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CALENDAR - THIS WEEK
VHDA Homeownership Education Program
Sat Nov 22
Virginia Housing Development Authority's FREE Homeownership Education Program teaches future homeowners how to prepare a...
Beginning Computer Classes for Adults
Tue Nov 25 10:30 am
Have computer questions and don't know where to begin? Come by the library and we'll help you get started! East End Libr...
CAR Meeting
Tue Nov 25 4:30 pm
Committee for Architectural Review
open mic @ Poe's Pub
Tue Nov 25 7:30 pm
acoustic open mic at Poe's Pub on East Main, hosted by Jim Daab. Sign up is at 7:30, music starts at 8, goes until clos...
Gabriel’s Rebellion @ FRC
Wed Nov 26 7:00 pm
lecture by Ana Edwards, Chair, Sacred Ground Historical Reclamation Project; Adjunct Professor, VCU From a series of ...

CLASSIFIEDS
Renovated house in Church Hill Close to downtown MCV, VCU, State offices. Located at 1305 N 28th Street 1500 square feet - 3 bedrooms 2.5 bathrooms W/D brand new appliances Central heat and air Back deck off kitchen PETS welcome 804.503.1858
2610 E. Marshall $115,000 Gutted to the studs & much mechanical work finished. Manageable square footage, even for the first timer. Walk to everywhere cool! Shannon RE/MAX Commonwealth 484 0367 shannonharrington.net
718 Chimborazo Blvd. Move in ready, 3 Bedrooms, newly renovated, great for students. On the busline. Willing to rent two individual rooms for $500.00 or the entire unit for a $1000.00. Rent includes water and sec. system. Call 221-6310 for showings.
512 N 26th St - room for rent, private entrance & private bath. Utilities included for $675. Call 804.683.4821 for more info.
Lease/Purchase at the Villas of Oakwood. Condos on the east tip of Church Hill most priced under $100,000. Lease for $650-$675 mo. Darlene Brent 477-3807 Long & Foster
HOME FOR SALE: 2703 M.STREET $219,000 - 3BR/2.5BA- FULLY RENOVATED W/ ATTENTION TO HISTORIC DETAIL AND MODERN LIVING. CALL KAREN STEPHENS FOR MORE INFORMATION & PRIVATE SHOWING 804.484.3348 (OPEN HOUSE SUN. NOV. 16TH 12-1:30PM)
Korpal Landscape and Design is now serving your neighborhood! Let us get your lawn and garden ready for winter. Call for a free estimate 804-240-2284 - No Obligation
Korpal Landscape and Design is now serving your neighborhood! Let us get your lawn and garden ready for winter. Call for a free estimate 804-240-2284 - No Obligation
Legal secretary with 20+ yrs exp. will help you get a VA uncontested divorce. 3+ me successful divorces so far; know the procedure, have and will type forms and give complete steps on the process. Fee of $60.00. Contact lucienepenny@comcast.net.
Experienced carpenter and painter specializing in historic home repairs. Highly reasonable rates; excellent references available. Contact Bill at (804) 317-7578 or at wswbalvis@hotmail.com for free estimate.
Historically appropriate storm windows, window restoration and old house consulting. Call Old House Authority, 804-648-1616.
EAST END FELLOWSHIP: a multi-ethnic neighborhood congregation meeting on Sunday afternoons at 4pm. Come join us at Franklin Military Academy, 701 N. 37th St. Contact coreyjwidmer@gmail.com




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comment   post to delicous
January 26, 2008

ACORN’s Researching the History of Your House

ACORN’s 5th Annual Susan Carter Williams Memorial Seminar, Researching the History of Your House, this morning at the Library of Virginia included the presentations Architectural Eras, Styles and House Types by Kim Chen , Your Historic Property: Detective Work at the Library of Virginia by Vince Brooks, Resources available at your Main Public Library by Harriet Henderson, Property Record Evidence at the John Marshall Courthouse by Michael Dodson, and Uncovering Clues at the Valentine Richmond History Center by Meg Glass.



First up was Kim Chen (Architectural Historian, Johannas Design Group, ACORN board member) with Architectural Eras, Styles and House Types, a quick look at 300 years of architectural history.

