It's 4th of July weekend, so why not feature a Sears house with a pretty flag flying, out front! This is a Sears Avoca, though, at the time that it was built, it was probably still being marketed as the No. 109. The Avoca was offered beginning in the very first year of the Sears Modern Homes program -- 1908-- and continued through the 1919 catalog. This one is in West Point, Virginia (not to be confused with West Point, New York, site of the famous U.S. Military Academy).
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Sears Avoca in my 1918 Sears Modern Homes catalog -- the catalog shows a double window upstairs front |
This house was recently in the real estate listings, but we've known about it for a while. The catalog listings sometimes mention towns where the model has been built... we call them, appropriately, "built at" locations, and West Point, Virginia is one of those locations. We can also match up a number of building elements, with items shown in the Sears Building Supplies catalogs, so, even though this house has a wrap-around porch added, on the side, we are very confident that it is a Sears house.
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Sears Avoca floor plan, with the "built at" locations referenced -- look! No bathroom! |
In 1916 catalogs, the houses were given long numerical "names", with the short number at the end, so this model No. 109, in the early 1916 catalog, was marketed as 264P109, though a late 1916 catalog we've seen, uses C to start the name, so this house is model C109 in that catalog. All of this coincides with the year -- 1916-- when pre-cut, or "already-cut" houses were introduced by Sears. However, this model was never offered as a pre-cut model.
Indoor bathroom, anyone?
And, you know what else it was never offered as? A house with an inside bathroom! I've just been looking over the floor plans from different years, to see if there were any changes made, and I do not see a bathroom! Obviously, every modern, still-standing example of this model, will have a bathroom or two, so they will have taken over that back pantry, perhaps, and maybe part of a closet and a bedroom upstairs? Not sure!
Inside the Avoca model
I have interior photos from the real estate listing for this house in West Point, Virginia, but I also have interior photos for one or two other examples of this model, so I'll include those, too. Let's take a look:
The front door leads you right into a nice little entry hall, where you find the lovely staircase, as well, and two nice big windows. This house in West Point has painted woodwork (sorry, that doesn't bother me... it might have been ordered as pine, and intended to be painted), but I also have an example for you with natural, stained woodwork.
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See that staircase newel? See that door? With the round ringer door bell? I'll show you those in the catalog, too. This is from 921 Lee St, West Point, Virginia |
In East Hampton, Connecticut, at 44 Colchester Ave, we have another "built at" Sears No 109, with
a real estate listing for photos. This house is in a little rougher shape, in some ways, but has gorgeous original woodwork. It also has Sears
Stratford door handle hardware, and trademark Sears hinges:
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This is the same door style as on the West Point VA house |
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Same staircase newel, though different staircase balusters.. but, we're missing a window! |
In Cranston, Rhode Island, at 471 Oaklawn Avenue, there sits another Sears No 109 / Avoca, and here is the look of the staircase in that house:
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Sears Avoca at 471 Oaklawn Avenue, Cranston, RI (source) |
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Sears Avoca at 471 Oaklawn Avenue, Cranston, RI (source) |
Here is the staircase newel, in the Sears catalog:
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Staircase newel and topper |
The door model on the West Point house, appears to be the Windsor model, but with new leaded glass. Here it is from the outside:
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Front door at 921 Lee St, West Point, VA -- Sears WINDSOR model -- also with a turn-type doorbell. |
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This model door was also offered without the added decorative carvings just below the glass insert of the door. My mom's family's Silverdale had that version, which you can see in this blog post about her house in Northampton, Massachusetts. |
The front living room has that bay with three big windows, with nice Craftsman style trim. Here it is in the West Point, Virginia house:
And here is that space inside the Cranston, Rhode Island house:
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This Avoca has an added bay-shaped front porch outside of this living room area, which is now enclosed. |
And, inside the East Hampton, Connecticut Avoca:
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Living room area of the Avoca in East Hampton, CT |
There are lots of lovely photos of the West Point, Virginia Avoca, in
the real estate listing. It has an addition, besides the roomy side porch, and they clearly fitted it with a bathroom, as well:
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Side porch addition on Sears Avoca in West Point, Virginia |
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Side porch and back addition on Sears Avoca in West Point, Virginia |
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This does look like an original clawfoot tub, doesn't it? But, it may have been later, to keep a period look. |
The East Hampton, CT Avoca is the one with so much original, unpainted woodwork, and the photos from its
real estate listing really show this beautifully. The floors were in need of serious restoration, but the doors and dining room sideboard and the window and doorway trim, is beautiful.
