Monday, December 27, 2010

More on the McCraken-Mize House…

…the sellers of the McCraken-Mize House (the trustees of Calvary United Methodist Church) continue to lower the sales price, which is now at $152,500. Additional land is also available to purchase.


This beautiful Victorian Queen Anne with original stained-glass windows at 210 E. Trinity Ave. is an important historic Durham property. (Check out my Oct. 20 journal entry: "The Historic McCracken-Mize has many fans" ). This historic property was the recipient of Preservation Durham’s Pyne Award in 1981 and qualifies for the Historic Tax Credits. To learn more about the state’s historic tax credit program, visit: http://ncolderhouse.blogspot.com/search?q=state+tax+credits


The church trustees say the best offers will be accompanied by a detailed explanation of the renovation plans of the buyers. The church is open to estimates of renovations vs selling price, but they will only consider “as is” offers and will not be responsible for any repairs. All buyers are advised to submit a cover letter with their offers. The church leaders say they will be reasonable because they wish to welcome their new neighbors and to be great neighbors themselves.


I share all of this with you, not because I represent the sellers; but because I would like to offer my services to you as a buyer’s agent who specializes in historic properties. Nothing would make me happier than to find just the right owner for this fine Victorian Queen… someone who could lovingly preserve her gothic, detailed angles; and renovate her diagonaled walls with bays of decorative pendant brackets.


With 11+ years of real estate brokerage experience, I would be happy to assist you in the acquisition of this fine home. So contact me right at away for your own private showing of the McCraken-Mize House or any other historic property. My contact information is


Lisa Dye Janes
"Your Older House Specialist"



Lisa Dye Janes
ljanes@markthomasrealty.com
Cell/VM- (919) 423-3463
WEICHERT, REALTORS® – Mark Thomas Properties
3901 University Drive
Durham, NC 27707
Office- (919) 403-5315
Fax- 919-287-2349
MarkThomasProperties.com

Monday, November 29, 2010

Price reduction on McCracken-Mize house

I just received word that the asking price has been reduced by $10,000 on the McCracken-Mize House at 210 E. Trinity Ave. in Durham. The house is now listed at $162,500. Here is a link to the web site that some of the Old North Durham neighbors put together on the house:
http://www.mccracken-mize-house.com/index.html

If you would like a private tour of this remarkable old home (check out my Oct. 20 journal entry: "The Historic McCracken-Mize has many fans" ), get in touch with me right at away. My contact information is:
Lisa Dye Janes
"Your Older House Specialist"


Lisa Dye Janes
ljanes@markthomasrealty.com
Cell/VM- (919) 423-3463
WEICHERT, REALTORS® – Mark Thomas Properties
3901 University Drive
Durham, NC 27707
Office- (919) 403-5315
Fax- 919-287-2349
MarkThomasProperties.com





Wednesday, October 20, 2010

The Historic McCracken-Mize Has Many Fans

McCracken-Mize House, 210 E. Trinity Avenue, Durham
Photos by Jessie Gladin-Kramer
I finally got the chance to go preview 
the beautiful, historic Victorian Queen Anne home at 210 E. Trinity Ave. in Durham. What an experience! One can certainly never judge a book by its cover. At first glance, you might see a tired old house with sagging floor joists and peeling paint. But once you step inside, the McCracken-Mize House certainly comes alive as her turn-of-the century styling is revealed... 


And, I have discovered there are quite a few people out there who love her! The Old North Durham neighborhood has set up a web site outlining her history, which you should visit:


According to the web site, “the exterior of the house has seen little change over the years. A fanciful turret still rises over a central gable and a wide, front porch. The home has windows that are decorated with colorful stained glass. The bays on the east front and the west side are embellished with unusual, round windows that are divided into nine, petal-like panes of colored glass. The window frames are also decorated with carpenter gothic details. The angles over the diagonal walls of the bays feature decorative pendant brackets.

