When Adam came downstairs with this, I felt it was validation for a bit of history I had just come across online. He does look like something of a space alien here, adding to the time machine impression. But a full dinner for $1.50 and up? That …
When Adam came downstairs with this, I felt it was validation for a bit of history I had just come across online.
He does look like something of a space alien here, adding to the time machine impression. But a full dinner for $1.50 and up? That does seem surreal today.
The sign was one of several he had uncovered while removing baseboard upstairs. The writing had faced the wall. Yankees are notorious for frugality of the sort that wastes nothing, if possible.
I had just started researching the history of our house, starting with the property deed transactions at the courthouse in Machias. One of our predecessors had owned and operated a well-known restaurant. Her obituary also described her as an exacting carpenter, so here was a piece of evidence.
I'll save her full story and those of the others for later in this series, but let's just say, the house was beginning to look a lot older than we'd suspected when we bid on it.
For example, hand-split oak lathing like this had gone out of use by 1830, or so we were told. This piece was extracted when carving out space for the toilet and bathtub.
The burn marks on the underside of the flooring also suggested another serious house fire.
Another detail is the molding on the side of our stairs. The same pattern is found on other houses in town from the 1830s and 1840s.
And, from a technical point of view, ours wasn't a post-and-beam house but rather timber framed, meaning wooden pegs held the big pieces together – and the weight of the structure didn't come down the inside walls.
The old wood was denser, too, than what you'd buy today.
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