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Sears Avoca at 44 Colchester Avenue, East Hampton, CT-- ah! There's a bathroom added! |
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Craftsman details in the bedroom of Sears Avoca at 44 Colchester Avenue, East Hampton, CT |
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Living room, looking into dining room and entry hall, Sears Avoca at 44 Colchester Avenue, East Hampton, CT |
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Sears china buffet (china closet with sideboard), in the dining room of the Avoca at 44 Colchester Avenue, East Hampton, CT |
And, here is that buffet/china closet from Sears, as shown in the 1915 building supplies catalog:
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China Closet/cabinet/sideboard offered by Sears |
You can't see them really well, but this china closet has the only-offered-by-Sears hinge:
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Sears hinge from the building supplies catalog, 1915 |
...as do the doors, which also have Sears Stratford door-handle hardware:
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Sears Avoca in East Hampton, CT, with a Sears five-panel interior door, Sears hinges, and Sears Stratford door handle hardware |
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Sears Stratford design door handle hardware in the 1915 Sears Building Supplies catalog |
The Cranston, Rhode Island Avoca has woodwork that is of an earlier style than the Craftsman look that we see in the other two houses. This house uses square wood blocks with a circle design in the center, and a slightly-curved face to the doorway trim. Both styles were offered in the 1915 catalog, but I know this corner-block, curved-face trim style to be prevalent closer to 1900 -- I had a 1907 house in the city of St. Louis, that had this style trim. These photos are from
this real estate listing.
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bedroom inside Sears Avoca at 471 Oaklawn Ave, Cranston, RI-- these are 5-panel doors |
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bedroom inside Sears Avoca at 471 Oaklawn Ave, Cranston, RI |
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close-up view of corner-block style trim |
And, here it is, shown in the 1915 building supplies catalog:
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from the 1915 Sears Building materials catalog |
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from the 1915 Sears Building materials catalog |
Exterior Features
The Avoca included brackets to support the overhang on the bay. Here is the East Hampton, CT Avoca, showing that-- and we see the expected size of the side extension of the Avoca (the West Point, VA house has the side porch added):
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Close-up of the bay bracket on the Sears Avoca in East Hampton, CT |
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Sears Avoca at 44 Colchester Avenue, East Hampton, Connecticut |
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It's the 78¢ bay bracket! |
Here is the front of the West Point, Virginia
Avoca, showing its bay brackets:
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Bay brackets on Sears Avoca at 921 Lee St, West Point, Virginia |
Let's close with a few more exterior photos of the Sears No. 109 / Avoca in West Point, VA:
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This back section is an addition, but notice the stair-step diagonal placement of the side windows on the original part of the house. That is a feature we look for, on the Sears Avoca. |
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Beautiful curb appeal on this Sears Avoca at 921 Lee St, West Point, VA |
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And, a final look, from above... such a lovely yard and setting! |
That's it! We have more
Avoca examples on our national database of Sears houses in the U.S., but we are always happy to add more... feel free to contact me if you know of one. In the earliest catalogs, for a short while, Sears offered a very similar house, without the bay window look on the front, and with a small dormer over the front porch side of the house. The interior layout was pretty different from the No. 109/
Avoca, though. I wrote a blog post about that model,
here.
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