Hey
Guys! And welcome to the first post of
our home blog Tudor Revived. I’m not normally the
person to start up a blog, but I’ve had SO many requests from people that want
to follow us on our journey of renovating our beautiful 90 year old home that a
blog seemed like a no brainer. If you
asked me 6 months ago if I’d be in this spot I would have LAUGHED at you. Really.
6 months ago I was happy inside of our 4 bedroom updated home with a huge beautiful
backyard, perfect for our two little boys, grumpy cat, giant dog (and baby on
the way). We had all the space we
needed, loved our neighbors, and honestly, were content. But sometimes, content just doesn’t cut it.
We’re that
family when we get bored we load the kids up in the car and go on drives around
town to look at neighborhoods we admire and dream of one day living in, but no neighborhood stood out to us more than
the historic district in downtown Starkville.
Is it the most beautiful neighborhood? Not completely. Is it the safest neighborhood? Actually, it totally is but you might not assume that… Are some of
the homes old as dirt and beg for someone to buy them up and make them
beautiful like they once were?? Yep, they sure do. Lets not forget that downtown is in the
middle of huge changes itself.
Renovations of homes, businesses, and entirely new and exciting other
opportunities are popping up all around, and that’s something I’d love to be
close to. Unfortunately, homes rarely
come available in these areas, and if they do, they are way over our budget, or
they’re snatched up too quickly for us to even take a look. Honestly, very few
are actually listed with an agent, they usually sell through word of mouth in
the neighborhood.
However, one
day while driving down a particularly picturesque street downtown I noticed a
home for sale (through an agent?!) and it didn’t look too snazzy, but did look
like it had plenty of space. I looked it
up, and IT WAS IN MY BUDGET! Whoa!
Called agent, so excited, I want to look! Darn…already under contract, big
shocker. So then I thought, well, since
most of these homes are word of mouth, I might as well let people know that I’m
interested. Again, not because I’m in a
hurry, but who knows when my ideal fixer upper will come available? It could be 5 days or 5 years, but it was
worth letting some people know, right? So let
them know I did. I reached out to several
friends that lived in the area and told them if they heard of anything to
please keep me in the loop. So of
course, 5 days later I received the same email forwarded from 3 friends with
exactly the info I was looking for. The
description read:
“The house was
designed by H.W. Stevens and built in 1929, in the Tudor Revival style. It is a
5 bedroom/3 bath (3/2 downstairs, 2/1 upstairs) house with approximately 2417
square feet. We have the original plans for the house.
The second story has a great deal of additional living/public space and a large laundry/utility room. Two bathrooms have been refinished and the floors are hardwood throughout.”
The second story has a great deal of additional living/public space and a large laundry/utility room. Two bathrooms have been refinished and the floors are hardwood throughout.”
Needless to
say, this email was a shocker.
What?!?! OMG…look at that brick
(swoon)…Hardwood floors throughout?! Loads of additional living space?! 5
bedrooms and 3 baths?!?!?! IN MY BUDGET?!?! Surely this was a hoax and too good
to be true.
Later that same day the hubs and I drove by
the house and we remembered it for sure.
“Oh yeah! There used to be that
creepy house next door to this one with coffins in it, remember that??” (I’m
not making that up, it really did have coffins). Next to this house sat two vacant lots
where two older homes were torn down (there are plans there, no need to worry).
Behind the house is the school district bus barn and mechanic shop, and
just a house away are the city railroad tracks, but luckily I doubt our little
town will every see a train on those tracks since they shut down several years
ago (I’m pulling for a rails to trails personally). We had several groups of friends live in this
house over the years and knew it had been a rental since I was in undergrad. We were convinced the inside would be ripped
to shreds and not worth our time, but hey, why not look. We went in with very low expectations in the
home and honestly thought we would write it off the moment we stepped in the
front door. Low and behold, we loved it…
It had all
the beautiful features I drool over like the original hardwood floors, and built
ins, the glass knobs, the fireplaces.
Granted, it needed some TLC, but honestly that's what I was looking for! I'm crazy, I know. The family living in it was very clean and
had it decorated nicely which made it much more appealing as well. And that upstairs…wow. The entire upstairs would be kid haven. I can send my children upstairs to play with
nerf guns or light sabers or legos, or sit on their bean bags and watch WALL-E AGAIN. It was
perfect. There was a bit of an issue
downstairs, but we’ll get to that later. It was just more inspiration for my ever expanding pinterest board.
We both left in shock because we thought we would hate it, and all the
sudden here we were, hugely considering it, and ultimately, (surprise) we now
own it. It’s official, signed the papers
and all. We’ve got LOTS of plans….so get ready!!

Great blog. I look forward to reading and seeing more. Best of luck!
ReplyDeleteThanks Angela!
ReplyDeleteTudor style houses are probably some of my favorites! What a fun adventure :)
ReplyDeleteHi Laura! Scott Maynard led me to this blog (thank you Scott!!). My family lived in this house from the time I was in 6th grade (1977 or so?) until my parents retired and moved back to their hometown in the late 1990s. So many wonderful memories! Always - ALWAYS when I would come down the stairs, right after making the turn I would lean up and kiss the bottom of the wall (that tall people would bang their heads on on the way down). I have no idea why, LOL. If there are pecan trees still lining the driveway, they gave us a great crop of pecans every other year.
ReplyDeleteI will definitely keep up with this blog - thank you for this!! Kate Murphree Baumann
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ReplyDeleteOh! And my dad built the workshop in the back if it is still there :)
ReplyDelete