The Cross House was built in 1894. It is located at 526 Union Street, in Emporia, Kansas. I purchased the house in March 2014.

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My blog posts about the restoration are below.

 

The Cross House, Emporia, designed by architect Charles M. Squires.

The Cross House, Emporia, designed by architect Charles W. Squires.

Currently displaying blog entries in Chronological Order. Switch to Most Recent.

Currently displaying blog entries in Most Recent Order. Switch to Chronological Order.

An Ode to Porcelain

I do not think I have ever seen Justin quite so excited. You see, Justin has been doing a lot of work on the Cross House. He is the Main Guy, and the one who has been lifting sagging parts of the house, demolishing non-original parts of the house (or rotted), building new sections of…

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Porch Railings. Part 1.

With all the west-facing columns now returned to the front porch for the first time in many decades, the next Great Porch Adventure can begin! Railings!                 To my utter astonishment, and considerable delight, the moldering railings proved to be almost all there, and all were restorable. Dr….

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HAPPY FIRST ANNIVERSARY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Golly. I started work on the Cross House a year ago today. And what a year it has been. I first saw the house in 1999, when Debbi and Bob Rodak had an open house shorty after they moved in. I was awestruck and mesmerized by the huge structure (almost 9,000 square feet on four…

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Roofing the House. Part 5.

This is my fifth post on re-roofing the Cross House. Nowadays, we are all concerned about energy efficiency. The most efficient roof on the Cross House would be white, which will reflect the sun. Of course white would be a terrible color choice, aesthetically. But an excellent choice, in term of efficiency. Oh, I am…

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Windows! Reappearing! Everywhere!

        Note the second-floor of the round tower. Look, TWO restored windows now back in place! TWO! And things of great beauty they be (particularly when you consider what they used to look like). Note the third-floor of the round tower. Look, THREE restored windows now back in place! THREE! Whoee!!!!!!! It…

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Roofing the House. Part 4.

   

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Roofing the House. Part 3.

In Part 2 of the roofing adventure, Marilyn commented: “If you are using Tamco shingles, their website allows you to upload a picture of your house and then “apply” different shingles.” Really? Cool!!!!!! Thanks Marilyn! So, off to Tamco.com I went! It was pretty easy. The modeling tool however is not very sophisticated so I could…

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More Wallpaper Adventures!

           

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Roofing the House. Part 2.

   

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Lighting Up

The Cross House was built in 1894, and with gas/electric lighting. At some point however ALL the original lighting was removed from the house. I am waiting for a time-travel app on my iPhone so I can go back in time and slap the person who made this decision. Even though I restore vintage lighting…

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Desperately Seeking…Doors

For all the the Cross House has been through (private residence, sanitarium, tea room, fraternities, sororities, apartments, motel, boarding house) it is amazingly, astonishingly intact. Save some bits. Like all the original lighting is long gone. BIG sigh. There are also about four interior doors which are Gone Door. Sigh. I have looked through countless…

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Roofing the House. Part 1.

2015 is the year that the Cross House gets new shingles, and the built-in gutters get relined. This is good as the roofs and built-in gutters are scary:     After MUCH debate, I have settled on asphalt shingles. Quite pedestrian, yes, but I have no desire to return to the original wood shingles “dipped…

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My Big Learning Curve About Historic Tile. Part 4.

      Since buying the Cross House a year ago, I have been…appreciative of the tile floors. I did not love or adore or treasure them. It seemed cool that they were original, and I certainly intended to respect them and do what I could to fill in missing sections. But during this week…

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My Big Learning Curve About Historic Tile. Part 3.

                A week ago I had no idea, none, that the 120-year-old porcelain geometric flooring in the Cross House, supplied by the American Encaustic Tiling Company, could be properly restored, and missing tiles recreated. No idea. My elation is considerable regarding this new-found knowledge. My anticipation is great…

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My Big Learning Curve About Historic Tile. Part 2.

FLASH UPDATE! In Part 1 of my Big Learning Curve, I discovered that it might actually be possible to fully restore the 1894 bathroom floor of the Cross House.     I just got off the phone with Bryan at Olde English Tiles in Arkansas, and with incredible news. The company can match my existing tiles!…

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Time Travel

   

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My Big Learning Curve About Historic Tile. Part 1.

When the Cross House was built in 1894, it featured tile floors in three vestibules, two bathrooms, and also tiles around eight fireplaces. The previous owner of the house, Bob Rodak, found an invoice from the American Encaustic Tiling Company (AETCO). This was a way cool discovery. Amazingly, all this tile is still there in…

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W! H! O! E! E!

BACKGROUND The 2015 Kansas Heritage Fund grants have just been announced. The Cross House had applied (after six months of work on the application). Then there was 3-1/2 months of waiting for the results. The Heritage Grant program is funded by a small tax on every mortgage filed in the state. The monies collected are…

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The Mystery of the Bathroom Notches: REVEALED!!!

It did not seem possible that only 24-hours after posting a thread about mysterious notches, the notches would no longer be mysterious! You see, the exposed studs in the second-floor bathroom of the Cross House have three rows of horizontal notches. The notches are only about 1/8-inch deep. Why are they there? Obviously, they had…

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The Mystery of the Bathroom Notches

What are they? What were they for? When did whatever they held get removed? Will the mystery ever be revealed??????????????????     In the 1920s the bathroom was converted into a kitchen. In 1950 the room was converted back into a bathroom (when the house was turned into a motel). At some point the room…

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