Old House Journal

1830 HOUSE IN ROSLYN

IN THIS HISTORIC TOWN ON THE NORTH SHORE OF LONG ISLAND, NOT FAR FROM NEW YORK CITY, A YOUNG COUPLE FOUND THE OLD HOUSE THEY’D DREAMED OF OWNING—ONE WITH A LONG HISTORY, SPACE FOR GARDENS, EVEN A ROOT CELLAR FOR STORING THEIR HOME-BREWED APPLE CIDER.

- BY REGINA COLE | PHOTOS BY STEVE GROSS & SUSAN DALEY

having lived in a city apartment, “we wanted a house with personalit­y,” say Julie Longabardi, a magazine art director. “We wanted a period house with a sense of place.” She and her husband, Erik, had been living in the Williamsbu­rg section of Brooklyn when, in 2014, they bought a historic house in Roslyn, New York. The town on Long Island’s North Shore is known for a historic center where homes date from the early-18th to the late-19th century. Its geographic­ally advantageo­us location is only 20 minutes from the city, but surrounded by natural beauty.

“Roslyn was founded in the 1630s as a close-in source of produce for people in New York City,” says Erik, who teaches art to autistic children in the City’s public schools. “We both grew up in mid-20th-century houses on Long Island. We were drawn to the historic feel of Roslyn. When we first saw this house, on a street full of old houses, we fell in love with it.”

This house that spoke to them likely was built in the early 1830s, although no records remain. Its rubble foundation is an indicator: historians claim that rubble foundation­s to the sills

were used in Roslyn until about 1835. Originally, the house was a simple three-bay clapboard cottage with one and one-half storeys under a pitched roof. It had six-over-six windows, a large central brick chimney, and a shed-roofed east wing that served as the kitchen. The second owner, Samuel Dugan Jr., bought the house in 1888. A carpenter, Dugan mounted three separate renovation campaigns over 15 years.

“He Victoriani­zed the house, added the gambrel roof, and built the barn-like shop that is now our living room,” explain the Longabardi­s. In the first renovation, completed in July of 1889, Dugan enlarged the window openings and replaced the six-oversix sash with two-over-two. He replaced the small loft-level windows with a pair of windowed dormers, added a bay to the north side of the house, and built the first iteration of his carpentry shop. In a second, undated, renovation, he moved the front door from the street-facing west side of the house to the south side. In 1902, his third renovation raised the roof and converted it to a gambrel, and the whole house was shingled. Dugan also added a dining room behind the north parlor, complete with glass-front, built-in china cupboards hanging above the rail.

Along the way, Dugan added wainscotin­g, laid oak strip flooring over original pine floorboard­s, and poured concrete on the hearths to bring them up the new floor level. He applied ogee mouldings to the new bay windows and old door surrounds, and he covered fireplace mantels.

Subsequent owners found original elements under Samuel Dugan’s accretions; as strip flooring and concrete on the hearths were removed, wide pine boards and brick came back to light. Under newer wainscotin­g, old sheathing boards still wore their original blue paint. Julie and Erik, who have done no structural

work of their own, are the fascinated heirs of a house that has been done, redone, undone—but mostly left alone.

The north parlor exemplifie­s Dugan’s work. He added an angular, three-window bay and Victorian-era crown moulding. The south parlor, which is located to the left of the entry hall, retains the original vertical sheathing to the ceiling, which had been covered with plaster and a wainscot. When, in the 1980s, previous owners removed those layers, they were delighted to see the old, worn blue paint still on the wood.

“When you come through the door and see the beautiful old painted boards, it’s always gratifying,” Julie says. “Every day, it reminds me that this is what we were looking for when we dramed of owning an old house.”

To the right of the south parlor, the kitchen is in its original location, though the original lean-to was improved over the years. Renovated in the 1990s, this room was another thing that drew Erik and Julie. “The cabinets were made by a Pennsylvan­ia carpenter, and just outside the window is a retaining wall,” Julie says. “Some of the kitchen is below grade; the house was built into the steep hillside. The view is nice.” The working parts of the room are practical and frank: black granite countertop­s, stainless-steel appliances.

Three bedrooms occupy the second floor. The master bedroom’s board wall wears the same blue paint that remains on the south parlor’s walls downstairs. A previous owner had installed an old dry sink that now acts as a plumbed vanity; it, too, has its old paint, worn but intact.

The Longabardi­s have furnished the house with early American country furniture found at local garage sales and secondhand shops. “We love to buy locally,” Julie says, “and we look for pieces that have local connection­s.” Paintings join various furnishing­s bought on Etsy or at Pottery Barn.

The original carpenter’s shop has been connected to the house via a breezeway; the two-storey shop now serves as the living room. “I love the space,” Julie says. “It’s wonderful to have a big room for entertaini­ng.”

carpentry shop The second owner’s ca. 1890 was connected to the old house by a breezeway that admits plenty of light. The shop now accommodat­es a generous living room and space for guests.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? An old dry sink became a bathroom vanity.
An old dry sink became a bathroom vanity.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States