THE HOUSE
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5
Acres, House, Outbuildings & 7,500 Christmas Trees
$634,587
FOR SALE
BY OWNER
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Style: Three-bay, two-story gable-ended vernacular Greek revival house sheathed with
wood shingles.
Click here
for more pictures of the house.
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Built: Sometime between 1850
and 1852 by Bennett C. Perry who purchased the five-acre lot of land. The
house is nearly identical to the house to the north also build ca. 1850 by
Bennett Perry's brother.
Click here for floor plan |
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The farm changed hands a number of times during the 1860s
and 1870s before being purchased by Betsy and David Buell in 1875. The Buell's had three children and a daughter who married an
O'Dell. She and her husband purchased the house and 31 acres from her parents in 1949. |
| Rooms include Kitchen. Family
Rm, Dining Rm, Living Rm, Parlor and full Bath on the first floor. The
2nd floor has 4 Bedrooms and a full Bath. There is a full basement and
large attic space.
Click here for floor plan |
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Renovations: The Buell's added the Italianate verandah in the front, a portion of which was removed sometime during the 20th
century. The O'Dell's put in the first plumbing and electricity and installed a furnace. Up until then the house was heated with
wood and lighted by kerosene lamps. Water came from a well located under the kitchen and it is still in use today. The house was sold with 3 acres in 1963 and at one time during the 1960s, the old
kitchen was used as an antique shop. The current owners, who operate a Christmas tree farm on the property, purchased the house in
1973. They spent 17 years rebuilding and restoring the house to its present state.
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Highlights: Original woodwork
and chestnut floorboards, Original six-over-six window sash,
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In 2004 an
additional 2.3 acre parcel was added to the farm, bringing it back to 5
acres it was in the 1850's. At the present time, about a tenth of an acre is
cleared every year for fire wood and the cleared area replanted in Christmas
trees. We collect the wood stove ash and use that to mark the new spots for
trees, starting the new trees with what is left of the old. |