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Saturday, January 17, 2015

My First Sears Crescent!

sears crescent 1926 rock hill missouri
1926 Sears Crescent  • 1030 N. Rock Hill Road,  Rock Hill, Missouri (St. Louis County)
I stumbled upon this Sears Crescent today, on my way home from work. I decided to take a
side-street detour on a street I hadn't been on before, because I could see that there were old bungalows on it.  I couldn't believe my eyes when I saw this one, because I've read innumerable blog posts and FaceBook posts about this very popular Sears model, and all of its cousins and step-sisters from other kit companies and plan books, but I've never seen one in real life. This one definitely appears to be the real thing, though.

Why do I think so?

1. The Front Porch Roof With Its Cornice Returns
When you see this house in person, you're really struck by the size and presence of that front porch. It really feels like the main feature of this small home.  The cornice returns are a major identifying factor, as very few lookalikes have that feature.  Some of the other similar kit-home and plan-book versions have a similarly large porch roof, but others have a noticeably less-impressive entry.  The Crescent's porch roof should have:
• cornice returns
• a triangle shape at the peak
• a few inches of wood on each side of that triangle
• a boxy structure on each side, about 10" in depth, connecting the porch columns to the cornice returns

sears crescent porch supports
Notice the amount of space around the center triangle,
and the size of the boxy support structures on each side.
Probably one of the most common mistakes of a newcomer to house researching, is not taking into account the size and quality of the front porch of the Crescent (obviously, I speak from experience!).

Note how the front porch roof differs from the Crescent, in these examples:

la salle by liberty homes of lewis mfg
This is the LA SALLE, by Liberty Homes of Lewis Mfg. Company (from Archive.org, the 1947 catalogue).
If you were new to the game, and drove by this, having just seen your first photo of a Crescent, you might think you had spotted one.  The windows are good... sort of! They're close, but too even in size.  However, the porch roof is nothing like the impressive, elegant porch of the Crescent.  The columns for the porch roof are wrong, too. And, there are no side lights around the front door. The gables (the end sections of the roof) are clipped, too. 
   
Bennett Homes' SANFORD / CLIFTON and other lookalike Bennett models (kits):
sears crescent clone bennett homes sanford 
Bennett Homes of North Tonawonda, NY, had this home, as well as other versions that seem to look just like it (Staunford, Clifton) in  catalogues available on Archive.org.  The porch roof is bigger than  Lewis' LA SALLE, but still lacks the impressiveness of the Crescent's porch roof.
bennett homes crescent lookalike
(Click here to go to the 1937 catalog for Bennett Homes, for more information.)


This photo gives a better impression, I think, of the proportion of the porch roof to the house:

crescent sears house st louis rock hill
Again, photos of this house are courtesy of Google Maps, October 2011.


2. The 3-part Front Windows
Most of the front of the Crescent is taken up by the porch and the two large, 3-part front windows that flank it. Always look at these windows. Not only are they three part, the two outer windows that flank the center one, should be noticeably slimmer -- maybe less than half the size of the center window. Other companies mostly had models with 2-part front windows, or single front windows, and of those that had three parts, those parts are usually similar to each other in size.

The Crescent's 3-part windows.
Originals will also have the little set of 8 panes
high up across the center window.
Wardway Homes (by Montgomery Ward) had three similar homes to the Crescent -- the Mount Vernon (Mayflower), the Priscilla, and the Potomac. Gordon-Van Tine had twins for each of those, whose names changed for different years of the catalogs.

The Mount Vernon (called Mayflower beginning in 1929), seen below, differs from the Sears Crescent in these ways:

It does not have 3-part windows-- it has twin double windows on each side.  Gordon Van Tine's Stratford (1931)(called the Cabot in 1929?) looked just the same (with double windows) from the outside, and the GVT Oxford (1929) looked the same from the front, but had pointed gables instead of clipped gables, and a different floorplan (I think).
The porch roof is shaped differently-- it does not have cornice returns.
It has clipped gables (though sometimes, apparently, folks would opt to have pointed gables, so that's not as big of an identifying factor as the porch roof and the windows).

