Authenticated Sears Clyde bungalow, circa 1923 • 480 Fairview Avenue, Colonia, New Jersey |
As we've mentioned before, we regularly peruse the real estate listings, looking for Sears houses for sale. This week, it was fun to run across this Sears Clyde bungalow, in Colonia, New Jersey (part of Woodbridge Township, Middlesex County), not only because it is a Sears house, but because I had previously tied this very house to a 1923 mortgage with Sears.
Sears Clyde bungalow in the 1922 Sears Modern Homes catalog. |
As you can see, this Clyde on Fairview Avenue has had the front porch enclosed, and a large addition has been added to the right side of the house, at some point. Take a look at the house from the front and from the right side:
Thanks to the real estate listing, we can see a good bit of the interior, much of which retains the original charm of the house, with original Craftsman style wood trim, and wood floors, and original wood doors from Sears.
The fireplace is on the left side of the house, so the enclosed front porch is the section that we see here to the left of the photo... the other side of the wall with the piano. |
When the Clyde was first introduced in 1920, there were two floor plans offered... one with a bathroom (#9030), and a slightly smaller plan without a bathroom (#7030):
The first two Clyde floorplans, shown in the 1922 Sears Modern Homes catalog. The larger floorplan, #9030, is shown on the left, and the smaller plan without a bathroom, #7030, is shown on the right. |
Our house here at 480 Fairview Avenue, is the #9030 floor plan, with the right-side addition of the master bedroom (and there is a sunroom added on to the back):
Sears Clyde #9030 floor plan, 1922 |
The back bedroom has two windows and a closet, and is accessed through the hallway. The bathroom is fit in between the two bedrooms, and the furthest front bedroom (really in the center portion of that side of the house), has one window, and a closet. The window is the window we see in the bump out section on the left side of the house.
We can tell by the placement of these two windows, and the entry door, that this is the back bedroom. |
This is the other bedroom -- that window wall is actually the bump out wall on the left side of the house. |
Here's a closer view of the dining room, allowing us to really see the beautiful wood floors. To the left, is the entry to that little hallway between the bedrooms and the bathroom, and the kitchen is entered through the back wall of the dining room:
Original dining room space. |
The kitchen is in the original space, and though these are not the original kitchen cabinets, let's take a look, anyway... after all, who doesn't like a nice white kitchen with subway tiles and vintage touches and nice stainless steel appliances? I like it... including the little Bon Appétit sign on the wall:
Here's that sunroom that is accessed through the kitchen. |
That extra, added sun room adds a nice amount of space, and it opens out to a little bit of back deck. |
The back yard wasn't provided by Sears, but it's attractive, and that little garage probably was bought from Sears, actually. |
Who Lived Here?
Originally, this house was owned by Asa V. Wilder, but he sold it to Mrs. Letitia Scott, through Sears, in July of 1923 (which is why I listed it with a build year of "circa 1923", because it could have been built as early as 1920). There are nine Sears houses on these two blocks of Fairview Avenue, and I've authenticated seven of them (through mortgages or deeds connected to Sears). Four of those were houses originally bought by Blackwood & Schroeder, which I assume was a real estate or construction company, that built those houses, and then sold them to homeowners, and arranged for the new owners to have their mortgage through Sears (I guess that Blackwood & Schroeder had mortgages with Sears, and Sears allowed them to transfer those mortgages to the new homeowners). A. V. Wilder was possibly also a real estate or construction speculator, because, in addition to this Clyde that he sold to Mrs. Letitia Scott in July of 1923, he also ran ads for several days in August of 1923, for another house on Fairview Avenue:
I wasn't able to find out anything about Mrs. Letitia Scott -- not her age, nor if her husband was still living, nor if she had children, nor if she had a job -- I only know the terms of her purchase of this Clyde: She put down $100 toward the full purchase price of $5,300 (that would have included the lot, too, so it would have covered the lot, the already-built-kit, and the already-incurred construction costs), agreed to pay another $2,200 upon receipt of the deed, and then allowed to pay the $3,000 balance through a five-year mortgage (at 6%) with Sears. This is the first time that I have run across a mortgage or deed set up like this, wherein the homeowner was dealing with the original owner and Sears at the same time... it's the first time that I've seen the name of the model of the house mentioned, as well. Here are snippets of that mortgage agreement-- you should be able to enlarge them through a click or a pinch open:
However, that's not the end of the story for Sears and this house. In April of 1928, a new Sears deed related to this house (which sits on lots 495 & 496, block 14, Colonia 2), shows that the property was transferred to Charles W. Knauer... not from Letitia Scott, but from a transaction involving Asa V. Wilder, Blackwood & Schroeder, and Sears, Roebuck and Company, involving Sears trustee Walker O. Lewis... so, apparently Blackwood & Schroeder had a connection to this property originally, too. I don't know what happened to Letitia Scott, but she must not have been able to keep up her payments on the house, because the 1928 deed mentions a 1924 transaction for this property, between Sears and Blackwood and Schroeder, and Asa V. Wilder (in fact, perhaps that 1923 newspaper ad I showed above, was not, in fact, for a different house, but was maybe for this same house, if Letitia Scott defaulted on her payments). Several of the Sears houses in these two blocks, appear to have gone through more than one transfer of an original mortgage from Sears.
