Showing posts with label aladdin pomona. Show all posts
Showing posts with label aladdin pomona. Show all posts

Sunday, April 9, 2017

Aladdin Pomona in Martinsburg, West Virginia

22 Upper Road, Martinsburg, West Virginia Aladdin Pomona
Probable Aladdin Pomona • 22 Upper Road, Martinsburg, West Virginia (source)
Aladdin Pomona 1918 Aladdin catalog
Fellow researcher Andrew Mutch (Kit House Hunters) recently shared with us the real estate listing for this great-looking Aladdin Pomona, in West Virginia.  We don't have any authenticating material for it, but it looks to match the model beautifully.  

To the right, you see the Aladdin Pomona as shown in my 1918 Aladdin Homes catalog. It's a great match.  

Below, you'll find a number of photos from the real estate listing, as well as a few images from the catalog, showing the floor plans (there were two -- this one, with upstairs bedrooms, must have been Plan 2), and interior drawings. Enjoy!


22 Upper Road, Martinsburg, West Virginia Aladdin Pomona

22 Upper Road, Martinsburg, West Virginia Aladdin Pomona

22 Upper Road, Martinsburg, West Virginia Aladdin Pomona

22 Upper Road, Martinsburg, West Virginia Aladdin Pomona

Aladdin Pomona 1918 catalog
From a previous blog post of mine.

Aladdin Pomona floor plan 1918 catalog
From a previous blog post of mine.

22 Upper Road, Martinsburg, West Virginia Aladdin Pomona

22 Upper Road, Martinsburg, West Virginia Aladdin Pomona

22 Upper Road, Martinsburg, West Virginia Aladdin Pomona
Aladdin Pomona Daily Bungalow
Source: Daily Bungalow

Saturday, December 3, 2016

Two Pittsburgh Mail-Order Homes: Sears Arlington and Aladdin Pomona

206 Waldorf Street, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania • 1922 Sears Arlington (not authenticated)
This week, my researcher friends and I did a little bit of searching in and around Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.  Andrew Mutch, of Kit House Hunters, ran across another Sears Elmhurst, and I came across this probable Sears Arlington.  In addition to Sears, Aladdin Homes were represented, as I came across a real estate listing for a cute little dark blue Aladdin Pomona, and the newest member of our research group, Sara, brought an Aladdin Shadow Lawn to our attention. I'll save the Shadow Lawn for another day, but let's take a look at the Arlington, and the Pomona!

Sears Arlington
Pittsburgh has many many many homes made of brick, so it's not surprising that we would find that our newest Arlington on the National Database of Sears Homes, is a brick veneer example.  

In January, I wrote a post about three wonderful old Arlingtons, all in a row, found by our young researcher friend, Nigel.  I explained a bit about the background of Sears' offering of this model:


The suspected Arlington at 206 Waldorf Street, is listed on the Allegheny county website as being built in 1925 (Pittsburgh seems to like to give their build dates ending in 0 or 5... they don't seem to be particularly reliable, though.) What I found, with a little bit of newspaper research, was that F. O. Wettach took out a building permit for this address in 1922, and he also put an ad in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette that year, looking for a laborer at this address. 
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Sept. 03, 1922, page 31
(source: Newspapers.com)
We can always recognize a Sears Arlington by its wide front dormer, with four full-size windows, and two ornamented peaks, looking a good bit like cat ears.  It also has a peak roof bumpout on the right side, with three long windows, as well as an exposed chimney on that side, with two connected full-size windows behind it. You can see all of that on our house on Waldorf Street, and then in the catalog image, below it:


sears arlington in pittsburgh pa
Craftsman-style tracery in the cat-ear dormer peaks,
is a wonderful part of the look of the Sears Arlington.


The left side elevation of the Arlington should have a side entry door, and a kind of complicated set of windows, looking not very evenly distributed... and this house has that:
Sears Arlington model
Left elevation of the Sears Arlington.
Though we don't have a Sears mortgage for this house, or blueprints, or any other documentation that this is a Sears home, inside, we do see a fireplace mantel that matches one offered by Sears, as well as a built-in china cabinet with leaded glass in a style also offered by Sears.
1929 Sears Building Material catalog
The 1929 Sears Building Materials catalog.

The cabinet on the right is shown in the Waldorf Street house.

Source: 1929 Sears Building Materials catalog on Archive.org
And, though the brickwork design on the fireplace itself is different, this looks like the mantel offered by Sears. Two of our researcher friends have the same mantel in their Sears Hamiltons.
Here are a few more photos from the Zillow real estate listing (by the way, the house is currently for sale, if you're looking!). Click to enlarge:
Sears Arlington
Great for porching!

Sears Arlington
Such wonderful original woodwork, and spacious rooms.