Take a look at this home in the Chicago area. It's a probable Wardway Mount Vernon. It's from an excellent and informative post by noted kit-home researcher, Lara Solonickne, at Sears Homes of Chicagoland:
Wardway Mount Vernon in Mount Prospect IL color photo of front
Probable Wardway Mount Vernon, (beginning in 1929, marketed as the Mayflower) according to Lara Solonickne.
Note the double windows, as opposed to the Crescent's 3-part windows.
The front doorway has side lights, but the attractive front porch roof lacks the
cornice returns of the Crescent's porch roof.

Here is the Wardway Mount Vernon in the 1928 Wardway Catalog on the Daily Bungalow Flickr page (there are two floor plans shown)

color catalog image of front of Wardway Mayflower model
You'll find the same house, with its two floor plans, listed as the Mayflower, beginning in the 1929 Wardway catalog, also on the Daily Bungalow Flickr page.

The same model was offered by the Gordon-Van Tine company (who produced the kits for Wardway) in their catalogs, first as the No. 633 & 633B, then as the Cabot, then as the Stratford:

gordon van tine stratford sears crescent lookalike
Gordon-Van Tine • 1931 • The Stratford
1929 • The Cabot  • 633/633B in 1926
Standard Homes offered, in 1928, The Cornell, which looks remarkably like the GVT home shown above (at least on the exterior).  The medallion is a bit different. (source) This is a PLAN only, not a kit.

The Wardway Priscilla  (and the Gordon Van Tine Fairfield in 1931 -clipped gables/ Tremont in 1929-and the No. 616 in 1926) had a very similar look, but:
•  had only single front windows on each side of the porch
•  had no sidelights on either side of the front entry door
•  had a porch roof with cornice returns, that looked more like porch roof of the Sears Crescent

clipped gables wardway priscilla
This image of the Priscilla, is from the 1925 Wardway catalog. (Kit) The Priscilla was also offered in 1926.



The 1930 Wardway Potomac has this same porch roof style, but double windows... still no sidelights around the door. It has the exact same floor plan as the earlier Priscilla, except for the front windows. It was available in 1928 and 1929, as well as 1930.:
catalog image of the front of the Wardway Potomac
Source-- from 1930 Wardway catalog (kits)

NOTE: The Wardway Field Guide (Thornton/Wolicki) has an error on page 94. It shows an image of the Potomac, but labels it as the Priscilla, noting that the name was changed to Potomac in 1928. It also says that the Priscilla was first offered in 1927. However, the correct info is that the Priscilla was offered beginning in 1925, was also offered in 1926, and the Potomac was then introduced in either 1927 or 1928 (I have no access to a 1927 Wardway catalog, but the 1928 is here). Strictly speaking, they are not the same model, because the windows are different in the front (though the size and floor plans are, otherwise, exactly the same).

Gordon-Van Tine: The Chatham. In 1931, GVT did have a kit model with 3-part windows, but with a porch roof without cornice returns, so it was more like the porch roof of the Wardway Mount Vernon. NOTE: There is NO Wardway model in this category, offering triple front windows.

gvt chatham
The Chatham in 1931 = The Oxford in 1929
In 1926, it was marketed as the No. 649

3. The Sidelights Around The Door

sears crescent sidelights
The arrows are pointing to the sidelights that flank the door.
The Crescent has a set of full sidelights on either side of the door. The sidelights, if original, should be a length of little square shapes, as you see in the image above. Some lookalikes have a different pattern in the glass of the sidelights, or there are no sidelights at all.

4. The Floor-Plan Footprint
While you can't tell the footprint of a house from a drive-by, you can find that information on the tax assessor's website for the county of the home.  The St. Louis County DOR website shows that the Crescent in Rock Hill (a suburb of St. Louis) has a footprint of 24 X 34 -- that's exactly the footprint of the smaller version of the Sears Crescent !

sears crescent floor plan 13086a
The 1925 Sears Catalogue (available here) shows this No. 13086A floorplan (later catalogs list it as the 3258A)
as the smallestof the two floorplan options availble for the Crescent. None of the other similar homes seem
to offer this size footprint.

Here is the footprint of our Rock Hill Crescent -- an exact match!

A Close Lookalike

sears crescent lookalike clone standard homes olmstead
Standard Homes OLMSTEAD model, in a 1929 catalogue collection offered by Gordon Lumber Company -- Standard Homes did plans only, not kits.
(seen here on Archive.org).

