bendix unit). The original kitchen is still there - Youngstown cabinets and countertop (base cabinets have painted metal doors, wall cabinets have flush birch doors and one has sliding panels), the kitchen floor is still the original 9 x 9 asphalt tile, the overhead track for the sliding bamboo door between the kitchen and the dining room is still there but the curtain is missing. The bedroom closets still have their original floor-to-ceiling Modernfold accordion doors; original bath and half bath are there. The house is built over a crawl space and has 2-1/4" oak flooring. There is even what is probably the original refrigerator from when the house was built - a Frigidaire.
Apparently the occupants of the house were smokers big time. ALL of the walls and ceilings were coated with nicotine and even with the a/c running the house had a very musty, dated smell. I was completely captivated by this time capsule house. I might have to go back tomorrow and take some more pictures. I am sure the house will go on the market once it's cleaned out. Very tempting to think about what could be done with it. Could make a very fun project for me, although I have no idea what the goal would be - live in it? flip it? rent it out? Sill me, I just want to make a museum out of it. LOL
Here are the pics I took this morning.
lawrence



