Reception and Silent Auction at the Samuel Noakes House

Please join Preservation of Historic Winchester for a Reception and Silent Auction Saturday, March 9 at the Samuel Noakes House at 201 South Braddock and 101 West Cork Streets to benefit PHW. Two event times will be offered with different refreshments and auction items. Admission is $20 per person for the 3-5 p.m. event with beer and barbeque, or $30 per person for the 6-8 p.m. event with wine and hors d’oeuvres. Auction items will be added to the event page for advanced viewing.

Space is limited, so only the first 40 paid reservations for each event time can be accommodated. Don’t delay – many auction items are one of a kind gems. Buy your tickets now via Paypal through the links below, or mail in your check to PHW, 530 Amherst St., Winchester, VA 22601.

Afternoon Showing, 3-5 p.m. – $20 admission

Evening Showing, 6-8 p.m. – $30 admission

The Samuel Noakes House, Part 21

The Samuel Noakes HouseWe continue our journey through the renovation process at the Samuel Noakes House at 101 West Cork Street/201 South Braddock Street. Updates are posted each Tuesday through the PHW blog, following the progress with virtual hardhat tours. The previous entries may be found at the PHW blog at part 1, part 2, part 3, part 4, part 5, part 6, part 7, part 8, part 9, part 10, part 11, part 12, part 13, part 14, part 15, part 16, part 17, part 18, part 19, and part 20.

In today’s installation of the Noakes house project, you can see a number of salvaged items being reinstalled in the building. As you may recall, a number of original doors were removed during the early stages of the project and tucked away for future use. They have now been reinstalled. In cases where there were not quite enough matching doors on hand, historic replacements were purchased from Maggie’s Farm architectural salvage in Front Royal. Note in the upstairs bedroom on the Braddock St. side that the closet doors have been reversed to expose the unpainted sides to the room. Several double swinging doors have been re-purposed as single closet doors. A few brand new doors have also been installed along with the historic ones — see if you can spot them!

Preparing for doors at Cork Street.Doors upstairs at Cork Street

Doors downstairs at Cork Street

Doors upstairs at Braddock Street

Doors downstairs at Braddock Street

The Samuel Noakes House, Part 20

The Samuel Noakes HouseWe continue our journey through the renovation process at the Samuel Noakes House at 101 West Cork Street/201 South Braddock Street. Updates are posted each Tuesday through the PHW blog, following the progress with virtual hardhat tours. The previous entries may be found at the PHW blog at part 1, part 2, part 3, part 4, part 5, part 6, part 7, part 8, part 9, part 10, part 11, part 12, part 13, part 14, part 15, part 16, part 17, part 18, and part 19.

For those who were able to tour the Noakes house during the Holiday House Tour, you may have heard the docent in the Cork Street side explaining about the future flooring plans for this area. During the tours, only the subflooring visible in the Cork Street apartment. Now the promised finished floor of cork and bamboo have been installed.

One item that had many people curious on the tour was how the access door to the basement in the Cork Street side would be handled. Instead of the open hole as we saw on the tour, the new door has been installed, creating an access hatch to the water heaters. As you can see, the cork flooring was installed on the hatch door to help it blend seamlessly into the rest of the flooring. A different shade of cork flooring was used in the rear bedroom, and bamboo finishes out the upper kitchen and dining area on Cork Street. Several nee built ins have also been installed in the Cork Street dining/living area since the Holiday House Tour.

There is also a huge change in the appearance of the floors in the Braddock Street side. The downstairs floors and stair treads have been sanded down to prepare for the finish coat. In several places, such as the hall and laundry room, you can see where the new flooring has been installed where the existing flooring had been too damaged or altered to retain. One question that came up several times on the tour was why did a circa 1810 home have such narrow floorboards. The original floor was of wide planks, but over the years new flooring was laid atop the old — as well as new ceilings installed dropped down! In the stripping process, the owner decided to stop at this layer of flooring due to its relatively good condition, as the sanding has revealed.

At this point, you may want to take a moment to remind yourself of the Noakes house flooring at the start of the project. It might be hard to believe the worn floors in the Braddock Street space could be salvaged!

New flooring and built ins at Cork Street.Flooring installed at Cork Street, with the basement hatch door and several built ins installed as well

Flooring sanded and installed on the Braddock Street side

The Samuel Noakes House, Part 19

The Samuel Noakes HouseWe continue our journey through the renovation process at the Samuel Noakes House at 101 West Cork Street/201 South Braddock Street. Updates are posted each Tuesday through the PHW blog, following the progress with virtual hardhat tours. The previous entries may be found at the PHW blog at part 1, part 2, part 3, part 4, part 5, part 6, part 7, part 8, part 9, part 10, part 11, part 12, part 13, part 14, part 15, part 16, part 17, and part 18.

This week at the Noakes house, we will catch up with some of the exterior progress, mainly on the Cork Street side. With the final shade of green chosen, the shutters were installed on the building. The majority of the work took place in the rear yard with the limestone retaining wall. The existing wall was carefully dismantled and rebuilt to accommodate the new drainage lines as well as a new access point to the yard on Cork Street. To reassemble the wall, the mason John Delre marked each piece of limestone so that it could be reinstalled correctly.