It looks like the Standard Homes OLMSTEAD plan is a spot-on match on the front, to our Rock Hill Crescent. However, a look at the catalogue page shows that the Olmstead has a 36' wide footprint -- the smaller Rock Hill Crescent is only 34' wide, and has an extension in the back and a fireplace in the middle of the house.

Two Radford Lookalike plans:
radford 15001-r sears crescent clone
This Radford plan-book model, from a 1927 lumberyard plan book, shows a very similar look to the Crescent. This is not a kit... you just ordered the blueprints.
 This one's footprint is a different size than the Crescent.  You can access this catalog page HERE, on Archive.org.
In 1925, The Harwick Lumber Company of Detroit put out a plan book that included this Radford model, The Fernwood. Again, Radford sold ONLY blueprints, not house kits.
A  C.L. Bowes Lookalike plan
crescent clone lookalike cl bowes
Source -- C.L. Bowes sold only blueprints, not kits.

A 1926 Gordon-Van Tine Lookalike kit
gordon van tine 635
Gordon-Van Tine No. 635 • 1926 Catalog (kits)
Source

Pacific Ready-Cut Homes Style 431 kit • 1925
Pacific Ready-Cut Homes model 431-- A kit company that sold many homes on the west coast

Sterling Homes
The Monterey, 1930 (kit)
The Monterey, a kit house from the Sterling Homes company (International Mill & Timber Co.)
Here it is in their 1930 catalog

National HomeBuilder's Society • 1923 Sold plans only, not kits:

A plan only, from National Home Builders plan book: Lincoln model: source



A Stetson & Post Lumber Co. (plans-only book) lookalike:
sears crescent lookalike stetson & post seattle
Source: This Daily Bungalow album

Two More plans (not kits) By C. L. Bowes:
Another  C. L. Bowes plan-book model (only blueprints, no building supplies) that is going for a Crescent porch roof look, but is straight across, instead of curved (and the house is tiny!):

c l bowes Creton crescent lookalike style
From a 1927 C.L. Bowes plan book, here.

And another C. L. Bowes plan-book model, the 14160-A:
c l bowes 14160-A crescent lookalike
Thanks to the excellent Daily Bungalow collection on Flickr,
you can see the full catalog image, here-- blueprints only, not kits
It's always important to look at the details of the porch roof and the number of windows in front.
Then, consider the placement of the chimney,  extensions on the back of the house, and side windows.

A Home of Your Own: A Lumber company plan book-- blueprints only, not a kit.
blueprints only, not a kit • source: Daily Bungalow

blueprints only, not a kit • Source: Daily Bungalow


catalog image of lookalike to Sears Crescent, by Standard Homes: Lenoir, 1929
Another plans-only option (blueprints only, not a kit): Standard Homes LENOIR (see catalog here)

Conclusion:
We have a 1926 Sears Crescent, floor plan 13086A!*

Here's what it looked like in the 1925 catalogue mentioned above:

1925 sears crescent catalog image

And here's a view of our Rock Hill model from the same angle:

sears crescent rock hill st louis
You can see that our Rock Hill Crescent has a side doorway, leading to the kitchen and basement.  This is shown on the
floor plan No. 13086A on that same side (the catalogue image above is of one of the larger floor plans-- note the third column on each side of the porch, which was a feature of the larger floorplan [I learned that today from reading a January, 2013 blog post by Rosemary Thornton]). 

The 1925 catalogue describes what comes with the kit-home package:



As well as offering additional options:



Inside the 1926 Crescent, you'd no doubt find doors and woodwork like this beautiful pantry door in a Sears Josephine in Mt. Healthy, Ohio:

This photo was found on an October, 2014 blog post by the late Laraine Shape, a huge enthusiast of Sears Homes, who shared many of them on her blog, Sears Houses in Cincinnati. She was well-known, admired, and respected in the Sears Homes community of fellow enthusiasts. There are more photos of the beautiful woodwork in the interior of this Josephine, on Laraine's blog post, here.

This image is from Rose Thornton's blog post of January 28, 2013.  Go here to read this very interesting and informative blog post by this author of several Sears books, which shows a number of photos of other possible Crescents (I don't think it's mentioned whether or not each one is authenticated). It's interesting to note that this home's front porch is supported not by the expected two or three columns on each side, but by only one on each side (and, the columns don't connect to the porch roof with the same boxy structure as in other Crescents).   This one also has front windows that aren't quite the right size. This house has not been authenticated, and possibly is not a Sears Crescent.  EDIT: Noted researcher Lara Solonickne, of the blog Sears Homes of Chicagoland, has left a comment below, stating that this house is not a Crescent.


