Laserfiche WebLink
r f <br /> STAFF REPORT <br /> CONCERNING APPLICATION FOR A <br /> CERTIFICATE OF APPROPRIATENESS <br /> Date: 08/06/04 <br /> Application Number: 2004-0804 <br /> Property Location: 68286 Miami Road <br /> Property Owner: Robert and Wendy Roeder <br /> Landmark or District Designation: Local Landmark <br /> Rating: Outstanding/13 <br /> STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE/HISTORIC CONTEXT <br /> The George Seifer family built this neo-Jacobean vernacular farmhouse,probably in the 1880s. George Seifer <br /> emigrated from Alsace,France in 1822. In 1855, Siefer moved to Saint Joseph County. Seifer was a well- <br /> -known and respected farmer and stock dealer in Union Township. He and his wife Mary Conrad Seifer raised <br /> eight children. The farm and the house remained,with the Seifer family until 1941 when George Cronkite <br /> purchased the property. <br /> In 1980,Ottomay Long gave the Commission her consent to proceed with local landmark designation for the <br /> 1880s vernacular farmhouse, several outbuildings, and property. In 1991, Ottomay.Long's.estate was put up <br /> for auction;HPC notified the auctioneer regarding its legal status as a landmark. In 1997,then-Director David <br /> Duvall spoke to the Roeder's,the present owners, informing them of the preservation standards for local <br /> landmarks. ' <br /> This farmhouse has many architecturally significant elements including the cruciform plan;wrap-around front <br /> porch with turned posts, frieze spindles, and gables; elegant eaves; cornice boards with crown molding; corner <br /> boards with capitals; and the many extended window openings with classical entablatures. The older sections <br /> of the house have stone foundations;brick was used later to shore up the porch and enclosed porch addition. <br /> The shed roof addition has a ruble foundation and the same siding treatments as the original house. Staff <br /> concludes that this portion of the building was probably a summer kitchen later attached to the house. <br /> APPLICATION ITEMS: <br /> Demolish contributing enclosed porch and metal roofed summer kitchen additions <br /> Remove many original window openings <br /> Construct new addition to east side of the house (38 %i ' by 39') <br /> RECOMMENDATION <br /> The main purpose of landmark status is to protect the character defining features of an historic building of <br /> site and the investments and time many owners have contributed to the stewardship of the historic <br /> property. The Siefer farmhouse has been well maintained for over one hundred years. <br /> The house and the property have changed during its history,but those changes have acquired their own <br /> significance and have added to the historic character and educational value of the structure. I refer <br /> specifically to the summer kitchen addition and the enclosed porch addition, which mark the evolution of <br /> this farmhouse. Often, summer kitchens were separate from the main house to keep the cooking smells <br /> and the unpleasant heat from the fire out of the house during hot weather. As living patterns changed, <br /> summer kitchens were added to the main house. The frugality of early America lent to the reuse of the <br /> buildings and the joining together of structures to add space with out the use of new materials: <br />