The interior of the house features a wide, board-and-batten paneled central hall with French doors dividing the front of the house from the back. Four large square rooms flank the hall, with a large fireplace and mirrored mantel. A staircase leads from the back of the house to the upper hall, which extends into the turret at the front of the house past a bedroom and bathroom.

The twin front parlors retain their original high ceilings, hardwood floors, elaborate moldings, and pocket doors, although the back rooms were damaged by a water leak in the mid-1990’s and the floors and ceilings need to be replaced.”

The McCracken-Mize House is owned by Calvary United Methodist Church next door. Although the house is currently on the market for $172,500, but the church is open to estimates of renovations verses the selling price. There is also land available through the church. The church is reasonable and wishes to welcome new neighbors and be great neighbors themselves. So don't be shy. 

There is a preliminary estimate on the web site to renovate/restore the McCracken-Mize house for around $284,000, according to Alan Spruyt of Trinity Design/Build. After historic tax credits, the net cost could be just under $200,000. To learn more about the state’s historic tax credit program, click on this link:


It will take a special kind of a person to “adopt” the McCracken-Mize House. But this home has a large number of cheerleaders on its team already, and many hands and feet can make for a light load. So if you think you might be that special person, be sure to let me or one of the many fans of this wonderful older home know!

The web site photos were donated by Jessie Gladin-Kramer

Friday, August 27, 2010

Countdown to an Olderhouse Open House

It’s been a fun few weeks in “Olderhouse Land” getting 507 E. Markham staged and ready for our big Open House from 3-5 p.m. this Sunday, Aug. 29. As soon as the seller’s tenant of two years moved out in mid August (she was such a good caretaker of their family home after their father moved into an extended-care facility), we had Mark Boyette and his crew come in. Mark worked miracles on the house by stripping off old wallpaper, patching plaster, giving everything a fresh coat of paint, rebuilding kichen cabinet doors, and even putting on a new front door!

This week, I worked with Home Designer/Stager Stewart Aycock who walked through the house and knew just where the finishing touches needed to be added. He suggested adding new house numbers so they could be seen from the street (now… why didn’t I think of that?). Changing a brick firewood box into a planter, converting Mr. Covington’s old steamer trunk into a coffee table… Stewart’s list of great ideas was just endless!

Stewart then recruited his assistant, Chris Tarrant, to bleach and pressure-wash the back deck, clean out the gutters and haul away the leaf debris, install a new light fixture in the foyer & in the upstairs master closet, caulk and sealing the cracks in the downstairs coat closet & in the upstairs master closet, remove an old PVC handrail from the front steps, blow off all the walkways and the patio, and remove all the storm windows & screens and neatly stack them in the outdoor storage shed (what a wonderful way to let in more light into the house).

Tomorrow, one of the owners will come to mow the yard and trim away some of the weeds that have grown up alongside the patio. Kim Henry and her crew will come to give the house a thorough cleaning and John Goddin of Goddin Real Estate Services will photograph the house so I can have some good pictures for our web site and for MLS.

Of course, an older home is always a work in progress. Just as soon as we start to update one, the more we see needs to be done. Sooner or later we have to decide at what point this is all we are going to do. If do not find a buyer for the house this weekend, we may wish to consider painting the concrete floor in the workshop a grey color and maybe even painting the walls.

My job is to get the best price for my sellers while guarding their bottom-line investment within the constraints of the current real estate market conditions. After all, I know they will be using the proceeds from the sale of their family’s home for the care of their parents’ healthcare. So it is critical that I be a good guardian of the older home that they have placed into my hands to find a new owner.

Friday, August 6, 2010

1940s Cape Cod Colonial in Durham's Duke Park is Now on the Market

I am pleased to announce that the Covington family of Durham has retained me to represent them as their sellers' agent in the sale of their father's 1940 Cape Cod Colonial home in Duke Park at 507 E. Club Blvd. It will be "For Sale By Owner” for a limited time only. Between now and August 15, the house is selling "as is" and the price will stay at $175,000 for the next 10 days.  Then on Aug. 16, the house will be listed in the Multiple Listing Service and the price will go to $199,000 (the family has a 6/24/2010 fee appraisal for $200,000). The price increase will cover interior cosmetic repairs to the sun room and the dining room ceiling, a new front door and door lock, and the buyer's agent's commission.