Sears Arlington
What a beautifully well-kept back yard! Great back porch.
Aladdin Pomona
On another street, in a different neighborhood of Pittsburgh, I ran across this recently renovated little Aladdin Pomona!  I'm not quite sure of the build date, but the county website says 1920, if we can trust that.
Aladdin Pomona
403 Marshall Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania • probable Aladdin Pomona
Real estate images: source

Aladdin Pomona
From my 1918 Aladdin catalog.

Aladdin Pomona

Aladdin Pomona

Aladdin Pomona

Thanks to Daily Bungalow, we have this great image from the 1918 Aladdin catalog, showing the living room and dining room in the Pomona:
Daily Bungalow 1918 Aladdin catalog Pomona interior
You can click to enlarge, or go directly to Daily Bungalow's Flickr page, to see it full size.
TWO POMONA FLOOR PLANS
The Pomona had two very similar floor plans, with the second one allowing for a staircase to lead up to two upstairs bedrooms. I believe that our Pittsburgh Pomona is plan number 2, and the real estate listing does show a finished upstairs.
Aladdin Pomona
Pomona plan No. 1

Aladdin Pomona
Pomona plan No. 2.

Aladdin Pomona

Aladdin Pomona

Aladdin Pomona
Surely an Aladdin garage. It matches the Peerless model nicely!
Aladdin Peerless garage, as shown in my 1920 Aladdin catalog.

For more information about the Aladdin Homes company of Bay City, Michigan, take a look at this previous blog post of mine, which also shows a Pomona in Greenfield, Illinois.

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For more information on who we are, and what we do, visit our website: SearsHouses.com

Saturday, September 17, 2016

Three Aladdin Bungalows: Pomona, Detroit, and Sunshine


Cover of the Fall 1919 Aladdin Homes catalog
Aladdin Homes were pre-cut kit houses sold out of Bay City, Michigan, made by the Aladdin Company, who began their home-kit business in 1906 -- this pre-dates Sears catalog homes by a couple of years, as Sears first offered homes in their catalogs in 1908.  The 1908 Sears homes were not pre-cut kits... the lumber was sent in standard lengths, requiring that the home builder cut each piece to fit.  As I understand it, though, Aladdin homes, even as early as 1906, were sold as a pre-cut kit, and, in fact, Aladdin claimed to be the developer of the pre-cut system, which they called "Readi-cut". You can learn more about the history of the Aladdin Homes company in this informative and concise blog post by Lara Solonickne, at Sears Homes of Chicagoland, and read more here, on Wikipedia, or here, at the Clarke Historical Library of Central Michigan University (where you can also see pdf files of Aladdin catalogs from 1908 to 1954).
A page inside my 1918 Aladdin catalog.
In our research group, we have lately been working from a long spreadsheet listing thousands of 1919 through 1933 sales for Aladdin homes throughout the country. The list gives us the year, the name of the purchaser (often with only initials for the first name), the city, and the model name.  Andrew and Wendy Mutch (of Kit House Hunters) went to the Clarke Historical Library (mentioned above) and photographed hand-written sales records.  Wendy spent hours and hours and hours transcribing the list into a spreadsheet, and she and Andrew have graciously shared this amazing resource with our group.  

Speaks to Aladdin's history as the developer of the pre-cut system ("Readi-cut").
From my 1918 catalog.
Research Challenges
Many of the sales on the list are for garages, which we don't usually try to hunt down, and many are for summer cottages in coastal or vacation areas, and we assume that many of those are gone at this point... but, more to the point, they are almost impossible for us to find, because we use census and city-directory and newspaper resources to try to link the name of the purchaser to an address where we might find the house.  If the house was a vacation cottage, or a rental cottage, or a rental home, the primary-home address for the purchaser won't help us locate the structure.  

This is what our list looks like, showing, here, three garages of the model that Aladdin named Buick.
The Buick garage, as shown in the 1918 catalog.
Interesting description -- remember, automobiles were still a pretty new thing in 1918!
Another challenging issue is that, the older the home, the less likely it is for it to be still standing (the 1919 homes are a challenge, but we're finding many), and, homes built in the early 1930s were too-often lost by the purchaser during the Great Depression. As a result,  we often find that the address given for that purchaser, in the 1940 census, is not that of the home they had bought in, say, 1931, and hoped to live in for years to come. We often find that they are listed as renters by the 1940 census (the census is done only every 10 years).  City directories are usually updated every year or two, but many of these homes were built in rural small towns, and we usually mostly have access to city directories for cities and large towns. 