So, in April of 1928, Charles W. Knauer, and his wife Margaret Does Knauer (both age 34), settled into their new Sears Clyde house, with their three children, Robert (age 6), Margaret (age 4), and Arthur (born that year). They were still shown as living in that house in the 1940 U. S. Census, and on Charles' 1942 WWII registration. Further research into the deed archives, shows that Charles and Margaret bought neighboring lots 497 and 498 in a foreclosure sale in 1941 (and then lots 499 and 500 in a foreclosure sale in 1943), so perhaps the addition to the house was put on after purchasing those neighboring lots in 1941. It looks like the Knauers sold the property (lots 495, 496, 497 498) in 1957, to Irving and Vivian Lopatin. The Lopatins sold the house (all four lots) in 1964, to Henry G. Westberg and his wife, Elvy Westberg. After their deaths, their daughter, Gertrude Westberg, lived in the house, until she sold it in 2004 to Zbigniew and Monika Korkowski.
The History Of the Clyde Model
Sears first offered a very large house under the model name Clyde... but it was first marketed as the No. 118. That large model was offered beginning in 1908, and continued in the catalogs until 1919.
Here are two examples of "the big Clyde" that I've blogged about... one in Mexico, Missouri, and one in Almond, New York:
You can see lovely interior photos of this Mexico, Missouri Clyde, in this blog post. |
And, you can see beautiful interior photos of this Almond, New York Clyde, here. |
The Clyde Bungalow
Over the nine years that the Clyde bungalow was offered, it had a little bit of an exterior design change, and it had three possible floor plans. It ran in the catalogs from 1920-1929.
When first offered, it was shown like this... from 1920 through 1922:
In the 1923 catalog, for some reason, they changed the style of the fireplace chimney, and added a trellis-style enclosure material for the front porch:
The slightly-changed look of the exterior of the Clyde, as shown only in 1923 and 1924. The same two floor plans (9030 and 7030) were still offered. |
Beginning in 1925, and continuing through 1929, the exterior of the Clyde got a more pronounced makeover, with a change to the look of the front porch pillars and short walls, and the elimination of the tracery in the gables:
The Sears Clyde as shown in the catalogs from 1925 through 1929. |
Floor Plan Changes
Beginning with the 1925 catalog, and continuing in 1926, the no-bathroom floor plan #7030 was no longer offered, and the only option was the #9030 floor plan.
But, from 1927 through 1929, an additional variation of the #9030 floor plan was also an option. The original #9030 floor plan was then labeled "9030A", and the newer plan, which was four feet wider, and added additional windows in the dining room, living room, and front bedroom, was offered as #9030B.
Here are all three of the floor plans:
smallest Clyde floor plan, #7030, 1920 - 1924 (no-bathroom ) |
Clyde floor plan #9030 (later called #9030A), 1920-1929 |
Other Clyde Bungalow Examples
The Clyde is a nice little model, and we've found it in many towns, often with additions. I'll finish off with a few examples:
Another now-enlarged Sears Clyde bungalow, mortgaged through Sears in 1926, at 409 S Barton Street, Arlington, VA |
Here's a Clyde with the smallest, no-bathroom floor plan (#7030)... you can see that there is no hallway connecting the bedrooms, they are just entered directly from the main rooms. A modern bathroom has now been added, and another addition for a larger kitchen, has been added on. At the time of this listing, the images show that the floors needed a refinishing, but the rest of the woodwork was original and in nice condition, and the house sits on a beautiful expanse of farm land. 3006 Weaver Rd, Mount Vernon, Ohio (see real estate photos here). |
A modernized, vinyl-ized Clyde with enclosed front porch, 708 Rudolph Ave, Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio |
Another #9030 floor plan example, for sale in 2021, lots of great, original woodwork and details, needing floor refinishing and updates... it sold, and I hope it wasn't torn apart and filled with grey wood-look vinyl plank flooring. 156 S Roys Avenue, Columbus, Ohio. • Sears Clyde bungalow |
3702 W 132nd St, Cleveland, Ohio (no interior views) • Sears Clyde bungalow |
Vinyl-ized, carpeted, but in nice condition... Sears hinges. 10604 Dale Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio (interior views) • Sears Clyde bungalow |
Nice interior with original floors, original Craftsman trim everywhere: 3692 Saybrook Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio (interior views) • Sears Clyde bungalow |
38 Parker St, Belvidere, NJ (interior views from before it was re-painted and fixed up) • Sears Clyde bungalow |
An example of the wider, 9030B floor plan, Sears Clyde bungalow, but no interior views. 19548 Paxson Dr, South Bend, Indiana. This house was located by researcher Rebecca L. Hunter (Kithouse.org). |
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We lived in the house in Colonia for almost 19 years. My husband and I did a lot of work trying to keep the original charm in addition to restoring to the original look.
ReplyDeleteYou look to have done a wonderful job! It's a charming house :)
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