This 1940 Cape Cod Colonial with three bedrooms, 1½ baths, 1,724 sq.ft. has loads of character, updates and modernizations, including: a kitchen with newer Kenmore appliances, new raised ceiling and recessed lighting, a new kitchen sink & disposal, and new kitchen flooring. The bathrooms have been updated with new plumbing, including an all-new half bath on the main level that has been completely re-done; and an upstairs master bath with a new toilet, new ceramic-tile flooring and a new, ceramic-tile backsplash. There is a large living room with beautiful crown molding, an ornate wood-burning fireplace with dentil molding, custom built-in-bookcases, and French doors that open to a large deck.

The home retains its original oak flooring in the living room, dining room and throughout the upstairs bedrooms; you’ll find vintage wallpaper in the kitchen and dining room; and a newly re-plastered and re-painted master bedroom and new custom lighting in the second bedroom.

Splashes of sunlight stream through the separate sunroom that overlooks a large, private brick patio with a built-in brick barbecue and what is believed to be one of Durham’s only circular, brick arches to be constructed at a private residence.
Other updates include a new roof, a new natural gas HVAC, new hot water heater, new exterior siding, and an attached 234 sq.ft. workshop with attic storage. The yard is nice-sized and consists of a quarter-acre lot with mature, hardwood trees that back up to a soothing forest behind the house. There is a detached garden shed just behind the patio.

To view digital photos and see video of the home, visit:
http://www.postlets.com/repb/4217680

For a private showing, please contact me at (919) 423-3463, ljanes@markthomasrealty.com

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Classic, Custom-Built Two-Story Colonial Was Builder’s Own Personal Home





I am excited about my new listing at 5124 Stephens Lane in Durham, which will be coming on the market this Saturday, July 24, when I will host an Open House from 2-4 p.m. This 1967 classic, custom-built, two-story Colonial was a builder’s own personal home. 


Straddling the North Durham neighborhoods of Stephens Woods & Oakdale, this home features five bedrooms, 2 ½ baths, 2,485 sq.ft., a 2-car garage, and has a 2.4-acre lot with a fenced backyard. The asking price of the house is $264,900. Recent updates include new vinyl & carpet floor coverings throughout the home; freshly-painted interior walls; and quality Sherwin Williams exterior paint that comes with a 25-year warranty. 


This home has a new roof with 35-year architectural shingles that have a 15-year mold-resistance warranty; new gutters & downspouts; and decking that was built with tongue-and-groove boards. All 33 of the windows have been replaced with PlyGem, low-energy vinyl windows. The house has two new locking storm doors with glass and screens; and two new garage doors with new electric garage-door openers. There is a new porch room on the back that has recently been sided with new hardiplank siding and there is new gravel in the driveway and parking areas. Although city water and sewage are available, the well is 410 ft. deep and has never run low on water.


For more information, pictures and video about this classic older home, you can click on this link.

Saturday, May 22, 2010

Thomas Day’s “Woodside/Richmond” House Open During Sunday’s Book Signing



Join us from 3-5 p.m. Sunday when the historic village of Milton debuts a new book about its native son, Thomas Day; and see one of the finest examples of Day’s antebellum architecture when you tour the 1838 “Woodside/Richmond House.”

This beautifully-renovated and updated pre-Cival War Greek revival manor is famous for its magnificent woodworking by Mastercraftsman Thomas Day, who was a free man of color. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, this exquisite home has five bedrooms; three full and five half baths; and a state-of-the art commercial kitchen.