Subsequently, the rear yard was graded, but actual landscaping will wait until spring. At the former location of the Braddock Street porch stairs, a small pad for trash cans and a planter box have been installed. The Barbershop area received its exterior lighting and was festively lit for the holidays.

Join us next week as we survey some of the interior changes that have taken place since PHW toured the building during the Holiday House Tour.

Snow covered walkway at Cork Street.Shutters are installed on Cork Street
Masonry work in the garden area
Grading the rear yard
Exterior lights installed at the Barbershop
The Noakes house dusted with snow

The Samuel Noakes House, Part 18

The Samuel Noakes HouseWe continue our journey through the renovation process at the Samuel Noakes House at 101 West Cork Street/201 South Braddock Street. Updates are posted each Tuesday through the PHW blog, following the progress with virtual hardhat tours. The previous entries may be found at the PHW blog at part 1, part 2, part 3, part 4, part 5, part 6, part 7, part 8, part 9, part 10, part 11, part 12, part 13, part 14, part 15, part 16, and part 17.

Although it has been a while since we last visited the Noakes house and the building was open for in-person tours during the 2012 Holiday House Tour, our virtual tours of the building are not quite complete. We will jump backwards in time a bit to show some of the progress shortly before the Holiday House Tour. Before you saw the nearly finished product on December 8 and 9, drywall and built-in shelving went in to hide the insulation and mechanical systems. Electrical systems also were installed and made functional. While the changes have been less dramatic, the apartments are becoming two clearly defined, separate living areas.

During this time, more behind the scenes work took place with the Barbershop, including another trip to the Board of Architectural Review to discuss the door replacement and an inspection to provide fire separation between the commercial space and living space above. The bottoms of the structural timbers in the ceiling of the Barbershop will remain exposed between the drywall to preserve a historic feel. The BAR also approved the Braddock Street apartment and Barbershop door colors in Evening Sky blue, the same color as the Cork Street apartment. A small railing outside the Barbershop entrance was also approved, along with replacing the original Barbershop door with a replica retaining the mullion pattern of the existing door.

The new steel railing at the Cork Street stairs.Interior walls and ceilings go up at Braddock Street
Electrical and lighting systems are installed
Cork Street steel railings and floor joists are painted
The built-ins take shape in the Braddock Street space

Holiday House Tour 2012: 201 South Braddock Street

201 South Braddock Street
John Chesson and Anne Schempp
House Chairman Sandra Bosley

Constructed circa 1810 with a Federal-style form, the building was altered in the 1840s to reflect the fashionable Greek Revival style. Samuel Noakes purchased the house and property in 1857. The house was altered again in the twentieth century for commercial use as the Peoples Barber Shop. The building is a mixture of limestone and brick covered with a low-pitched, side-gabled roof, covered with standing-seam metal. The house is currently undergoing renovation. Images of the process will be presented during the tour of the space.

Holiday House Tour 2012: 211 South Washington Street

211 South Washington Street
Erich and Kristin Bruhn
House Chairman Karen Clay

Historically known as the Richard Byrd Residence, this Federal-style dwelling was constructed in 1832 for the prominent Winchester lawyer and member of the Virginia House of Delegates of the same name. Built of Flemish-bond brick, the home is topped with a hipped roof featuring a central Palladian dormer window. The Federal-style entrance sports a fine elliptical fanlight and moldings. The Queen Anne-style porch embellished with a dentilated cornice and spindlework was added circa 1870. This house was willed to PHW by Mrs. Lucille Lozier, an early president of the organization. It is now owned by the Bruhns.

Holiday House Tour 2012: 205 South Washington Street

205 South Washington Street
Ardis Cullers
House Chairman Mark Lore

Constructed circa 1951 by Boyd Hamman, this one-and-one-half-story home was designed in the Colonial Revival style with a Cape Cod form. Two dormers, each with a front-gabled roof, extend from the eastern slope of the roof. The central bay on the façade contains a single-leaf, paneled wood door surrounded by four-light sidelights and a semi-elliptical fanlight. This was the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Patton, who established Patton’s Furniture Sales in 1957. The most striking feature of the house’s decoration is the series of eight large and two small original Audubon engravings from the early 1800s, purchased from Arader Galleries in New York. They are from a series of books that James Audubon and Robert Havell created, intended to depict all birds and animals in North America.

Holiday House Tour 212: 103 South Washington Street

103 South Washington Street
Chuck Alton and Judith Omslaer
House Chairman John Barker

This Italianate style home was constructed circa 1880 for the Willis family. The elongated first-story windows, segmental brick arches, and modest detailing typifies domestic architecture in Winchester during this period. A centered, half-hipped bay typical of the Italianate form projects from the façade. Paired scrolled brackets, cornice returns an ogee-molded cornice, and jig-sawn brackets and pendants complete the Italianate styling.