Saturday, November 3, 2018

Sears Rembrandt In Cheverly, Maryland

Front left side view of Sears Rembrandt in Cheverly MD
Authenticated Sears Rembrandt • 1925 • 6101 Forest Road, Cheverly, Maryland
b & w image of Sears Rembrandt in Sears Modern Homes catalog
Sears Rembrandt from the 1925 Sears Modern Homes catalog
Cheverly, Maryland has an authenticated Sears Rembrandt, and here it is! Researcher Andrew Mutch authenticated this house, along with the other 21 Sears houses in Cheverly, through mortgage records. Most all of these houses were bought by Robert Marshall, around 1925, as part of his plans to build the development of the new city of Cheverly (in fact, Forest Road was originally called Marshall Road). Marshall was an investor and stockbroker from Ohio, who came to the D.C. area during WWI "with the intent of creating a residential community, convenient to the city by rail and road, but retaining the beauty of its natural surroundings", according to this informative website about Cheverly, where you can read further about Marshall's development of Cheverly.

Newspapers in D.C. in 1926, show Robert Marshall's ads advertising "a City at Cheverly"... a "million dollar development" with "beautiful shaded lots":

newspaper clipping showing ad for Cheverly 1926
Evening Star (Washington D.C.) July 31, 1926, page 22
Further ads give more information, pointing out that Cheverly was "carefully restricted and zoned" (read: not just anyone could live there), and touting the concrete streets and curbs, ornamental lamp posts, city water and electricity and telephone service, modern schools, and good transportation into D.C. .
snippet of information in 1926 ad for Cheverly
From a Cheverly ad, Evening Star (Washington D.C.), July 24, 1926, page 20
So, this lovely Sears Rembrandt on Forest Road, is part of the Cheverly development of 1925. Andrew ran across this real estate listing today, and, since I'm not very familiar with this model, I decided to take a good look, and put together some photos of the interior, since we're lucky enough to have them.
First floor layout of the Sears Rembrandt, 1925 Sears Modern Homes catalog
First floor layout of the Sears Rembrandt, 1925 Sears Modern Homes catalog

Second floor layout of the Sears Rembrandt, 1925 Sears Modern Homes catalog
Second floor layout of the Sears Rembrandt, 1925 Sears Modern Homes catalog


The Rembrandt was first introduced in 1924, and was offered by Sears through 1927. The 1925 catalog shows some colorful images of what the Rembrandt's rooms look like. I think that the real estate photographer may have been familiar with the catalog images, because several of the shots show us the same scenes.  Let's take a look.

Heading for Sears Modern Homes catalog 1925 page 22 showing colorful views of interior of Sears Rembrandt rooms
From page 22 of the 1925 Sears Modern Homes catalog

Sears Modern Homes catalog 1925 page 22 showing colorful views of interior of Sears Rembrandt rooms
living room view of Sears Rembrandt in Cheverly MD
That's the Sears colonial fireplace surround you see here.
Sears Modern Homes catalog 1925 page 22 showing colorful views of interior of Sears Rembrandt rooms

entry area view of Sears Rembrandt in Cheverly MD
The staircase has the Sears Colonial newel.
From the Sears Building Materials catalog, 1929
Sears Modern Homes catalog 1925 page 22 showing colorful views of interior of Sears Rembrandt rooms

dining room view of Sears Rembrandt in Cheverly MD
View from the dining room, looking into the kitchen, on the left, and the entry hallway and living room.
That bumped-out corner isn't shown in the catalog, so something must have been added on the other side... perhaps a closet? pantry? powder room?
The kitchen could probably use a little updating, but I'd say it's a bit improved over the 1925 suggestion!:
kitchen view of Sears Rembrandt in Cheverly MD

Sears Modern Homes catalog 1925 page 22 showing colorful views of interior of Sears Rembrandt rooms
The Rembrandt's kitchen, as shown in the 1925 Sears Modern Homes catalog
Sears Modern Homes catalog 1925 page 22 showing colorful views of interior of Sears Rembrandt rooms
The master bedroom, with requisite twin beds, à la I Love Lucy... ha!

master bedroom view of Sears Rembrandt in Cheverly MD
And, here it is, in real life... those are even the same kind of doors as shown in the catalog image.
master bedroom view of Sears Rembrandt in Cheverly MD
The master bedroom looking out into the hall.
That's it for the catalog shots, but I'd like to document the rooms and the outside of the house:
living room view of Sears Rembrandt in Cheverly MD

front room of Sears Rembrandt in Cheverly MD

sun room view of Sears Rembrandt in Cheverly MD

bedroom view of Sears Rembrandt in Cheverly MD
We see Sears Stratford design door hardware on this door.