The book “Thomas Day: Master Craftsman and Free Man of Color” will be released this weekend and the Woodside/Richmond House is one of six homes featured in the book. Co-authors Jo Ramsay Leimenstoll and Pat Marshall will be signing the new book at another 3-5 p.m. Open House at Union Tavern in Milton. Also to run concurrently is an exhibit on the life and works of Thomas Day that opens at the N.C. Museum of History in Raleigh and will continue for at least a year.

Stepping into the Woodside/Richmond house is like stepping back in time. Its entrance hall has a coiled newel post of magnificent mahogany and a spectacularly-carved stair rail that pay homage to Thomas Day. Eight of Day's Greek Revival mantels are found throughout the house, with each the bedrooms featuring a cozy fireplace.

The home is currently on the market for $529,000 and is listed with Durham Realtor Lisa Dye Janes of Weichert, Realtors – Mark Thomas Properties. For more information about the house and to see digital photos, visit:


Directions:  From Durham, take Highway 15-501 to Roxboro. Then get onto Highway 57 North and continue through the Hyco Lake community. Go 3 miles past Semora & begin looking for the Woodside historical marker, which is on the right in front of the house. There will be Open House signs in the yard.

The Herald-Sun - Thomas Day Master Cabinetmaker

The Herald-Sun - Thomas Day Master Cabinetmaker

Thursday, April 29, 2010

History of the Freedman House


Located at 1006 W. Trinity Ave. in Durham's Trinity Park, this house was built by Jacob and May Freedman in 1938.  They had purchased the lot from JC and Bessie Markham on January 20, 1938.  According to Durham city directories, the lot had previously been vacant.  The house was designed by George Hackney with the help of May (information from her daughter) who was a former student of the Cooper Union Art School in New York.  The blueprints are dated March 1938 according to Mr Harold Lane who owned this house until July 2006 and is still in possession of the blueprints.  May was not totally satisfied with how the finished house turned out.

The house is featured in The Durham Architectural and Historic Inventory, published 1982, on page 205.  The house is described as being one of the few Tudor Revival style houses built in Trinity Park.  The exterior is faced with clinker bricks.  Its salient features include a clipped gable roofline, large exterior chimney with multiple shoulders on the main façade, and decorative stonework around the pointed arched front door.  The same pointed arches are used in the interior of the house.  On a brick wall in the basement it is possible to read “Joey 1938” written by a finger dipped in mortar.

Freedman’s Clothing Store occupying 341 and 343 West Main Street, where Jacob Freedman worked as one of the two directors, is featured on page 41 of The Durham Architectural and Historic Inventory.

Jacob, born in Russia, December 18, 1900 and May (née Leibson), born in New York, January 7, 1904, married on August 1, 1925 in New York which was her home city. 

They had three children, William born May 1, 1926, Doris Jeanette born May 3, 1929 and Robert Alfred born May 6, 1938.  Both Doris and Robert are still alive and I am grateful particularly to Doris for helping me with my research of her parents.

On June 171970, Jacob and May Freedman sold the house to Theodore Matthew Benditt and his wife Anne Shaw Benditt.  The sale included the electric refrigerator and the gas stove. 

Jacob and May Freedman moved to 1501 Southwood Drive, Durham which May had bought on June 22, 1970.  Jacob died on May 9, 1971 in Duke Hospital – his death certificate describes him as Retired President, D. Freedman Clothing Company.  The family had run the store at 341-343 Main Street, Durham until it was sold to Robert R Tucker who also leased the building on January 15, 1971

May Freedman continued to live at 1501 Southwood Drive, and on September 8, 1972, she remarried. Her new husband, Gedale Man, was born in Poland in 1898 and had been living in Guatemala where his mother lived at the same address. May died May 19, 1984, and is buried alongside Jacob in the Durham Hebrew Cemetery on Morehead Avenue.

Ted Benditt was an assistant professor at Duke University.  Before moving to the University of Alabama at Birmingham in 1978, he taught at the University of Southern California.  He served as dean of UAB's School of Arts and Humanities from 1984 until 1998.  He and the late Max Rogers were instrumental in saving Trinity Avenue, Durham from becoming a major highway – they were alerted to this possibility when they woke one morning to discover pink ribbons tied round all the trees that line the street.

