Sunday, October 2, 2011
Aches and pains
Here's Daheim, my home in Millbrook for thirty years, in a photo taken yesterday afternoon. It's a complicated looking house by any measure, and if it isn't huge, considering others I've blogged about, it ain't small either. Daheim was in ruins when I signed my first lease in December of 1981. It's taken a lot of work, time, sweat, love and money to get it looking like this. Remember Sisyphus? Well, probably you don't, but he was a mythological Greek king condemned by the gods to spend eternity repeatedly rolling a huge stone to the top of a hill, only to watch it roll back down again.
You probably didn't notice in the photo above that the eaves on my porte cochere are a mess. Actually, they look better since Eddie, my in-house construction man, pulled off the rotted wood in preparation for repairs. The explanation for the leaking eaves, while long and dull, can be summed up in two words that bring knowing nods from any old house lover, to wit: "flat roof." This one was resurfaced fifty years ago with tar and white pebbles. The desirability of this system completely eludes me, since it makes finding a leak virtually impossible.
The porch - sorry, "piazza" - at Daheim has fifty-two columns and probably five times as many decorative brackets. This pair is resting on the parapet until Eddie gets the porte cochere back together.
There are no longer so many houses like mine, in part because so many of them have burned down. The builder of Daheim had extensive interests in gas illumination companies, which must have made him more aware of fire danger. Shortly before World War I, he built this stone addition to house modern kitchen and servants' facilities, and to encapsulate a mammoth coal fired steam boiler in a steel and cement basement chamber. The exterior walls aren't veneered with stone, they're built with a two-foot thickness of it. The interior floors are supported with steel beams. My kitchen could probably survive direct mortar fire with only minor damage. The boiler room originally wasn't even accessible from inside the house. During the winter of 1982, my first caretaker, Noel, and I decided to open an access door from the basement corridor. Who would have thought the interior non-bearing wall would be a foot and a half thick and made of block and cement?
You probably didn't notice in the image above that some miscreant has made off with my copper gutters. When Daheim was new, and doubtless for many succeeding salad years of maintenance, those scrolled eaves and joist ends glowed under multiple coats of dark shiny varnish. But...not happening now.
On the ground floor, the kitchen wing is connected to the wood frame section of the house with a flat-roofed serving pantry (don't even ask). On the second floor the connection is via this utterly charming "Bridge of Sighs." I can only paint Daheim in sections, but we got around to this side recently enough for it to still look pretty good.
Well, "pretty good" unless you notice that dormer on the fourth floor. I'll get to it, after I re-point the chimney. Jeez, it doesn't look half that bad from the other side.
The chimney looks deceptively fine from this view of the east facade. Daheim's exterior envelope is so visually complicated you tend not to notice the warts.
Speaking of warts, some benighted hippie from the Leary days - you do know Timothy Leary lived here, right? - managed to remove this attic window entirely. Noel and I temporarily boarded it up thirty years ago and it's still on my very (very) long "to do" list.
Here's the south elevation of the house. The mulberry tree and the gigantic yew bushes were deer-ravaged stumps in 1981. I have tended and protected them for thirty years and were they children, they would long ago have left home to make their own way in the world. Since they're plants, they're not going anywhere. I used to keep the yews trimmed as spheres, but that plan lost traction years ago. Now they're way too big for me to tackle. Last spring a landscape service gave me an estimate....$2400. Not going to happen.
Nowadays I'm just trimming the yews to avoid actual contact with the house, but this is not the look I intended.
Daheim really is charming. I had the local historical society here for a tour and a tea last weekend, and everyone loved the place.
You probably didn't notice this hole in the image above. Alas, it's but one of a number made by aggressive squirrels whom I simply cannot keep out of the piazza ceiling. Were it not for my cat, they'd rampage inside the house as well. As soon as we plug one of these up another appears, although it can take a while to notice.
Undertaking a house like Daheim is a huge obligation and undertaking. It is only thanks to people like you that many of these houses survive at all, especially the ones that haven't been radically torn apart and remodeled as something else that sacrifices all their original character.
ReplyDeleteI do have two questions: How do you enjoy providing this kind of maintenance work, and how do you feel when you walk in the door?
I don't really mind the maintenance hassle, because at the end of a Manhattan work week, when I walk in the front door, I know I'm in a beautiful place.
ReplyDeleteIt's really a lovely home, and I love seeing the two contrasting styles of the newer and older parts. Good for you for taking on such a difficult but worthy project!
ReplyDeleteTwo questions:
Is there a story behind the home's name?
Was there some sort of balcony over the porte cochere at one time?
Daheim is a German expression - the builder of the estate being a German immigrant - that translates literally as "the home." In conversation I'm told it means "at home" in the sense of "chez moi," in that context having connotations of love and security.
ReplyDeleteThere used to be a balustrade that ran all along the edge of the porch roof. Above the porte cochere was a pergola with columns and brackets identical to those on the level below. These and a series of glazed bulkheads that let light onto the porch were eliminated when the new porch roof was installed, I believe sometime in the 1950s.
John Foreman, marry me! Ooops, well I have been married to a lovely man named John for 43 years. He asked me to dance at a Vassar mixer some years ago and we have been admiring (and living in) some old houses since then. I was at the college when Millbrook was still the home of Bennett College, and Timothy Leary was living at the Hitchcock place, and G. Gordon Liddy was Dutchess County DA.
ReplyDeleteDespite the grizzly state of NY's repeated tax-rape of the middle-class, I do yearn to return to the Hudson Valley to live at some point.
It is an awesome story you tell. Keep up the good work!
My great-great grandfather, Ludwig Gros, was brought over from Germany to be the Groundskeeper and gamekeeper of the estate. His father, my great-great-great father was the gamekeeper for Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany, so he sent for his son to come to America to manage the estate. Bravo to you for saving it from ruins!
ReplyDelete"Dieterich, the German-born genius, who invented acetylene gas, was a kind, public spirited man. His country seat Daheim, was one of the finest show places in the state.
In the spring and the fall especially, he invited the people from Millbrook and vicinity to walk, or drive through the estate and enjoy the beauties of the flowers; the rare birds and the graceful deer. Dieterich needed a gamekeeper, and so he sent to Germany for Ludwig Gros, who came to Daheim for that purpose. Kaiser's gamekeeper Gros’ father was a highly esteemed gamekeeper for Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany in the Black Forest region. Gros’ father was awarded special honors by the Kaiser for his outstanding service as a gamekeeper. This close connection between Kaiser Wilhelm and the Gros family gave rise to the rumor, that at the close of World War I, the Kaiser fled to safety at
Daheim, with the family of the child of his trusted gamekeeper, Persistent rumor
This rumor persisted in the Millbrook community for 40 years until a letter to the
German Embassy in Washington, D.C., brought a reply, confirming that the rumor was a myth. Kaiser Bill had never set foot on United States soil!"
Source: http://fultonhistory.com/Newspapers%20Disk3/Millbrook%20NY%20Round%20Table/Millbrook%20NY%20Round%20Table%20Sep%203%201975%20-Jun%2022%201977.pdf/Millbrook%20NY%20Round%20Table%20Sep%203%201975%20-Jun%2022%201977%20-%201146.pdf#xml=http://fultonhistory.com/dtSearch/dtisapi6.dll?cmd=getpdfhits&u=ffffffff9d396cb9&DocId=10067749&Index=Z%3a%2fFulton%20Historical&HitCount=6&hits=84+619+61a+626+638+650+&SearchForm=C%3a%5cinetpub%5cwwwroot%5cFulton%5fNew%5fform%2ehtml&.pdf