I'm pleased to have found this Sears Crescent today, and glad to have written about it here... especially because the street where it sits is full of older, somewhat neglected bungalows, that seem to be in danger of systematic tear-down and replacement with newer homes.  At least two of the homes visible in the October 2011 Google street views I used, are already gone.  So, if this house disappears along with the others, we'll at least know that there once sat a fine, Honor-Bilt Sears Crescent, at 1030 N. Rock Hill Road, in Rock Hill (St. Louis), Missouri, 63119. (2021 Edit: There are several pre-fab kits on this stretch of road, by a St. Louis company called Manchester Buildings... remember, Sears kits were not pre-fab houses, they were pre-cut kits. Pre-fab houses arrive on the building site with sections already put together. For more explanation, and to see these houses, see this 2018 blog post of mine.)

To Read more about the two sizes of the Crescent (3 different floor plans), read this blog post of mine.

* Disclaimer: I have to add that I have not actually authenticated this house as would be required to definitely declare it to be a Sears house.  To do that, you would need something like (correctly) marked lumber; original mortgage or deed papers; building permit showing Sears somehow; or blueprints. When declaring a house to be a certain model from a certain company, one really must make that disclaimer. I can only say that the process of elimination shows this to most probably be a Sears Crescent.

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

Thursday, July 16, 2015

Catalogs Online: Sears, Radford, Gordon-Van Tine


DAILY BUNGALOW
Daily Bungalow has a wonderful set of catalogs on Flickr, including Sears, Gordon-Van Tine, Lewis, Harris, C. L. Bowes, Liberty, Sterling, and many, many others . 

NOTE: August 14, 2024, the Daily Bungalow links are back!

• kit companies, labeled with year: click here
• plans-only catalogs, labeled with year: click here

I have also included some of the Daily Bungalow albums directly in the lists below, where there was not an Archive.org version of that year's catalog.


ON PINTEREST:
Click here for this Pinterest resource by Dale Haynes


Archive.org & Flickr

Good news! Internet Archive links are now working! (October 24, 2024)

Find online catalogs for Sears, Gordon-Van Tine, Radford, Wardway, Harris, Lewis with these links.

SEARS 
(mail-order, bundled homes; pre-cut and labeled 1916 through about 1940)

1908: Sears Modern Homes -- extremely slow to load, awkward format with no thumbnail view

1911-1912: Sears Modern Homes -- on Archive, better format

1911: Sears Modern Homes -- on Hathi Trust

1913/14: Sears Modern Homes -- album on Flickr

1913: Sears Modern Homes -- Dover reprint on Google books

1914: Sears Modern Homes -- Elsmore on cover -- album on Flickr

1916: Sears Modern Homes -- album on Flickr (Daily Bungalow )

1916: Sears Modern Homes (Hathi Trust)

1916: Sears Modern Homes (Archive)

1917: Sears Modern Homes - Hodgson -- album on Flickr (Daily Bungalow)

1917: (copyright date 11/26/1916) Sears Modern Homes -- album on Flickr (thanks, Dale Haynes!)

1917: Sears Modern Homes -- same issue as above, with C models/cut OR pre-cut

1918: Honor Bilt Modern Homes (has Carlin, Lebanon, Warrenton, Madelia)

1920: Honor Bilt Modern Homes (on Hathi Trust)


1921 (May): Honor Bilt Modern Homes (same cover as 1922)

1922: Sears Simplex Sectional houses, garages, cottages (pre-fab, not pre-cut Modern Homes)

1923: Honor Bilt Modern Homes (labeled as 1920)

1923: Honor Bilt Modern Homes - Daily Bungalow Flickr album

1925: Honor Bilt Modern Homes

1926: Honor Bilt Modern Homes - Hagley Digital Archives

1926: Special Supplement -- Honor Bilt Homes, "15 new models" (includes Elmwood)--Daily Bungalow

 1926: Sears Special Supplement, Honor Bilt Homes, "15 new models" (includes Sears Elmwood) on Archive.org

1927: Sears Modern Homes -- a Flickr album

1928: Sears Modern Homes (on our drive)

1928: Sears Kit Houses: Virtual Tour (Interiors, hardware, lighting) -- Daily Bungalow Flickr

1929: Sears Brick Veneer homes (a Daily Bungalow album on Flickr)


1930: Sears STANDARD BUILT homes (on our drive)

1931-32: Sears Modern Homes (includes Barrington, on our drive)

1932 (January): Homes of Today (no Barrington)

1932: Homes of Today (edition not sure) (no Barrington)

1932: Homes of Today (edition that has no Barrington)-- Daily Bungalow Flickr album

1932: Homes of Today -- on Hathi Trust

1933: Sears Home Construction Division: America's New Low Cost Homes!