On May 201975, Ted and Anne sold the house to Richard F Kay and his wife Cheryl. It was their first home.  At that time Rich was an Assistant Professor at Duke.  He is now professor and chairman of the department of biological anthropology and anatomy at Duke University Medical Center.  While Rich and Cheryl lived in the Freedman house, they closed in the sun porch which is on the east side of the house with glass windows, and also lifted the linoleum from the heartpine kitchen floor, as well as the old rug from the rest of the first (ground) oak floor.  The floors were then sanded and sealed.  They are beautiful.  Rich and Cheryl divorced in 1991, Cheryl died in 2004 and Rich has remarried and has two younger children.

Rich and Cheryl left 1006 West Trinity in 1980 as the house was too small for their growing family.  They sold the house on February 191980, to Harold H. Lane, Jr. and his wife Carolee.  Harold and Carolee had married in Duke Chapel on June 4, 1968, shortly after graduating from Duke.  They have two sons, Kenneth and Brian, but Harold and Carolee divorced in 1981. Harold worked for the RTI as an electrical engineer and computer scientist.  He has a permanent medical disability caused by accidental exposure to excessively high noise levels.

Harold Lane, who had previously moved to Overby Drive, Durham, sold the house to David and Sarah Nevill on July 18, 2006, who were moving from Basel, Switzerland as David works for Syngenta Biotechnology, Inc. in the Research Triangle Park.  

David and Sarah are not yet in possession of the blue prints for this building.  Sadly, Harold Lane has not so far understood that blueprints belong to a house, not to a person.

As well as help from Doris Ritter (née Freedman), I have also spoken (or emailed) with Ted Benditt, Phyllis Dworsky, Gayanne Freedman, Will Grossman, Hannelore Rogers, Rich Kay, Harold Lane, Malvina Markman, Lynn Richardson, Ruth Richter, Leonard Rogoff, and Rabi Steven Sager.  I thank them all for their support.

Other resources were:
1. Durham City Directories, North Carolina Room, Durham Public Library
2. Deeds Office and Marriage Registry Office, Durham former Court House
3. Birth and Death Registers, Durham Health Department


Written by Sarah Nevill, February 23, 2007


P.S. April 28, 2010 -- In 2007, David & Sarah Nevill worked with Trinity Design Build to renovate the basement. The original garage now forms the major part of the “in-law suite” (better known by the family as The Granny Dungeon). There is a wine cellar underneath the sun porch, and plenty of fitted storage space, as well as a laundry area.

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Trinity Park's 1938 Clinker-Brick Tudor Revival



I am pleased to announce that I have just listed for sale the Freedman House at 1006 W. Trinity Avenue in Durham's Trinity Park. Featured in the “Durham Architectural and Historic Inventory,” this 1938 clinker-brick Tudor Revival was designed by Durham architect George Hackney.


With four bedrooms and 2 ½ baths, this historic home features a new, $83,000 private in-law suite in the daylight basement with French doors that open into a beautifully-landscaped and fenced private garden. The large kitchen has newer stainless appliances, beautiful heart-of-pine flooring, original painted cupboards, a cozy breakfast nook, plus a wonderful chef’s pantry. There is original crown-and-picture molding and beautiful oak flooring throughout; and the sunken living room has pointed Moorish arches and a fireplace with gas logs. There is a large dining room just off the kitchen, which is separated by a swinging door. And on the other side of the living room is an enclosed sun porch with glass windows and brick tile. The gas-operated heating and air conditioning systems were new in 2006. Just off the garden is a private, two-car, alley-way parking area with ingress and egress to Watts and Gregson streets. Conveniently located, this Trinity Park home is within easy walking to distance to Duke’s east campus, downtown restaurants & shopping, Brightleaf Square, and is only a 20+-minute commute to the Durham-Raleigh international jetport.