This is the Bay City, Michigan address given for Joseph Auer, in the 1920 census -- 140 Fillmore Place. Is this garage in the back yard the original 10 X 16 Buick by Aladdin? Hmm. Doubtful! If it is, it has new doors, that's for sure.
Purchases in rural communities present an additional challenge, as those communities often did not assign street numbers to houses back in the first half of the 1900s, so, both the census and the city directory might just give "Blake Street", or, worse still, "farm" (yikes!).  On top of that, we have to find these houses using Google or Bing maps streetview, and those rural areas are often not on street view.

aladdin plaza
Here, for example, is a barely-still-there Aladdin Plaza that I found via a sales record, but had no good address for in the small town of Lisman, Alabama. Sometimes, if the town is small enough, you land on the house just by Google-driving around the town.  Also, Google streetview is sometimes grainy and dark in these small towns, because they don't do it as often, and the images are from several years before this technology improved.

Three Houses From Our Sales List

Aladdin Pomona (1919)
612 Main Street • Greenfield, Illinois (backing to East street).
aladdin pomona 1918 catalog
I believe this is from my 1918 catalog.
aladdin pomona greenfield illinois
Authenticated 1919 Aladdin Pomona, Greenfield, Illinois
The house sits with its side to Pine Street, at 612 Main Street
(its rear driveway enters off of East Street).

The funny thing about finding this house, is that I found it by chance, and before I knew of it being on our sales list.  Greenfield, Illinois, is a small town about an hour and a half from St. Louis.  My husband needed to go there one day this spring, and I was trying to find where the town square was, using Google streetview, so that I could give him directions.  Even though it's a small town, it has lots of streets to drive around when you have no idea where the town square is, and just by chance, I came upon this house!  Then, I noticed on the sales list, that there was a Pomona sale to someone in  Greenfield, Illinois.  This is it!

This house was bought by Frank J. Meng, and his wife, Bessie.  They were only 26 and 28 when they had this great little bungalow built, and it might have been the impending birth of their first child, Marie, that spurred them on to build.  Their second child, William, was born about three years later. Frank is listed on the census as a merchant in a general store, and it says that he worked "on his own account", so I'm assuming that he ran the general store in town.

Floor Plans
The Pomona had two floor plan options. Pomona #1 was a single-story layout. Pomona #2 had a small second floor added, to add on two bedrooms. To accommodate access to an upper floor, the layout of the first floor was given a little tweaking, and things are arranged a bit differently. You can see the two versions, below:

aladdin pomona floor plan 1st floor
The catalog shows this great 3-D version of what the 1st floor looks like, of Pomona #1 (single floor only).

The catalog also shows what the Pomona's dining room and living room might look like:

aladdin pomona dining room 1918
Pomona #2 floor plan had the addition of two upstairs bedrooms,
but, also a few changes were made to the layout of the first floor.
aladdin pomona living room
And this shows the living room as it might look in someone's Pomona.
The Pomona looks like a pretty spacious bungalow. Here are a few more views of the Meng's home, thanks to Google streetview-- it looks like those are the original windows, the same ones with the ornamental lead design, as shown in the catalog image:
aladdin pomona in greenfield illinois

aladdin pomona in greenfield illinois

aladdin pomona in greenfield illinois
It looks like the house had an enclosed porch extension put on behind the kitchen, as the Pomona doesn't usually extend back this far.

Aladdin Detroit (1919)
1441 Washington Street • Northampton, Pennsylvania
Home of William and Ellen Brown
aladdin detroit
Aladdin Detroit • 1918 catalog
aladdin detroit
This authenticated Detroit in Northampton, Pennsylvania, was bought by William and Ellen Brown.  William worked as an engineer in a cement factory, according to the 1930 census.











The Detroit's floor plan, as shown in, I believe, the 1918 catalog.
Once again, the catalog shows a depiction of what the Detroit's living and dining room might look like.

aladdin detroit
I believe that the Aladdin Detroit doesn't normally have that small extension off of the back like this, so that must be added. 
aladdin detroit


Aladdin Sunshine (1919)
6506 Emma Avenue, Jennings, Missouri (a suburb of St. Louis)
Ordered by Charles and Hilda Toennies
The Aladdin Sunshine, as shown in the 1917 catalog
Authenticated Aladdin Sunshine • 1919. It looks like Mr. and Mrs. Toennies chose to reverse the floor plan,
since the dining room bump out is on this side.They chose to forego the fireplace, as well.

aladdin sunshine st louis mo

aladdin sunshine catalog cover
(source)


Charles Toennies was a shirt cutter, in a shirt factory, and he and his wife Hilda lived here, with their son, Charles H.

Options Shown Inside The Aladdin Catalog
Inside the 1917 catalog, you can see the choices in colonnades, arches, buffets, and mantle bookcases, that Aladdin offered.  Any of these might have been bought for inside of our Pomona, Detroit, or Sunshine:






I love the Aladdin door knob and surround! I believe that every Aladdin home shipped with hardware like this. I love that leaf pattern.

If you know of any other Aladdin homes -- or anything about any kit home -- please leave a comment, or contact me via the "contact me" spot on the side column of the blog.  I'll be posting more of my Aladdin finds, soon.