The House That Became Part Of A Family Part
Three
by: Pat Stelzer
That October morning dawned
bright and sunny, seemingly an omen of good things to come. It
was moving day! We were actually moving into our “new”
home. Since we were doing the job without professional help,
friends had gathered and we began to load the furniture onto a
rented trailer, one of the open air ones with slat sides. When
the trailer was filled, we proceeded to load the remaining
boxes, including canned goods and food from the refrigerator
into waiting cars and began the caravan to our home for at
least the next few years. We had decided this might be the
‘starter’ house that would allow us to build up equity so we
could move to something a little nicer in maybe five or six
years. Somehow that idea got lost
along the way over the ensuing years, and forty-five years
later, we are still living in that starter house.
As our friends helped unload and carry our furniture into the
house, not one mentioned the horrible linoleum that was
cracked, split and pealing off the kitchen floor. They didn’t
laugh at the congoleum pealing off the walls of the kitchen,
and no one made disparaging remarks about the horrible purple
and silver wallpaper in the living room. They were being kind.
After all, to repay them for their help, we had offered to
spring for pizza after the move was finished. A few of the men
used some rather harsh language when they had to carry beds,
mattresses and box springs up the narrow stairway and lift them
up over the banister at the top because the turn was two steps
from the top and blocked by walls. The only thing that came up
missing was an old card table that probably flew off the open
trailer. Two of the rooms, one downstairs and one upstairs,
were left empty as we didn’t have furniture to fill them. This
did provide storage space for boxes that I couldn’t unpack
because there was no place to put the stuff, minor things like
bedding and towels, books and the kids’ toys. The room upstairs
also became a pseudo closet. It had pegs on the wall that could
be used to hang our clothes.
After the pizza supper, we stood in the driveway and waved
goodbye as our friends left, and I noticed that a few of them
were shaking their heads. I’m sure they thought we were totally
out of our minds. We went back into our home, thrilled with
spending that first night in the house we now owned. Our son,
who was approaching four, was delighted with the uneven floor
in the kitchen. His toy cars rolled from the middle to the wall
with no effort on his part. His nine-month-old sister was
oblivious to it all. She was happy as only babies can be to sit
in her playpen and watch as her brother kept letting his cars
roll across the floor.
Other than a few inconveniences like only one electrical outlet
in some of the rooms, everything was fine for the first few
weeks while the nice weather held. But when temperatures began
to drop, we began to experience an influx of uninvited guests.
Mice. From the last of October until the middle of January we
caught twenty-two of the furry visitors. Some like the ones
that got caught in the wastebasket and couldn’t get out we
simply returned to the wild. We even found one in the old claw
foot bathtub one morning. He was in a panic because he couldn’t
climb the slick sides, and we were in a panic trying to figure
a way to get him out of the tub and out of the house. We
managed to trap him in a bucket and toss him outside.
Adding to our confrontation with reality was the chill that
began to permeate the house as temperatures dipped below
freezing. As the wind blew, the windows rattled and allowed
that cold air to slip right in. And the upstairs was almost as
cold as my refrigerator. We put both children in the same bed
so they would stay warm. I made them sleep in hooded
sweatshirts and under a ton of blankets. I had made the mistake
of placing a thermometer on a dresser in their bedroom. One
night I checked it before putting them to bed and it read 35
degrees. That was the night we pulled mattresses downstairs and
slept on the floors of the two front rooms. We never dreamed
the upstairs would get that cold. Reality almost caused us to
suffer from hypothermia.
Another problem was frozen water lines. Who needed ice cubes?
The well was just off the side porch, and the water pump was in
the milk house that was attached to the house but wasn’t
heated. The pipes were exposed to the cold air. After having
friends bring us enough water to get through the next day, we
bought electrical heating tape to keep pipes from freezing. We
struggled through that first winter knowing that our poor house
had some problems that needed fixing, and fearful that our
oldest child might be in trouble. He had suffered from
bronchitis and tonsillitis every winter from the time he was
just three months old. We also struggled through that winter
knowing that another baby would become part of the family in
June. Smart baby, he knew better than to come into the world
during that first winter in our house.
As spring approached we made the decision that storm windows
would be our first investment. Fortunately, we were contacted
by a company looking for houses in our area to be used as demo
houses for their windows. We agreed with their very favorable
terms and had the windows installed as quickly as possible.
What we had also failed to realize was that there were no
screens for the windows and there would have been no way to
open the windows in the summer unless we purchased the old
pull-out screens for every window in the house. We also
realized that the heating bills were going to eat us alive if
we didn’t do something to cut down on heat loss. Our oil bills
that first winter were horrendous. Hopefully the storm windows
would help.
With the coming of summer, we learned to enjoy some of the
blessings of our old house. We hadn’t realized that one of the
gardens was a strawberry patch. We had strawberries with every
meal. The house stayed cool in the heat of the summer because
of the twelve inch thick brick walls and the two maple trees
that shaded the front yard. Our dog had his own private dog
house when we converted the old “out house” with the half moon
design in the door into his private quarters. Our second son
and third child decided to make his appearance in June, so by
the end of summer we were forced to put the third bedroom into
use. Other than paint a few of the upstairs rooms, we had no
assets with which to start any major remodeling projects. We
had envisioned taking out the center wall between the two front
rooms making one large front room by using a steel I-beam for
support. How fortunate that we didn’t have the money. The wall
is still there and is still twelve inches thick, as is every
wall in the original part of the house.
We also realized that our oldest son had not been sick that
winter. He had gotten through it without a single attack of
bronchitis. Sleeping in the cold upstairs had toughened up his
system. That’s when I decided that this old house had been good
for our family and wanted us to stay. That very first winter,
as difficult as it had been, made us aware that the house was
more than just a building; it had become our home, a part of
our lives. It needed us to give it a family with love and
laughter and we needed it to keep us safe. That ‘old house’ had
begun to worm its way into our hearts.
About The Author
Patricia Stelzer, Springfield, Ohio USA
patstelzer@rusticdecorating.com
www.RusticDecorating.com
Pat Stelzer is a writer, columnist, reporter, and retired
school teacher, currently an adjunct instructor at a community
college. She has a long running interest in home decorating and
in rustic or folk art pieces, her own 175-year-old home a
veritable collection of many types of Americana and folk art.
She has recently published her second mystery novel, "DEADLY
RESEARCH, BY GEORGE!" Information about it can be found at
www.PatStelzer.com.
information@rusticdecorating.com
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