For More information, pictures and video, you may click on this link.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Milton's Oliver House Offers Modern Convenience, Old-World Charm


The Oliver House, c. 1845, at 18 Bridge St in Milton, N.C.

I have just put on the market Milton’s historic Oliver House, circa 1845, at 18 Bridge Street. Completely restored in 2005 with all the modern conveniences and old-world charm, this classic raised cottage has been renovated according to National Department of Interior and historic-restoration guidelines. The kitchen has custom-built cupboards and all-new appliances; and the updated bathroom has built-in shelving and recessed lighting. Most of the doors, moldings, and fireplaces and the heart-pine flooring on the main level are original. There are three non-woodburning fireplaces, with the kitchen fireplace piped, wired and ready for gas-log installation. The .41-acre lot is large enough to add a detached garage or a large workshop and sits on a corner of Milton’s historic district. Relax on the cottage’s wonderful screened porch that overlooks Countyline Creek.

The Oliver House is an income-producing property, currently being used as a guest cottage, and could continue to be used as a rental property or as a single-family home. Rental rates are $105 a night and there is housekeeper and a lawn-care person who help maintain the property. The cottage has a single bedroom with a double bed and two twin beds and is completely furnished. And the driveway is built to accommodate recreational vehicle parking. All the appliances are included in the sale of the house, but the furnishings and other personal property may be purchased separately.

The Oliver House is the perfect get-away spot for sports-car enthusiasts of the Virginia International Raceway; and boaters and fishermen who enjoy the nearby Hyco Lake year-round. Milton’s historic district is noted as one of the most perfectly-preserved examples of 19th-century commercial districts. Guests will enjoy visiting its antique shop, restaurants, and the historic Thomas Day House.

Thomas Day, who lived between 1801-1861, was a free black cabinetmaker and successful Milton businessman. His fine furniture and beautiful woodworking can still be found in many of Caswell County’s historical plantations and throughout the state.

The Oliver House is one of four raised cottages built by the town’s merchant class in the 1800s, when tobacco was king in North Carolina and southern Virginia. (The other three raised cottages are also on Bridge Street).

Milton is located at the intersections of Highways 62 & 57 on the banks of the Dan River on the North Carolina side of the Virginia border in Northeast Caswell County.

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Durham Police Department's Crime Mapper and Durham’s Online GIS System



The Durham Police Department has an excellent Crime Mapper tool which can be accessed at: http://www.durhampolice.com/crimemapper.cfm.

I like to send this link to my buyers whenever they have concerns about the safety of a neighborhood they may be considering or the specific location of a home they may wish to purchase. They can also view city-wide data, by address, street intersection, and by police districts, police beats or by sheriff zones. Crimes are updated daily and are categorized by incident, including gun-related crimes, arson, assault, burgalary, homicide, larceny, motor vehicle, theft, robbery and rape. (In Durham, the Police Department normally patrols within the city limits; while the Sheriff’s Department patrols outside the city limits, but within the county lines).

The site also will link users to Durham’s interactive maps at http://gisweb.durhamnc.gov/imap_launch.html, including the city and county online public access system, Durham school attendance zones, a city atlas with a complete list of county streets indexed to the maps, flood insurance rate maps, a city and county parks locator, zoning atlas, and a precinct atlas so that voters and candidates can view their boundaries and polling sites.

If you love to play with inter-active maps and you live or are considering living in Durham, you will enjoy visiting these web sites.

Another important source of public-safety information is available through the North Carolina Department of Justice. This is the link to the state Sex Offenders Registry and Alert Program at: http://sexoffender.ncdoj.gov. “Knowing when offenders move into your neighborhood and where they live can be an important tool in keeping families and communities safe,” according to N.C. Attorney General Roy Cooper.

You can map all offenders' addresses up to five miles away from any site you choose, such as home, park, school or child care center.
You can also sign up to receive e-mail alerts to track a specific offender or if an offender registers at an address in your community.


Sunday, January 31, 2010

Triangle-Area Private Schools