1934: Sears Modern Homes

1935: Sears Modern Homes (Homecrest on Cover-some brick veneer, too)- Daily Bungalow Flickr album

1936 (December):  Modern Homes

1938 (April): Modern Homes  (NOTE: The 1937 catalog is identical to the '38)



Early Lighting Fixtures-- 1900: Sears Electric, Gas, and Combination lighting 

Ceramic Tile designs:
 1910 catalog from Sears

Mantels and Fireplaces: Sears Roebuck & Co., 1910 (?)

Building Material, Lighting, Millwork:
Sears Roebuck & Co.  1910

Building Material and Millwork: Sears Roebuck & Co. 1912 

Concrete Machinery: Triumph, Wizard, and Knox Blox Machines -- 1912

Making the Old Home New: 1914 home renovations catalog Sears

Hardware (including door hardware): 1919 Sears catalog

Building Material (millwork, fireplaces, etc.): Sears Roebuck & Co 1920

Building Material (millwork, fireplaces, etc.): Sears Roebuck & Co 1929

Building Materials: Sears Honor Bilt 1930  

Building Materials, Plumbing, Heating, Paint, Lighting, etc.: Sears 1932

Building Materials: Sears 1939

Farm Buildings: Sears 1928

Sears Garages, Cottages, Log Cabins, Play houses: Sears 1935

Sears Lighting -- original catalogs from various years (Sears 1934 & 1937), on OldHouseLights.com

Sears Wallpaper -- color images from 1916 catalog -- Daily Bungalow Flickr album

GORDON – VAN TINE
(mail-order, bundled homes; pre-cut and labeled 1916 through mid 1930s)




1919 3e (listed incorrectly as 1918): Ready-Cut Homes

1920: Gordon-Van Tine (Daily Bungalow Flickr album)


1921 8e (listed incorrectly as 1920): Gordon-Van Tine Homes

1923 1e: Gordon-Van Tine Homes (same cover used in 1926 and 1927)

1926: Gordon-Van Tine Homes  (on Archive)

1926: Gordon-Van Tine Homes on Flickr, by Daily Bungalow  (see Wardway Homes 1926 link below, where Daily Bungalow has cross-referenced the Wardway homes with their corresponding GVT name/number.)

1927 2e: Gordon-Van Tine - Plan-cut homes


1929: Plan-Cut Homes (Daily Bungalow Flickr Album)

1929- GVT interiors, in color (Daily Bungalow Flickr Album)

1931—Plan-Cut Homes

1936 (December): Book of Homes












RADFORD
Radford Architectural Company and Wm. A. Radford 
(NOT mail-order bundles -- only blueprints)

1903 – The Radford American Homes, 100 House Plans (By the Radford Architectural Company)

1903 – The Radford American Homes, 100 Houses Illustrated(yellow, black, green cover)
(By the Radford Architectural Company)

1903 – The Radford Ideal Homes, 100 Houses Illustrated (through Montgomery Ward)
yellow and red cover – 7th edition, March 1903, order from Montgomery Ward

1904-- Radford Brothers of Oshkosh, WI & Chicago, IL -- millwork, windows, etc.

1907—Lumberman’s House Plan Book (Fravel Sash & Door Co., Inc., Harrisonburg, VA

1908 – Radford’s Artistic Homes, 250 designs  (Radford Architectural Company)

1908- Radford’s Bungalows (208 designs)

1908—Radford’s Bungalows (different cover – plain red) 208 designs


1909—Radford’s Modern Homes, 200 Designs (Radford Architectural Company)

1909- Radford’s Portfolio of Plans (over 300 designs, homes +)


1915 – Guaranteed Building Plans with Interior Views andDetails (150 house plans, 50 farm building plans, etc.)

