Family Album – Issue 51

Durand, Ill., Kelly and Ruth Stoll
Nicknamed “the little brown house” by everyone in our small town, our 1,000-square-foot, two-bedroom bungalow was built in 1927 and lived in by its builders until the 1990s. We carefully added a garage in the back in 2005, keeping the original tiny garage to use as a gardening shed. Central heating and air conditioning have been added, but otherwise our quiet little home is original from its cedar shake siding to its woodwork. As we’ve landscaped, we’ve used plant species available in 1927 whenever possible. We understand what our guests mean when they say they feel at home as soon as they enter this house: our warm and cozy home is our favorite place to be.

Shelbyville, Tenn., Telette Kellar
I bought this charming little house in 2000. It is one of several in the area built in a similar style in 1945. (A local man said he thought they were called “homestead houses” to attract residents after WW II.) It is about 1,000 square feet, with two bedrooms and one bath. The woodwork is all original and is especially nice. An odd beaded board on the walls runs horizontally, not vertically, and had cardboard over it as a surface for wallpapering. I took this photo before I had a new metal roof put on it; the metal is lighter in color and really fits the style of the house surprisingly well. I was looking for an older home with character in a settled neighborhood in a small town, and that’s just what I got!

Washington, D.C., May Ann Curtis
I bought my wood-shingled, 1,900-squre-foot 1923 bungalow 31 years ago.I chose it for the close-in city location, the light and spaciousness, and oak and heart-pine floors. In the unfinished basement I discovered the original two-burner cast-iron stove and several interior doors, including glass doors for the bookcases on either side of the red-brick fireplace. The house faces the U. S. Naval Observatory grounds, an accidental urban wildlife sanctuary. Architect Bruce Wentworth (see “A Sympathetic Addition,” AB No. 39, page 102) has provided good advice on both practical and aesthetic improvements. The unfussiness of this house works well with an eclectic collection of furniture, ceramics and copper pieces collected from Spain, Italy and Greece. A new Stickley rug in the foyer adds a touch of authentic bungalow style.

St. Louis, Mo., Cody Thomas
It was the frankness of this house that was so appealing. It is located in the Southampton neighborhood, which was conceived in 1920 by an English expatriate hoping to recreate the feel of his native city while building affordable housing using Arts and Crafts sensitivities and values. Amenities include extensive built-ins, even built-in art: every house in the neighborhood has two delightful Arts and Crafts stained-glass windows in the front room, where they filter light and wash the hardwood floors with their hues. This gem was originally sold under what was then a new-fangled system: showing display homes from which buyers could choose among models and options. This “Five Room Economy Bungalow” originally sold as a “remarkable value” for a price of $4,250.

Springfield, Mo., Jennifer and Steve White
We bought this 1924 four-level house in November 2004. It is located in a highly sought-out area of Springfield, close to the lights of downtown and the local university. It has four bedrooms and two-and-a-half baths, with an unfinished basement and bonus room. Totally restored to its original architecture, the house has tall ceilings, original radiators, extensive hardwood flooring, crown moldings, a covered deep front porch, a side portico entrance, a covered rear stoop and a picturesque backyard. Fifty-two windows provide ample lighting. This house is a keeper. We have found our home for life.

Fitchburg, Mass., Paul and Connie Williams
Our bungalow was built in 1925. It has most of its original woodwork. It is situated on a tree-lined lot and offers us sanctuary in a busy world. The front porch is a favorite gathering place for friends and family. At the end of our driveway is a garage built at the same time. We feel very fortunate to live in a bungalow, and we enjoy every aspect of our home.

Spring Lake, N.J., Anne and Fred Folco
We have lived in our four-bedroom, two-bath Arts and Crafts bungalow since 1999. From the records we could find, it was built around 1920Ð1923. We are only the third owners. We absolutely love our home, located in the beautiful seaside community of Spring Lake, also known as the “Irish Rivera” and, since June, as the home of this year’s National Spelling Bee Champion. It features exposed-beam ceilings in the living and dining rooms and beautiful hardwood floors throughout. We have lovingly furnished it with Mission-style furniture and light fixtures. The best feature of this house is the wrap-around porch, where we spend most of our time and which is our guests’ favorite place, too.

Moberly, Mo., David and Priscilla Nicholson
Our 1920s brick bungalow has 4,000 square feet and a matching garage on two lots. There is Italian tile on the front porch and on the front and side steps, and all of the original windows are intact. The 52-inch front door has the original beveled glass and matching sidelights. Renovating it has become our hobby. Last year we had it repainted and tuckpointed and added the arbor and fencing. It recently won a local photo contest and was named house of the month. It is the most comfortable and charming house we have ever lived in.

By Mick Woodbury

The boat has the grandness of a home, with rich mahogany inlays, Douglas fir floors, and exposed beams in the ceiling. In so many ways, it is like a 2,200 square-foot Craftsman house, except that you can take it for a cruise to Alaska.

