Thursday, August 19, 2010

Welcome to Butternut Hill



 Johnny Swalls
In March 2010, we moved to the property known by the National Register of Historic Places as "Butternut Hill."  The property is one of the earliest settled in the Wabash Valley, and the home was built in 1835.  After remaining in the same family for many generations and undergoing additions and alterations, the homestead was divided up and sold in the 1990s. While much of the farm land was sold to developers, the house and 5.5 acres of the farm were donated to the Indiana Preservation, who placed it on the National Register, added covenents governing changes, and sold it at auction.  It was purchased by a local couple who converted it into a Bed & Breakfast.  By this time, the farm had not been active for at least 20 years, and the new owners continued to allow the land to return to nature.  Unfortunately, they were unable to maintain the home and allowed significant damage to occur to both the interior and exterior during their stewardship.  Their family decided to sell the home in trust at auction in 2009, and hired auctioneer Johnny Swalls to conduct the sale.

In October 2009 on his commute to work, Chad noticed that this property was to be auctioned, and we immediately began considering the possibility of purchasing it.  Doing so would put into action a dream we had  to live a more self-sustaining and sustainable existence.   We were charmed by its location on the National Road (US 40) next to Highland Lawn Cemetery, which just happens to be the resting place of one of our favorite Socialists, Eugene V. Debs.  We also thought that 5 plus acres would be about the most we could reasonably handle, but that we could certainly do a lot with the space to accomplish a more green lifestyle.  Also, at the time, we had three dogs who required daily walks in the park, and we felt that having some land would make exercise easier for both us and the dogs.  Despite some very real concerns with the property and our ability to manage the financial shortfall we would experience until our own home sold (in a *terrible* market) we decided to buy the property, and haven't looked back since!  I intend to chronicle in this blog our successes and failures, hopefully more of the former than the later. 

The house is located on more than five acres of land near the eastern edge of Terre Haute, Indiana.  Access to the house is by a hand-laid brick driveway of about 200 yards that winds upwards from the National Road and many trees and bushes cover most of the surrounding land.  Here we are dragging our gigantic trash recepticals up the driveway in March 2010, soon after moving into the house.



In addition to the house, there is a two car garage, an 800 square foot cabin, the foundation of a small barn, and a dilapidated corn crib.

I will leave this post with other photos of the exterior.  Next time ... the interior !!!


Back of the house
West side of the house

2 comments:

  1. I cannot wait to see the interior. I have loved this house from afar for a very long time.. So excited to see how it will turn out!

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  2. Are the owners from this blog still fixing the home?
    I found myself here through the wormhole that is the internet.lol

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