1915 -- Radford Farm & Building Book (a Daily Bungalow album)



1924 - Home and Garden Argo-Summit Lumber Company, Argo, Illinois


1925- Home and Garden   Hartwick Lumber Company, Detroit

1926 – Home, Fireside and Garden (various lumber companies)

1927- Colorkeed Home Plans (Wm. A. Radford)
Lundy Home News and Plan Service, Lund Lumber Company, Williamsport, PA

Speer Lumber & Supply Co., Easton, PA

1927 – Colorkeed Homes Fireside and Garden – lumber company in Hot Springs, ARK


1930 (date nowhere in book – Radford name nowhere in book)
Artistic Homes: Build a Home First

1949-- Radford-Morgan-Andersen: Woodwork, windows, doors, fireplace surrounds

MONTGOMERY WARD / WARDWAY (mail-order, bundled homes; pre-cut and labeled 1915 through about 1935)

1914 -- Building Plans of Modern Homes -- Hathi Trust
1915 -- Book of Homes
1916 -- Book of Homes 
1917 -- Book of Homes
1918 -- Coverall PAINT, Montgomery Ward
1924 -- Wardway Homes
1926 -- Wardway Homes on Daily Bungalow -- cross referenced with the GVT name of the same house model (!). Click on the thumbnail of the house, and you'll find the GVT name/number in the notes in the white section below the catalog image.
1928 -- Wardway Homes (Montgomery Ward) -- on Daily Bungalow's Flickr page
1929 -- Wardway Homes (Montgomery Ward) -- on Daily Bungalow's Flickr page
1930-- Wardway Homes
1930 -- How to erect your Wardway Ready-Cut Home
1930 -- Building Materials (Montgomery Ward)
1935 -- Building Materials (Montgomery Ward)

HARRIS HOMES
(mail-order, bundled homes; pre-cut and labeled option)
1913 -- Chicago House Wrecking Company
1916 -- Harris Homes cut-to-fit, edition 69, on Archive
1917 -- Harris Homes cut-to-fit, edition 73, on Archive
1918 -- Harris Brothers, a plan book of Harris Homes (kits)
1920 -- Harris Brothers, a plan book of Harris Homes (kits)-- on Archive
1920 -- Harris Homes album by Daily Bungalow, on Flickr 
1923 -- Harris Homes Beautiful -- on Archive, one of the pages says ©1923
1923 -- Harris Homes Beautiful, Price list says February, 1923 -- slightly different
1928 -- Harris Homes album on Archive, catalog No 554
1929 -- Harris Homes on Archive, catalog No 555
1931 -- Summer Bungalows from Harris Homes, on Archive
BUILDING MATERIALS:
1920 -- Harris Brothers Building Materials AND houses and garages
1924 -- Harris Homes Building Materials (has a homes catalog in the same scan)
1928 -- Harris Homes Building Materials AND "Plan Cut Homes"

LEWIS HOMES
(mail-order, bundled homes; pre-cut and labeled 1916 +)
1914 -- Lewis-Built Homes
1916 -- Lewis Built Homes
1917 -- Lewis Built Homes
1919 -- Lewis-Built Homes (Modern Method of Home Building)
1920 -- Lewis Homes (Homes of Character )
1922 -- Lewis Homes (Homes of Character)
1924 -- Lewis Homes (Homes of Character)
1925 -- Lewis Homes - Portfolio of New Designs
1917-1925 -- Lewis Homes (Daily Bungalow Flickr album -- Friends only content)

1926 -- Liberty Homes
1950s & 1960s: Liberty Homes

BENNETT HOMES
Ray. H. Bennett Lumber Company • Pre-cut Kit homes from northern NY State
1920 -- Bennett Homes (Gutenberg EBook)
1925 -- Bennett Homes (a Daily Bungalow Flickr album, thumbnails)
1936 -- Bennett Homes Dura-bilt Ready-Cut homes
1938 -- Bennett Homes  (a Daily Bungalow Flickr album)
1932-- Bennett Homes
Various Years -- Bennett Homes