Resources:

  • Dictionary of Building Preservation by Ward Bucher
  • Illustrated Glossary on Early Southern Architecture and Landscape by Carl R. Lounsbury
  • the Church Hill Association’s Living With History
  • What Style Is It? (deals more with high style houses)
  • A Field Guide to American House (by Virginia and Lee McAlester)

American Architectural Eras:

  • Colonial (1600-1820); Postmedieval English, Georgian, Adam, Early Classical Revival; most of Postmedieval English are mostly gone. (Bacon’s Castle - Surry County VA 1655); Adam (Federal, Jeffersonian): first truly American style (example: Brickland, Lunenburg County [PDF])
  • Romantic Houses; Greek Revival (1825-1860); Gothic Revival (1840-1880); Italianate (1840-1885)(*many* examples around Richmond); Exotic Revivals (1835-1890)
  • Victorian (1860-1900): urban, mass produced — Second Empire - some in RVA, mansard roof; Queen Anne - “an homage to the machine”, balloon-frame, new forms, elaboration of form; Richardson Romanesque (some of Franklin)
  • Eclectic (1880-1940)(a very creative period)- by influence, often combined: (RVA Old City Hall)(Main St Station)(details define buildings); American/English/French
    Mediteranean (Mission, Spanish, Italian Renaissance); Modern American (Art Deco, Craftsman)

  • After 1950 - “disposable architecture”



Your Historic Property: Detective Work at the Library of Virginia by Vince Brooks (Senior Local Records Archivist - Library of Virginia)

Some resources:

  • Virginia Historical Inventory (documentation of vernacular architecture in Virginia)
  • Richmond Esthetic Survey - photos and info on some buildings in Richmond
  • T.Crawford Redd & Bros., Plats & Surveys (1786-1952) - at Library of VA; will show footprint of structure, roads and alleys, property lines.
  • Mutual Assurance Society of VA, Property Declarations & Revaluations (1796-1966) - basically a property assessment, will have drawing of footprint; pre-1865 info is online, early and later info is in LVA.
  • Richmond City Building Permit Office - 1907-1976; start on microfilm with the permit applications; can have blueprints, drawings; more.
  • Richmond Property Assessment Records - 1934-1977; Richmond City, Reels 477-699
  • Sanborn Fire Insurance Maps - footprint of house and surrounding properties, roads, alleys, outbuildings; construction material; addresses.
  • General Atlases, General Maps, Board of Public Works Maps

He also mentioned the publication Researching Your Historic Virginia Property (PDF).

Brooks referenced a map avilable at the LVA that shows the territorial growth of the City of Richmond, indicating when which areas were annexed from Chesterfield and Henrico Counties. A copy of this map is available for sale at The Virginia Shop at the Library of Virginia.

map_of_richmond_annexation.jpg



Resources available at your Main Public Library Harriet Henderson (Richmond Public Library Director) - Richmond Public Library)

  • Richmond City Assessment Records (1933-1960); need map reference number
  • City Council Minutes - for any special use permits, etc
  • City Directory - searchable by name, address, or phone number (1852-present)
  • Phone Books - 1912, 1925-1926, 1930-present
  • Newspaper Clipping Files - background info about neighborhoods, architects, more; more info



Property Record Evidence at the John Marshall Courthouse by Michael Dodson - Planner K.W.Poore & Associates, ACORN Board Member.

Records room on G-level. Open 8:45AM to 4:45PM. An easy quick way to find out a lot of history about home and neighborhood. Some recorded deeds, can search by names, map numbers. Some information back to the 1700s. Plats available on microfiche. Wills may also be a source of information (especially between 1930s and 1950s).



Uncovering Clues at the Valentine Richmond History Center by Meg Glass - Director of Archives and Photographic Services, (Valentine Richmond History Center)

Many many many photographs of primarily the Richmond area - people, places, events. Ephemera, documents such as city directories with address, employment, race of residents of house; Sanborn fire maps. Will overlap with other sources, complement them. Papers and photographs of Mary Wingfield Scott. Some architectural drawings from over the decade. Maps collection of voting districts, street car systems, other. Small number of plats. Reference library of books. Limited hours — contact them first by email, fax, or letter. Some small fees for nonmembers.

Posted at 8:11PM under architecture, history | Tags: ,

3 Responses to “ACORN’s Researching the History of Your House”

  1. posted by Cadeho at January 29, 2008 6:10 pm :

    Man I forgot all about this!!!!

    Thnaks for the coverage… and where can I get that map?

    I love T.Crawford Redd maps and Sanborn maps. I found really interesting stuff on Woodville ten years ago.

  2. posted by Cadeho at January 29, 2008 6:13 pm :

    I meant was a larger version of that map… I wanted to view it in more detail but I guess I’ll have to go down to the Library of Va… I wanted another map they had from way back when… just need to get down there.

  3. posted by john_m at January 29, 2008 6:31 pm :

    I looked for you there, figured something else had caught up with you.

    I couldn’t find a larger version of the map *anywhere* online.

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