catalog image of Sears Stratford hardware

bedroom view of Sears Rembrandt in Cheverly MD

bedroom view of Sears Rembrandt in Cheverly MD

bathroom view of Sears Rembrandt in Cheverly MD
rear view of Sears Rembrandt in Cheverly MD
rear view

rear and side view of Sears Rembrandt in Cheverly MD
side and rear view

Front and right side view of Sears Rembrandt in Cheverly MD

Front view of Sears Rembrandt in Cheverly MD
Front view of the Sears Rembrandt at 6101 Forest Road, Cheverly, Maryland
In 1928, Sears made one change to the Rembrandt -- the look of the front porch-- and marketed it as the Van Jean. Other than the look of the front porch, the Sears Rembrandt is the exact twin of the Sears Van Jean. The layout and windows and size, are all exactly the same. They even used the same renderings of the interior, but labeled them as "The Van Jean Interiors".
comparison between Sears Rembrandt and Sears Van Jean

b & w catalog image of Sears Van Jean
Sears Van Jean interior renderings in 1928 Sears Modern Homes catalog
In the 1928 Sears Modern Homes catalog: The Van Jean interior photos are the same ones used for the Rembrandt.
More Kit Houses In Cheverly
Andrew Mutch has documented a kit home by Michigan's McClure Company in Cheverly, in this blog post , and there are more, nestled in among the kit homes by their competitor, Sears. This informative Google doc has lots of pages of information about the history of Cheverly, including this nice little Google map showing the locations of other Sears and McClure homes in the area (UPDATE May 4, 2025: I'm leaving the link for that Google map, but the link is broken at this time.)

Click here to access the Chevy Chase list (note: none of the McClure houses are on this list)
Click at this link, to access the Historic Chevy Chase DC organization's website.

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Visit our website: SearsHouses.com

Sunday, October 28, 2018

Sears Mitchell And Lookalikes

English cottage style sears mitchell house model pale green
Sears Mitchell •  4616 Arlington Avenue, Fort Wayne, Indiana
b & w image of Sears Mitchell
Sears Mitchell • 1932 Sears Modern Homes catalog
This is the first time that I have blogged about the Sears Mitchell model. That might be because it is a model that has such close lookalikes, that I am rarely confident that the house in front of me is, in fact, the Sears model. 

But, today, we have a beautiful real estate listing for a Mitchell that was found in Fort Wayne, Indiana, during a house-hunting weekend that several of our researchers were involved in. I understand that the group was headed down this street to see a Sears Barrington, and drove right by this house, and it was Dale Wolicki who spotted it as they headed back up the street. Ha! We all thought that was pretty funny, considering that there were probably quite a few avid Sears house minds--and eyes-- in the car at the time. 

There are quite a few little things to look for (on the exterior) when trying to pin down that a model like this is a Sears Mitchell, and not one of the lookalikes sold by Gordon-Van Tine, Wardway, Aladdin, Bennett Homes, or Home Builders plan book. The side windows -- on both sides-- are a huge key factor. Sometimes, though, it's hard to get a good look at both sides. There are some other distinguishing features in the front of the house, too. I'll try to explain them all. 

But, first... take a look at this door on the house on Arlington Street, in Fort Wayne! This is, without a doubt, a Sears door. It's a perfect example of what we call, "Sears curlycues". See the hinge edge of the door? That curly look? That was only on the decorative iron strapping of Sears doors. So, if se see that on a house that looks like a model from the catalogs, we know it's authentic.

round top 1930s style vintage Sears door with iron strapping with curylcues on hinge end
Sears door with trademark Sears "curlycue" decorative iron strapping, on our Mitchell in Fort Wayne.
There is one other company that we have found, that offered decorative iron strapping with a curly edge, and that is the McKinney forged iron company, based in Pittsburgh. Their iron strapping options were advertised in a big Home Builders plan book that I have, from 1929. The curl is slightly less pronounced than the Sears curl, but the definite difference is at the other end: McKinney's strapping has a little hook at the other end. Sears' strapping has a pointy tip, kind of like the tip of a fat arrow. All of the other companies used iron strapping that did not have curylcues at the hinge edge, in any fashion.
styles of vintage decorative iron strapping
See the difference there at the end?
What's On A Mitchell?
First, let's take a look at what to expect on the front of a Mitchell. Not all companies have all of these features. Some have most of this, some have all of this, some are clearly different here.
infographic showing aspects of Sears Mitchell house
See the right side here, with 2 windows, then 1, 1, 1 ?
Well, the Wardway/Gordon-Van Tine version has one fewer windows on this side (2, 1, 1).

view of front and left side of Sears Mitchell •  4616 Arlington Avenue, Fort Wayne, Indiana
The Fort Wayne Mitchell looks good from this angle (reversed floor plan, of course).
The real test of a Mitchell, is the set of windows on the long side of the house... so, if you're looking at the catalog image, it's the left side of the house. On this Mitchell, since it's reversed, it's the right side elevation of the house.... which we can't really see in any of the photos. But, for this house, the door clinched it for us, so we know it's a Mitchell. I'll use the floor plan, and another house, to show you what we're looking for.