STERLING (International Mill & Timber)
1915-1916 -- Sterling System-Built Homes (The Famous Fifty)
1916 -- Sterling Homes (The Famous Fifty and other homes --a Daily Bungalow Flickr album)
1920 -- Sterling catalog No. 17
1920-25 -- Sterling catalog (a Daily Bungalow Flickr album)
1927 -- Sterling catalog No. 27 (circa 1925-1927)
1928 -- Sterling catalog No. 28 
1930 -- Sterling catalog
1939 -- Sterling catalog
1944 -- Sterling catalog
1945 -- Sterling catalog (a Daily Bungalow Flickr album)
1946 -- Sterling catalog
1956 -- Sterling catalog
1971 -- Sterling catalog (the final catalog, a Daily Bungalow Flickr album)

ALADDIN HOMES
(mail-order, bundled homes; pre-cut and labeled 1906 +)
1908-1954 -- Aladdin Homes catalogs *(NOTE: June 2022, that link takes you to their new catalog links page, and all catalogs are now available. Also, try THIS LINK to some of the catalogs, on Archive.org.) THIS LINK takes you to a list, rather than icons.
(*This is the collection at the Clarke Historical Library at Central Michigan University, which has all of these catalogs online.)
Aladdinette Homes -- 1920 (on Archive)
Aladdinette Homes -- 1921 (on Archive)
Aladdin Manual of Construction (...every step... David S. Betcone) -- 1918 (on Archive)
• Aladdin-1918  Industrial Housing catalog 
• Aladdin-1920  Industrial Housing catalog on Hathi Trust
 
Artcraft Ready-Cut Homes
Berkshire Lumber Company, Pittsfield, MA
1918 catalog,  on Archive

Fenner Kit Houses, Portland Oregon (West Coast)
Factory Cut Catalog (not sure of year), on Daily Bungalow

Ready Built House Company, Portland OR (West Coast)
1915 Catalog, on Archive

Pacific Ready-Cut Homes (West Coast)
1918 Catalog, on Archive
1925 Catalog, on Archive • on Daily Bungalow 
1925 Catalog, on Archive, with notes about the company
1923 Catalog, on Archive

Crain Ready-Cut House Company
This is a Houston, TX pre-cut company, operating in the 1920s
Catalogue No 3  (Ready Cut and Sectional houses)
Catalogue No 6 (Ready Cut only, no portable houses -- labeled as Brace, but Crain is the name)

T. Eaton Company -- Company in Western Canada
(plans and standard length lumber, not pre-cut kits)
Plan Book of Ideal Homes (year unknown)

Homebuilder (plans only)
1923 -- A plan book by the National Homebuilder's Society (Possibly the original source for a number of Sears kit designs)

C.L. Bowes (plans only) C.L. Bowes published plan books that we have found contain "lookalikes" to a number of the plans offered by kit companies such as Sears and Gordon-Van Tine. These plans are NOT for kits... just for the purchase of blueprints. They were offered at various building and lumber supply companies, or contractor offices.

1918 • Offered by Home Lumber Company (this one has lookalikes for MANY of the Sears models, including oldest Starlight, oldest Winona, oldest Elsmore, both versions of Marina, old Concord, Flossmoor, Chelsea, Somerset, Cranmore, Sherburne, Rossville/171, Niota,  Avoca, Lucerne, Elmwood, Westly, Saratoga, Avondale, Somers (alternate porch roof), Maytown; Aladdin Georgia, Aladdin Detroit, Aladdin Franklin;  GVT 712, GVT 526, GVT 536, and more) 
1923 • Offered by Latham Brothers Lumber, Mineola and Port Washington NY (this one has lookalikes for the Sears Starlight, Winona, Dundee, Lakecrest/Marion; Wardway Lexington; Aladdin Avalon; GVT Shadow Lawn, and more) 
1925Offered by Wood Construction Bureau, Cleveland, Ohio
1926G.D Combes Estate, Lumber & building materials company, Rockville Centre, NY
1926 • Florida Casas, A book of small house plans • Ozona, Florida
1927John Kadletz, Lumber & Building Material, Shawano, Wisconsin 
1927Offered by Charles C. Kellogg and sons, Utica and Clinton, New York
OTHERS: you'll find several lumber company plan books including C.L. Bowes designs at this link

ASHSB  (Architect's Small House Service Bureau -- plans only)
1922   --  How to Plan, Finance, and Build Your Home
1925    -- Fifty Ways to Lower Home Building Costs
1927    -- 100 Bungalows of Frame and Masonry Construction
1929    -- July edition, Small Homes
1920s? -- Homes by the Larcomb Construction Company
1920s?  -- Better Homes in America (some time during Calvin Coolidge's presidency)
1920s?  -- Help for the Man Who Wants to Build
1930     -- Colonial Homes
1930     -- Correctly Designed Modern American Homes