Like a Craftsman house with a foundation that seems to have arisen from the earth, the 92-foot Lotus looks so fitting it could have surfaced from the waters of Puget Sound. Surrounded by towering pines, textured hills and a calm blue bay, the wooden yacht – whose unique design was inspired by the double-deck steamships that frequented the sound from the 1850s to the 1930s – is a captivating presence. Inside, its wainscoting, vertical-grain fir and brass lotus-blossom lamps reveal a rich patina that comes only with age and loving care. It seems only natural that this boat, recently featured in the Port Townsend Historic Home Tour, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Outside, the wind is up, the whitecaps are knocking and it’s so quiet, it’s almost like being anchored in the pure, secluded backwaters of coastal Alaska. There’s one restaurant on the waterfront that just serves dinner and is known to be pretty wonderful. A little marina is farther down the bay. The two dozen boats anchored off the port side are bobbing on the chop. Snug in the pilothouse on the second floor of the Lotus, owner Christian Gruye and interior designer Karen Hovde are recalling stories about this remarkable houseboat that has come into Christian’s life for the third time since she was a young girl.

“In 1959, I wasn’t even a teenager yet when my Mom, Kathryn, found a little three-line newspaper ad that led us to a dock where the Gasworks Park is now located,” says Christian, who also runs the Lotus Foundation for the preservation of her seaworthy piece of history. “The Lotus was leaning against the pilings. For my dad, Curtiss, or ‘Papa,’ it was an easy decision that resulted in a quick sale. From then on, my sister, Lezley, and brother, David, and I spent our summers aboard and our days were filled with clamming, fishing and playing on the docks. We even learned to work as maids when we ran her as a “boatel” during the 1962 Seattle World’s Fair. We could sleep 14 people in beds and 4 on beautiful deck seats behind the pilothouse out of the wind.”

“Instead of a family cabin, the Gruyes had a boat on Puget Sound, the most state-of-the art yacht in its day,” says Hovde, Christian’s long-time friend. ” It was built in 1909 for Maurice McMicken, a prominent Seattle attorney, politician and newspaper publisher who wanted to travel the Inland Passage with his family and friends. It is one of a kind, built the best it could be with the finest materials available. The sea-green Grueby relief tiles surrounding the fireplace depict Viking ships. There’s a chandelier in the main saloon, which has built-ins just like a Craftsman home. The heads are as big as any bathroom in a Craftsman home, and there are two claw-foot tubs. You could have a live band and dance floor on the boat deck behind the 18-by-9-foot pilothouse. In fact, they’ve done it! There are even lights and an intercom installed in the days when electricity had yet to reach into many conventional homes.

“This boat has the grandness of a home with rich mahogany inlays, Douglas fir floors, and exposed beams in the ceiling. So many things are very similar to a 2,200 square-foot Craftsman house, except that you can sail it on the open ocean.”

In the 1970s, with their children grown, Curtioss and Kathryn were ready to travel more, and Curtiss sold the Lotus to a Puget Sound historian who, on impulse, bought both the boat and the marina all in one day. “We were all disappointed Papa sold the Lotus, but we knew it was the right thing for him to do,” Christian says. “The very next day, though, he called the buyer and said, ‘I feel awful and I’m having terrible remorse. But all I really want is to have the right of first refusal if you ever decide to be done with her.’ Sure enough, a few years later Papa got the call we had hoped for. He went to the bank that day, withdrew the boat money that he’d never spent, and bought the boat back. We were all so thrilled, and though we were scattered geographically, we all came back right away and started working on her again, even installing a new engine.”

With repairs and a new engine, the Lotus was again seaworthy. It wasn’t long before Curtiss was testing the waters with members of his family, first on outings with his son, then on a “grand adventure” with his two brothers to Alaska’s Glacier Bay. Then he began what would become a long association with wooden-boat and classic-yacht enthusiasts. “Our first wooden boat festival was here in Port Townsend,” Christian says. “From then on, we did every festival in Puget Sound and many in Canada. The Lotus was part of the Washington State Flotilla of Ships to the Vancouver, B.C. Expo in 1986. Mayors even presented her with keys to their cities. The opening-day parades were celebrations we tried never to miss.”

In 1998, after two decades of touring, exploring and tirelessly crewing the yacht with the help of inspired friends, Curtiss sold the Lotus for the second and final time, to a couple who operated it for a short while as a bed-and-breakfast.

They, as well as the father and son they soon sold it to, both discovered how costly it is to maintain an antique 92-foot boat. (Bottom paint alone is at least $100 per gallon.) When the father and son learned the boat’s history with Christian’s family in 2003, they called her and offered it to her as a gift. This time around, the woman who grew up working and playing on the boat she called her second home would have tour guides in her two grown children, Piper and Cody, and the best mooring rigging – not to mention support and encouragement – from her husband, the Master Rigger and author Brion Toss.