Here's an infographic that I've turned to many times, made by Andrew Mutch:
window configuration of Sears Mitchell
That single window should be right up close to that bumpout, and the triple windows within the bumpout, should have plenty of space before you get to them, just like you see here. Other companies are different here. Aladdin's University model has a single window, but it's more centered in that area... not quite as close to the bumpout, and, within the bumpout, there are only two windows, also set back toward the back of the house.  Gordon-Van Tine's Patrician, and Wardway's Newport, have a whole triple set of windows there in that first space (that's the living room, for all of the models), and then only a double, in the bumpout. The Bennett Homes Brentwood looks the most like the Mitchell: it has a single window, but it's not quite as close to the bumpout a the Mitchell's single window, and the bumpout also has three windows in it, set back like the Mitchell's windows. The plan book lookalike, the Home Builders Elyria, is very different on this side of the house, because it has no bumpout... it is even for the whole length of that side of the house.
four catalog floor plans compared - all are lookalikes to Sears Mitchell house model
The GVT and Wardway models are actually almost the same house (note location of hall linen closet)-- on the shorter side of the house, they have one fewer windows... a double, and then just two singles; Aladdin's model is the University, and here is the Mitchell, both with a double, then a smaller bathroom window, then two bedroom windows.
(Click to enlarge.)

comparison of two floor plans Sears Mitchell vs Bennett Homes Brentwood model
On the outside, the Bennett Brentwood would be pretty hard to tell from a Sears Mitchell.... though the whole bumpout looks larger on the Sears Mitchell. On the inside, the location of the closet in the front bedroom, is a key indicator.
Home Builders Elyria floor plan
No bumpout at all on the living room side of the house!

I was lucky enough to run across an Aladdin University this year, in Charleston, West Virginia, and to help myself figure out the differences, I looked at all of the windows on this side, and made this comparison:
infographic comparing Sears Mitchell to lookalike made by Aladdin: University model


Here's another house that shows this side of a Mitchell:
white Sears Mitchell
You can see what we expect, on both sides of the Mitchell, with these two photographs.
Notice that front set of four long windows? 
On the image above, of this white Mitchell, did you notice that the 1932 catalog doesn't show windows like that... it just shows three wider windows? Well, the older catalog versions do show this kind of front window look:
Sears Mitchell 1928 catalog
The Sears Mitchell in its first year, 1928, had a stretch of 4 long, slim windows. 

Sears Mitchell showing front with 3 standard sized windows
Beginning in the 1930 catalog, up through 1939 (this image), the front windows are shown as three standard size windows.
The Mitchell was first offered in 1928, and had a long run, all the way up into the 1940 catalog. It graced the cover of the 1929 catalog, and its brick-veneer twin, the Sears Stratford, starred on the front of the special Brick supplement catalog put out in 1929, also:

colorful catalog cover showing Sears Mitchell
Sears 1929 Modern Homes catalog

colorful close up of pale grey Sears Mitchell with green door and roof of shades of reds and green

brick Sears Mitchell -- Sears Stratford-- gracing green cover of Sears Honor Bilt brick veneer catalog
Thanks to our friend at Antique Home / Daily Bungalow, for this image, and the scans above: Sears Special Supplement, 1929, Brick Veneer Honor Bilt Homes
Now that we've seen the floor plans for the competing companies, let's see their catalog images:
B & W photo of Aladdin Homes University model
Aladdin Homes offered the University. (Source: 1936 Aladdin Homes catalog.)

B & W image of Gordon-Van Tine Patrician model
Though Gordon-Van Tine and Wardway usually offered the same model, with a different name, you can see some differences in the look of the Patrician, vs the Newport, especially in the section over the front windows, and in the size of the window by the chimney (this window is absent on both the Sears Mitchell and Aladdin University).
(Source: 1929 GVT catalog, on Daily Bungalow)

B & W image of Wardway Newport model in stucco
Wardway's Newport, in their 1929 catalog. (Source: Daily Bungalow)
Also note: Look at the top of the door, on both the GVT and Wardway models. Instead of being one solid, curved-top door, it is actually a squared off door, with a separate curved section just set in there.

