Tag: House Dismantling

  • O’Kane Notebook IV: The Ghost Pantry

    Blue Parlor Wall, Dismantled
    Blue Parlor Wall, Dismantled. Photo by John Butler

    One of the first treasures we uncovered at O’Kane was a wall of horizontal featheredge sheathing painted in bright yellow.  It was hidden behind plaster in the Blue Parlor, and had shadow lines delineating where once there were shelves.  Where the boards terminate, on the left side, we think there was originally a wall, creating three rooms in the back half of the house.  Two smaller rooms flanked the Blue Parlor with its large central hearth.  The yellow paneling probably turned the corner, creating a pantry in what was originally the kitchen, given the large fireplace.  Throughout the house, we have continued to find boards and shards in the same chrome yellow, used as padding and strapping.  This helps to the date those walls, and solve the mystery of the house’s original layout.

    New Wall, Old Panelling

     

    Pictured above is the paneled wall that we uncovered in the room directly above the Blue Parlor.  The right portion of the paneled wall is original, and you can make out the hinges from the original door opening on the second panel from the right.  The door opening was filled with one wide, nondescript board and a board with the same chrome yellow paint and shadow lines.  During one period of renovation, this yellow pantry board was probably taken from the partition wall downstairs and installed upstairs to create what became a UNH student’s bedroom.

    We have found other pieces of this doorway elsewhere in that upstairs bedroom.  In the closet, the head casing was being used as a shelf cleat, allowing us to determine the width of the original door.  Time and again during the dismantling process, we are reminded to be thankful for that Yankee thrift.

  • O’Kane Notebook I

    Tools for Dismantling
    Tools for Dismantling

    We’ve begun in earnest the dismantling of the O’Kane House, in Durham, NH.  It began with a training day with John Butler, a photographer and carpenter who has worked with us on a number of museum de-installations.  He showed us how to remove trim without damaging the surface using a variety of softwood wedges, and other specialty tools.  He has also been working with us to develop a streamlined process for labeling and documenting all of the parts we will remove.

    As we dismantle the house, I hope to keep the blog up to date with a series of posts and pictures of the neat stuff we find.  Consider the following the first:

    Chimney Girt Look at that enormous Chimney Girt!

    Jamb and CasingThe interior door jambs were rabbeted into the casing.  Those dadoes and rabbets were all plowed by hand!

    ReuseWhen the carpenter who milled this piece of baseboard ran into some squirelly grain, or screwed up and ran off the edge of the board, he just flipped the piece over, and ran the molding on the opposite edge of the opposite face.  We revel in connecting to other carpenters in this way.  We all make mistakes, it’s the good carpenters who know how to fix them.

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