“Now, she’s been in our family three times, and each time is with great joy,” Christian says. Also, this time she has Karen Hovde’s Arts and Crafts interior-design expertise. “Every time there was a significant change in Christian’s career path, she would say, ‘Now I can buy the boat back,’” Karen says. “To have the boat gifted back to the family makes it a remarkable story.”

“When she became ours again, we put her in the public domain right away,” Christian says. “We had to haul her out of the water for the insurance survey, but even sitting in the boat yard, she drew attention. People would sheepishly walk up and ask for tours. So we finally made a sign – “Tours Daily” – and opened her up to visitors every day at 5 p.m. when we finished working on her. I’d say that by now, conservatively, a half-million people have walked through this boat. The minute they walk in the door, the first thing that comes out of their mouths is ‘WOW.’ They have no idea they’re going to walk from a common dock to a saloon that just knocks you over, one that’s so beautiful, and so gloriously simple.

“It’s the simplicity of this Craftsman-Edwardian era in the art and décor, when design went from the overdone Victorian, over-ferned sort of setting, to clean lines, strong profiles and beautiful use of materials. In the Northwest in particular, because we’re surrounded by wood, stone and water, it really resonates, and people get swept into it. If they have time, they gravitate to the saloon and there’s always a teapot on for a cup of tea. Or they can sit up on the deck, or in the pilot house. It just makes you want to slow down and step back. I think because wood is a beautiful medium for muting sound, it makes everything mellow. The boat is all wood, so it gives a very solid, quiet feeling the minute you walk inside. And because she’s so big and heavy, she sits solidly in the water. It’s a serene feeling.”

Christian is reminded of the energy and involvement of “our wonderful Friends of Lotus volunteers. Once people take the tour, they want to get involved. Volunteers have made a world of difference. One couple came for a week at a time and lived in their van while they worked on her. We had 1,600 volunteer hours just for the exterior. The Lotus has always been well maintained, so this is not a restoration or a renovation but a continuing preservation. And because people care, pieces of the Lotus’s past are coming back. The fold-up porcelain sinks and deck chairs were returned by previous owners, and because the Lotus crest is on so many items, people will call and say they have a glass or a dish they want to return. It’s been great for Papa, at 86, to come almost every day and know she’s being brought back to her full glory to kick off her second hundred years.”

Mick Woodbury is a marketing consultant and lifelong sailor.

Table of Contents
Number 51
Fall 2006 (Purchase Here)

BUNGALOW FEATURES

Architecture
Embrace the Darkness
by Jane Powell
In which the author explains why bungalows
are often dark, and how to live well with the
consequences, with a tour of her own “Fabulous Bunga-Mansion” in Oakland, Calif.

Architects
Only in L.A.: Mayan Fantasy
by Rebecca Kuzins
Robert Stacy-Judd envisioned an
“All-American” architecture drawn from
Pre-Columbian sources. His Atwater
Bungalows are its purest, quirkiest expression.

Readers’ Renovation
A Classic Pasadena Craftsman is New- and Old-Again
by John Luke
Committed owners spend 10 years getting to know their home, then reinvent it for a new age.

Brand New Bungalows
Craftsman Distilled: An Artist’s Bungalow Makeover
by Judy Seckler
A sculptor with a tiny old house and an
eye for bungalow design elects to stay in
the neighborhood she loves.

Navigating History
Navigating History: Piloting a Craftsman Houseboat Cruiser/”>Piloting a Craftsman Houseboat Cruiser
by Mick Woodbury
The boat has the grandness of a 2,200-square-foot Craftsman house. The main difference? You can take it for a cruise to Alaska.

Show us What You’ve Done
The Little Bungalow that Came Back
By Ken Widmeyer
He said he was looking for his grandparents’ house. All he needed was something to work with.

Departments and Craftsman Resources

A Letter from the Publisher

Open House: Letters to the Editor

Family Album
From Missouri and elsewhere around the land, readers share their bungalow restoration and preservation achievements.

Antiques
Perspective on Antiques with David Rudd
Our consultant responds to readers’
questions on vintage furnishings.

Arts & Crafts Profile
Drawing from the Past – Two Views,
One Vision: CJ Hurley Century Arts
by Terry Tsujioka
A meticulous artist finds inspiration in
Japanese Tea Ceremony.

Books
Building with Nature
By Leslie M. Freudenheim
Review by John Luke

American Bungalow News
The restored Barn at Fallingwater adds
new attractions to Frank Lloyd Wright’s
iconic setting.

Directory of Advertisers

From Our Friends
Front Porch Memories
by Wallace R. Cromwell
Once a treasured gathering space,
the front porch seems to be making a comeback.

The Bungalow Bookstore
As the weather begins to cool, now is the
time to explore autumn reading and begin
planning for the holidays.