Issues → January/February 2011 → Home & Garden →
You Can Go Home Again
Edie Vonnegut and her husband, John Squibb, combined art, practicality, and a good dose of frugality to make the Cape Cod barn of her childhood into their own family's home.
by Ian Aldrich
Let's go back--say, 25 years. Before those lazy Sunday afternoons on the pond out back. Before those gorgeous mornings in the great room with all that sunshine pouring through. Before the yard-sale hunts to find another treasure. Certainly before kids. And long before the dream was ever realized: the dream of turning a dilapidated barn on the northern edge of the mid-Cape into a cozy home.
Where do we end up? A point in time that seems improbable now: at a moment when Edie Vonnegut believed that there was no way she could ever move back to her hometown of Barnstable, Massachusetts--not after leaving the Cape at age 17, traipsing around the world, before settling again in New York. For 15 years she called the city home. She built her career as a painter, found love, and eventually married a childhood friend.
And then the story takes a turn. It was her husband, John Squibb, who'd suggested the move. He was a builder. Like her, he'd grown up in New England. And also like his wife, he wanted a family, but not in the tight confines of New York. There was a barn at Edie's mother's place. It needed a lot of work, but he could fix it up. He could make it their home. But Edie was reluctant to leave a city she loved for a place that was just a little too familiar. "It was the last thing I wanted to do," she says now, laughing. "There are neighbors who still remember me as a kid running naked down the street."
Edie had moved to Cape Cod with her family at the age of 2, the youngest of a small contingent of Vonneguts arriving from Schenectady, New York, in 1952. Her family had vacationed in Provincetown the year before, and it was then that her father, the writer Kurt Vonnegut--who was still years away from literary fame--fell in love with the area and realized that he was never going to be happy with his 9-to-5 life in public relations at General Electric. He wanted to write, and he wanted to be close to the sea. So, with little money, he and his wife, Jane, and their children moved first to Osterville and then, after a couple of years, settled in Barnstable, into a rambling place that featured fantastic sunsets, a pleasant backyard that tumbled down to a pond, and a tired-looking barn.
It's here that Edie's dad wrote some of his most celebrated titles--Cat's Cradle and Slaughterhouse Five among them. It's also here, in small-town Barnstable, that the Vonnegut home, which included three nephews that Kurt and his wife adopted, was a swirl of activity. In the barn especially: parties and concerts, unplanned jam sessions, and random get-togethers. "It was the '60s," Edie says. "People would come for five minutes and stay a week." A lot of socializing but not a lot of upkeep. By the time Edie and John returned to the Cape in 1985 (her parents had divorced, with Edie's mother remaining in Barnstable), swallows had moved into the drafty structure, the basement had flooded, and the barn had no heating.
To make it their home, John and Edie wanted to renovate the building without sacrificing any of its barn character. That meant learning to embrace its age and imperfections. "This floor," John says, standing in the middle of the barn's main room, "pitches four inches. So be it." The wide wall boards, the oil-stained floor planks, and the old hand-hewn beams were not only to be retained but showcased, easy shortcuts be damned. To insulate their home, John got creative and built out instead of in, constructing bays on the barn's exterior. He filled them with 2-inch rigid insulation and capped them with plywood, then re-sided the entire barn.








Reader Comments
Comment from Dale Brittle on March 7, 2011
Great story! My grandmother and mother lived in this home when it was owned by Elizabeth Crocker Nye, my great aunt who was a librarian in Sturgis Library for over 50 years.
I have photos of the Pond and the home from the 1920\'s, along with family photos taken at the house. I would be interested in writing and article about my great aunt, the house and her work at the library if your magazine would be interested in a feature such as this? It may be an interesting follow-up to this articles? Please let me know. Thank you. Dale Nye Larkin Brittle dalebrittle@verizon.net
Comment from martha chabinsky on August 23, 2011
nice to see an old friend doing wonderful work! classmate from Harvard
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