Bennett Homes Brentwood model
The photo of the Bennett Homes Brentwood, is probably actually a Sears Mitchell...look at that door.... sure looks like Sears curylcue iron strapping! (Source: Bennett Homes 1937 catalog)
Catalog image light brown shingle exterior Home Builders Elyria
It looks like the folks at Home Builders plan-book company, grabbed an image of the Sears Mitchell, as well... tell-tale curlycue iron strapping from Sears!
Interior Of Sears Mitchell In Fort Wayne
Finally, thanks to Andrew Mutch's scouring of real estate ads this weekend, we are treated to beautiful interior photos (click to enlarge) of the Sears Mitchell at 4616 Arlington Avenue, Fort Wayne, Indiana, thanks to this real estate listing:

living room Sears Mitchell •  4616 Arlington Avenue, Fort Wayne, Indiana
These are the triple windows you see in the front of the house, and the window on the left is the single window on the bump out side.

living room inset built in space Sears Mitchell •  4616 Arlington Avenue, Fort Wayne, Indiana
This inset area is actually the start of the bump out, before it gets to the dining room windows. There should be just this single, standard size window next to it. (Wardway and GVT versions have a recessed area half this width, and next to it, is supposed to be a short-height 3-part window... though we have also seen a pair of standard-size windows, on an authenticated Wardway house.)

living room windows Sears Mitchell •  4616 Arlington Avenue, Fort Wayne, Indiana

fireplace Sears Mitchell •  4616 Arlington Avenue, Fort Wayne, Indiana

looking into dining room Sears Mitchell •  4616 Arlington Avenue, Fort Wayne, Indiana

kitchen dining room living room Sears Mitchell •  4616 Arlington Avenue, Fort Wayne, Indiana

dining room looking into living room Sears Mitchell •  4616 Arlington Avenue, Fort Wayne, Indiana

white and grey kitchen of Sears Mitchell •  4616 Arlington Avenue, Fort Wayne, Indiana
pale grey bedroom with double bed of Sears Mitchell •  4616 Arlington Avenue, Fort Wayne, Indiana

bedroom looking into hallway • two windows Sears Mitchell •  4616 Arlington Avenue, Fort Wayne, Indiana

bathroom with deep lilac walls Sears Mitchell •  4616 Arlington Avenue, Fort Wayne, Indiana
Door hardware on Sears Mitchell •  4616 Arlington Avenue, Fort Wayne, Indiana

rear entry side view Sears Mitchell •  4616 Arlington Avenue, Fort Wayne, Indiana
This is the expected rear view of the Sears Mitchell. The Wardway Newport and GVT Kent/Patrician, have a slightly different look (see comparison photo further down in the blog post).

rear entry side view Sears Mitchell •  4616 Arlington Avenue, Fort Wayne, Indiana

left side visible fom air rear entry side view Sears Mitchell •  4616 Arlington Avenue, Fort Wayne, Indiana

front view Sears Mitchell •  4616 Arlington Avenue, Fort Wayne, Indiana
Sears Mitchell • 4616 Arlington Avenue, Fort Wayne, Indiana

Comparison Photos: Wardway Newport and Gordon-Van Tine Kent/Patrician
Here are photos from some houses that had Wardway mortgages, to show you the contrast with what the Sears Mitchell has.

color photos of rear of three houses, comparing look of Sears Mitchell vs Wardway Newport
Here is a comparison of what we expect to see on the rear of the house, comparing the Sears Mitchell, to the Wardway / GVT version. (Sorry for the blurry image of the Rowley Blvd house... that's the best they had in the real estate listing.)

color photo of living room of wardway newport
This is the expected width of the recessed area, on the Wardway Newport or GVT Kent/Patrician. The recessed area here, in the Sears Mitchell, is twice as wide. The recessed area of the Bennett Homes Brentwood, is about this same width. Lara Solonickne blogged about this testimonial Wardway Newport, in January of 2016. Also note, here, that the windows next to the recessed area, are two full-sized windows, whereas we expect a short-height triple window here.

color photo of left side of beige house, Wardway Newport
This is the expected look of the bump-out side of the Wardway Newport or Gordon-Van Tine Kent/Patrician, with the short-height 3-part window. Authenticated through mortgage research by Lara Solonickne. 916 Muirfield Avenue, Waukegan, Illinois

color photo of bedroom of a Sears Mitchell, showing two windows on side wall
Back bedroom. The Sears Mitchell has this 2nd window on the side wall. The floor plan of the Wardway Newport and GVT Kent/Patrician, shows only one window on this wall.

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