Southern California Bungalow Plans (not kits)

Sears Homart PRE-FAB houses (These are not kits, and these were not part of the Sears Modern Homes catalogs. These were pre-fabricated houses, that would be shipped in sections of wall, etc., that were already pieced together, and had to be attached to each other. These were small and extremely modest, post-WWII homes.)
This blog post shows good catalog images 
This blog post shows the full 1949 Homart catalog (SearsHomes.org)
This blog post explains the difference between a Sears kit house, and a pre-fabricated house (Sears Homes of Chicagoland)
This blog post has one Homart home, and good explanations (Sears Homes of Chicagoland)
This blog post shows a 1950s Homart home (Sears Homes of Chicagoland)

Hodgson PRE-FAB houses These are not pre-cut framing lumber kits, either. These were pre-fabricated houses, that would be shipped in sections of wall, etc., that were already pieced together, and had to be attached to each other. Hodgson houses were always white Cape Cods with black shutters, with painted cedar siding. Hodgson's factory was in Dover, Massachusetts. Here is their 1937 catalog.

THESE BOOKS CONTAIN PLANS ONLY and are NOT SEARS HOUSES:
Sears did not offer their own blueprints or plans before their kits were offered in 1908 (they offered building supplies, alone, beginning in 1895, but no blueprints).

However, among the items sold by mail order in the Sears catalogs, were sometimes books of plans by publishers who just happened to sell their plan books through Sears, and usually they also sold them through Montgomery Ward (and elsewhere). But, these plans are not by Sears-employed architects, and they were not sold individually, they were just books of plans that were among the many things sold in the Sears general merchandise catalogs. 

Sometimes, when people built a home from one of these plans that they got from a book that they bought through the Sears or Montgomery Ward general merchandise catalog, they passed down the mistaken information to their kids and grandkids and great grandkids, that the house was a Sears house... but, that is a confused misconception of the origin of the house, and it isn't actually in any way a Sears house. 

Sears houses are only those which were purchased as a bundle of plans (by a Sears-employed architect, or licensed by Sears) and building supplies (and, beginning in 1916, the framing lumber of that bundle of building supplies, would have been pre-measured and pre-cut, and labeled with a stamped letter/number combo).

Among the companies who had books of plans that were sometimes sold through the Sears and Montgomery Ward general merchandise catalogs, might be:
• George F. Barber 1905
• Fred T. Hodgson, architect (published by Frederick J. Drake & Company): 1903 •  1905 
• Wm Radford Architectural plans: Here is a 1903 book of Radford plans, sold through Montgomery Ward (see others, linked above in the Radford section)

archive.org sears gordon van tine aladdin radford


And:
My own "Favorites" on Archive.org.
My favorites are listed by catalog company, so, if you click on the white box with the catalog or lumber company name, you'll get the page with the list of their uploaded catalogs.
For Example:
Once in Archive.org, clicking on this icon on my FAVORITES list,
will bring you the list of Aladdin catalogs on Archive.org.
(Click here to actually go to the Aladdin list!)

1913 catalog, available here

1912 catalog, available here

1926 catalog, available here.
1932 catalog, available here
Sears Barns, available here
Aladdin Homes catalog for 1917, available here
Gordon-Van Tine Company catalog for 1923, available here
Look for it among the offerings on ebay of one of the authors: ikcilow


Radford Homes 
These were house plans only, not kit homes
available here
Radford Homes
These were house plans only, not kit homes
available here
Wardway Homes
Dover reproduction of the 1925 catalog,
available here

DVD with pdfs of many years of the Sears Modern Homes catalogs
(NOTE: This DVD does not actually contain the 1924, 1927, or 1929 catalogs, though the covers for those years are shown in the listing... but, those years are not on the list of the catalogs included)
On ETSY, here

Our Go-To Book!
This is hands-down the best reference resource on Sears houses.
Published by the National Trust for Historic Preservation
Available here
This is a small book,
but is packed with all of the basic information about numerous mail-order home companies.
Rebecca L. Hunter is a highly respected authority on mail-order homes.
Available here
A thorough discussion of mail-order homes and other early 20th-century American home styles.
Available here
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SearsHouses.com: Visit our website for more information