Date: Fri 22-Nov-1996
Date: Fri 22-Nov-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: CAROLK
Illustration: C
Location: C1
Quick Words:
home-tour-Rectory-Hertberg
Full Text:
(histories of homes on 1996 Holiday Festival walking tour, 11/22/96)
Home Tour Histories
(with photos)
The Family Life Center's 11th annual Holiday Festival will take place Sunday,
December 8, from 10 am to 5 pm. Centered around Main Street and attracting
nearly 1,500 visitors each year with an antiques show and sale, a Victorian
Tea, a crafts show and sale and live entertainment throughout the day, one of
the Festival's perennial favorites is its historic homes walking tour.
The walking tour features selected Main Street-area homes and buildings
decorated for the holidays, including Trinity Church, the Matthew Curtiss
House and the offices of the Bee Publishing Company.
Following are histories on each of the four private residences that will also
be open for the tour this year. The programs for this year's tour, to be
handed out the day of, will include line drawings of each building by Newtown
resident Kim Proctor.
Home of Kathleen and Richard Adams-Shepherd (Trinity Rectory), 64 Main Street.
This wood frame dwelling is described as a Victorian bracketed house. It is
thought to have been built in 1867 for Edward Starr, who ran a grocery store
on the west side of Main Street directly across from the Matthew Curtiss
House. It is interesting to note that the original etched glass above the
front doors and in the panels to the dining room side door are in a star
motif.
The original house is believed to have been a four room over four, but shortly
after construction the dining room and a larger kitchen were added. When
built, the house contained at least four fireplaces, but with the introduction
of central heating, all but one were closed.
In later years the present kitchen was enlarged twice and completely remodeled
in the early 1980s. At that time pine flooring discovered under the kitchen
subfloors was restored. The sun room was added in the late 1950s.
Interesting architectural features include the newel post of the banister,
which is a solid piece of cherry wood; the double pocket doors which separate
the front parlors as well as the window and door moldings of these two rooms
and the porcelain doorknobs throughout the house.
In some of the closets original flooring of boards eight to ten inches wide
may be seen. Most of the beams in the attic are pegged. The backyard contains
a two-seater privy.
Around 1960, the house was willed to Trinity Episcopal Church by Curtis
Glover. The house has served as a home for Trinity's Rectors and their
families since then. It is currently the residence of Kathleen and Richard
Adams-Shepherd, and their two children, Sarah and Myles. The Adams-Shepherd
family and Trinity parishioners have spent considerable time renovating and
restoring the house, its outbuildings and gardens.
Holiday decorations for the Holiday Festival will be arranged by Trinity
parishioners Anne Marie DeLuccio and Ena Higgins, with help from Wendell
Stonaker of The Ridgefield General Store; antique furniture courtesy Tucker
Frey Antiques of Woodbury; and additional holiday greens provided by Newtown
Garden & Farm Stand. Additionally, the rectory will be decorated for Advent.
Musical selections will be performed by pianist Floyd Higgins.
Residence of Lindell Hertberg, 61 Main Street.
When Lindell and Bernie Hertberg learned 25 years ago that the old Holly House
Tavern was for sale, they decided they had to look at it. One of their
daughters, Holly, was only a baby and it was a classic case of home buyers
being lured to a house by its name.
Although the exact date this magnificent Federal style house was built is not
known, part of the molding is of the style used in the late 1700s, while other
parts are from the 1830s.
Research done by a previous owner, a Mr Zincavage, uncovered that the house
was built by Zibas Blackman, a descendent of the Blackmans who built Hillbrow.
In more recent times, the house was owned by members of the Budd family.
Originally the house was built as an inn, but it was not profitable due to
much competition in the area. The frame clapboard house has three chimneys,
four fireplaces and a gable roof.
There are also many distinctive features within the house. The windows around
the front door are typical of the Federal period. Inside is a spacious
entrance hall with pineapple wallpaper. Pineapples were the colonial symbol of
hospitality. Rumor has it there are scenes of Newtown hidden behind the walls
on the staircase.
From a library in the rear of the house, there is a fine view of the four-acre
property, which is rather typical of the original town plots in that it is
long and narrow and leading off Main Street.
The late Bernie Hertberg was a co-founder and director of the Family Life
Center for several years.
The home will be decorated by Florist on the Green owner Allen Hermansson.
Musical selections will be by harpist Pat Kendziorski.
Art and Wendy Fuller's home, 5 School House Hill Road.
Built in 1929, this farmhouse was a dream come true to George and Ivy Mayor.
George, a tool and dye maker by trade, built it himself assisted by his
father, father-in-law and various friends. This labor of love was also home to
the four growing Mayor children.
Ruth Liska, a Mayor daughter, recalls the house with fondness. She also
remembers crisp winter days when she, her sister and brothers would sled down
School House Hill from the monument to the McLachlan house.
Set high on a small hill, the Depression era home had a commanding view of
open fields, School House Hill - still a dirt road back then - and The
Boulevard.
Built solidly on a stone foundation, oak was used on the first floor while fir
covered the upstairs and the walls were made of plaster. Water supply may
originally have come from a well, but fairly early on they adopted town water.
George and his relatives also built the kitchen cabinets and the corner
cupboards, two of which are still around today.
Wide stairs ascend from the first floor to the second, and from the second to
the attic. Considered ample for the day was 30 amps for electricity, and the
plugs were in the middle of the wall rather than at floor level.
A grape arbor and vegetable garden were in use, and the presence of a chicken
coop on the property today suggests the family kept chickens.
A hay rake left behind suggests some other types of farming may have been done
on the property. Pear and peach trees grace the lot and at one time bees were
kept. All of this was done on one acre of land.
The home stayed in the Mayor family until 1984, when Art and Wendy Fuller
purchased it. The Fullers have done a number of renovations, including adding
shutters and railing to the spacious front porch. Important to them in
planning the addition was to keep the lines of the old farmhouse. The addition
added bedrooms and a bath, a family room, and back porch. A kitchen pantry was
made into a half-bath. The renovations have added space, but have not
detracted from the building's original form.
Lexington Gardens of Newtown will handle decorating duties for the Fuller
home.
Residence of Chuck and Jone Fulkerson, 8 Currituck Road.
The Fulkerson home was built in 1936 by Miss Rowena Keyes, a staff member of
Antiques magazine. The house, a faithful copy of an 18th Century saltbox, was
designed by architect Willis N. Mills of New York City. An addition, including
a master bedroom and attached garage, was added in the 1960s to the south side
of the house.
The house has a number of 19th Century original paintings and personal
possessions of the Fulkersons' Connecticut ancestors. Oil portraits of
Phillipp Simons and his infant son, Phillipp, Jr, eye each other from across
the living room. Great- great uncle Phillipp, Sr, was a Waterbury jeweler.
Over the living room mantel are two tiny watercolor portraits of
great-great-grandparents John and Eliza Freeman.
An eight-day Darrow shelf clock made in Bristol sits on the mantel above the
Civil War sword of Thomas R. Martin, a great grandfather and captain in the
5th New York Zouaves.
A pair of large photo/chalk portraits of Katherine and Leonard Meyer hang in
the dining room. Watercolors of local and regional scenes painted by Charles
hang in several rooms. Three of these watercolors have appeared in Reader's
Digest annual calendar, including the 1994 calendar cover depicting Main
Street, Newtown. A fourth, entitled "Jone's Garden, Newtown," will appear in
the 1997 calendar.
Chuck and Jone live in the home with their two children, Libby and Charley.
Holiday Festival decorations will be taken care of by Steck Nursery & Country
Barn in Bethel.