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IssuesSeptember/October 2010Home & Garden

House Redux: Yankee Magazine's Original House for Sale

by Ian Aldrich

House Redux
Credit: Hornick/Rivlin
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Credit: Hornick/Rivlin
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Read the Original House for Sale article

It all started with a crooked-looking bay window in 1999. More than a decade on, that's how Chris Allen remembers it. The window, made out of two old cabinet doors, was just a small part of a grand old house in downtown Groton, Massachusetts, that Chris passed each day as he made the daily drive from his home in Concord to Pepperell, where a horse of his was stabled.

"It just seemed to be calling to me," Chris says. "It just made me want to find out what else was there."

So he tried to do just that, slowing down just enough every morning to take in a little more detail. There was the way the house sat back from Main Street, tucked away from the traffic. The varying roof heights appealed to him. So did the seemingly forgotten yard, which sloped and meandered before butting up against a wall of trees. Even the crooked house lines drove his interest.

Finally, after a year, Chris paid a visit to a nearby real estate office and told an agent that if the place ever came up for sale, he'd love to talk to the owners. "Funny you should say that," she told him. "I just got off the phone with them, and they're thinking about selling."

Let's step back a moment. You see, this isn't the first time this property has appeared in Yankee. In April 1950, in response to reader requests to feature homes that were actually on the market, our magazine took action.

"For some months now, we have been running, as you know, pictures and a story of some attractive house in [New England]," editor Richard Merrifield wrote in that month's issue. "Naturally, this sort of story would not be as interesting as a similar story of a house actually for sale--one YOU could do something about."

And with that, the genesis for Yankee's long-running "House for Sale" column was born.

In 1950 the property was the home of Robert Sturtevant, former director of the recently shuttered Lowthorpe School of Landscape Architecture, an all-women's institution in Groton and the first of its kind in the country. Sturtevant's 115-year-old home was a patched-together place, a series of carriage and wagon sheds that years ago had been turned into "a dwelling with rooms blithely located at five different levels," the Yankee Moseyer wrote.

Handmade doors adorned the place. There was an artist's studio, a large "summer" room, and, under Sturtevant's hand, a beautifully landscaped yard. "If you're an imaginative family," the Moseyer added, "this house could be fun." The owner's asking price: $16,900.

The property eventually sold--then sold again--and then a few more times. By the time Chris and his wife, Ellen Allen, owners of a successful printer repair and service company, decided to buy it in 2000, the value of the place had jumped to $350,000.

It had also fallen into severe disrepair. Old carpeting plagued the house. A decrepit roof was blanketed with 16 layers of tarpaper. The heating system was wheezing toward its finish. And a major support beam that ran between a couple of upstairs bedrooms had been cut in half for purely aesthetic reasons. Adding to it all was the general old-house feel of the place: small rooms, low ceilings, little light. "It was a knockdown," Chris says.

Reader CommentsRSS

Comment from Adra Bifano on August 29, 2010

What a delightful article. I have always enjoyed your houses for sale and the remodeling of this one.

Comment from Victoria Cullen on September 7, 2010

Oh thanks so much for the follow up. It was great!

Comment from Sally LaRusso on September 7, 2010

How wonderful to live in a home you love and take such pride in your suroundings!

Comment from Dorothy Capezzuto on September 7, 2010

A great article. How wonderful to have the time,patience and of course the money to do such a renovations. Congratulations

Comment from Joan B Smith on September 7, 2010

I wish!

Comment from Janice Georgilas on September 14, 2010

I wish I could see this home that sounds so beautiful when ready about it. Thank you for sharing this story!

Comment from krista kohler on September 18, 2010

wow ... I was so surprised when my mom told me that this house was in the Yankee magazine. My father grew up in this house back in the 50\'s and my mother had several bridal showers in this house after getting engaged to my father. My father passed away 3 weeks ago so this article and the pictures of the house really mean a lot to my mom. Thank you so much for sharing it.

Comment from Edie Irons on May 14, 2011

My grandparents lived in this house for many years before Chris and Ellen bought it. After my grandmother\'s memorial service in Groton a year ago, some family members and I dropped by to see what had happened to the place, and Chris and Ellen warmly gave us a tour! We couldn\'t have been more touched and delighted by the work and love they put into it, they really brought out the charm of the place. Thanks!

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