Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Restoring historical homes is a passion for Greendale business owner

- Joanne Kempinger Demski

When Ron Raasch works on restoring old structures, he focuses on doing work both he and the homeowners will be proud of. But, he admits, his mind often wanders to thoughts of the history of the buildings and those who worked there before him. ● “History is a big driving force for me. I like to hear the stories about these old houses. I often do research on the houses I work on. I do it for myself but also for the homeowners,” he said. ● “I’ve found things in the walls of buildings many times. It’s so wonderful to find these things. I found shoes from a whole family in one wall, and I found part of someone’s lunch, once. I found bones and an old bottle.” ● At a Wauwatosa mansion he once found a time capsule, then left one there himself.

Retaining the history of a building, both manually and mentally, is clearly a passion for Raasch, who is the owner of Two Hands Restoratio­n, (twohandsre­storation.com) a Greendale firm that does design, consulting, constructi­on and preservati­on of historical­ly significant buildings — from log cabins to sprawling mansions.

It’s a business he started 32 years ago, after learning his craft mainly from his father, who he said “did all manners of woodworkin­g projects.”

“I’ve always been fascinated by the process of combining design and function. I learned the value of things well made,” he said.

Raasch said his dad learned his trade at Milwaukee’s Boys Technical and Trade School (now Bradley Tech High School), then later was a carpenter at Allen-Bradley.

“At his job people started noticing his unique talents and he was called upon to do side jobs for the higher ups at their homes, and I often followed along,” he said. “I enjoyed watching the interactio­n between the people and I enjoyed watching the work my dad was doing. I can remember holding the nails for him. I would put all the nails heads up and then I would hand them to my dad and then grab more.

“Then he might say, ‘Saw three more board like this.’ I learned how to measure accurately and learned what the next steps were in the projects he was doing. While he worked, he was always explaining what he was doing.

“That got me interested in constructi­on and remodeling, but I also took note of things that were more stylized — things that had more of an aesthetic. I appreciate­d the intricacie­s involved in old houses,” he said.

Raasch took his first woodworkin­g class at the former Fritsche Middle School. By then he already knew the basics and while others in his class were told to make simple projects such as bookends, his teacher told him to make whatever he wanted.

“I made a coffee table. It was in a midcentury modern style and it had simple curving lines. I made it out of cherry wood. It was an easy grade for me and I enjoyed being in the workshop. The teacher told me I was already very competent and I told him that this kind of work was my father’s livelihood.”

That was the only class he ever took in pursuing his career.

“My apprentice­ship was literally just following my father around,” he said.

After high school Raasch worked at Falk Corporatio­n where he met others he learned from.

“I worked at a loading shed with 12by-12 timbers. We were building very customized-shaped cradles and skids for motor drives and gears. This was heavyduty work and the pieces were very fitted into each other like pieces would fit into a log cabin,” he said. “There were a couple of older European gents I worked with and they could do anything with an ax. That’s when I thought, ‘I have to learn how to build or restore a log cabin.’”

He later worked for builders who made modern houses, at Discovery World where he made exhibits, then at a restoratio­n company where he headed its design and woodworkin­g department.

“I found that I liked working directly with the homeowners. So after that company closed I felt it was time to go on my own,” he said.

Today he works mainly on buildings built between the 1830s and the 1930s. But he admits he is always open to an interestin­g project.

“If someone called and said they had a 1950s building with unusual features, I might consider it. But for the most part I don’t work on McMansions of the ‘90s or on more contempora­ry homes,” he said.

So that his work matches or historical­ly complement­s the original structures, he uses both old and new tools and old lumber.

“I do use what is most appropriat­e to the project,” he said. “When it comes to things like carving, you have to use oldstyle tools. For example, chisels for carving come in different orientatio­ns that aren’t just flat. You need different sizes and different curves. And when doing fine work, instead of using a hammer you would use a mallet, because a hammer could break the wood.

“Some jobs require using more laborinten­sive hand tools — maybe something like a coping saw. Sometimes those old tools are handier or more efficient than using electric tools.”

Work on a log home or a barn might require the use of an adz, he said.

“It’s like an ax but with the cutting edge going perpendicu­lar to the handle, and it’s also curved. You would use the adz to make a log from round to square, and it leaves a pattern of chipping. You are chipping the round part of a log until you have a flat surface on four sides.”

Old molding planes would be used when working on old mullioned glass windows to get the exact contour of the dividing pieces in the windows.

He said it’s also important to use oldgrowth wood when trying to replicate historical features.

“You have to use old-growth wood whenever possible to match existing wood. It has capabiliti­es for longevity and it’s also more resistant to bugs and weather as it has a very tight grain,” he said. “And when you find clear stock, which is wood with no knots in it, you buy it and keep it until it’s called for. Sometimes people will give it to me. They might say they want to clear out their garage.”

Raasch said while he has no special training or licensure to work in historical restoratio­n, he does research on the properties he works on in order to make changes look like they are original to the building.

“Generally I know what to do at this point, but (for informatio­n) you can look at Sandborn maps at the local historical societies. Sandborn maps are insurance maps that existed before building codes. You can also look for old photos.”

One of his favorite projects to date is the Dr. Fisk Holbrook Day House, an 1874 high Victorian gothic revival house in Wauwatosa that is on the National and State registers of historic places.

“In 1988 I did an extensive exterior and structural restoratio­n to make the house waterproof and to replicate exterior detailing. And in 1990 I designed and built a new front porch” in the space where a porch had once been, he said.

To build a porch that would look like it was original to the house, he looked to an old photo and a bracket on a bay window nearby.

“I got the photo from the homeowner. They had done some research and they found a glass plate negative from when the house was built. It was a picture of the front of the house that showed me that the bracket on the nearby bay window was used on the porch. So I could use the existing bracket as a guide, and as a unit of measure to gauge the size of the porch.”

He also worked as a consultant when the homeowners had the home gutted and restored.

“It was the finest home I’ve ever worked in, but it was a wreck. It had live and dead animals in it, and it had been made into a three-family residence. Someone had added walls, staircases and bathrooms, and there was a lot of deteriorat­ion.”

Another project Raasch enjoyed was the coach house at the Kneeland-Walker House in Wauwatosa. There, he built an interior staircase using materials found on-site and did restoratio­n work on the building’s exterior. The Kneeland-Walker House is on the National and State registers of historic places.

Another memorable project was a large building with a storefront and secondfloor residences on Milwaukee’s east side that had been covered with asphalt brick siding for 50 years.

“There I replaced much of the wood siding and strap-work — which are the vertical and horizontal boards that form an aesthetic to the building — and I carved two decorative inset panels. I also added period doors from another building,” Raasch said. “Then I devised a five color scheme to paint the exterior in the style of a painted lady that was neither cute or garish.”

Current projects include work on two buildings on the National and State

historic registers, the Matthew Keenan House on Jefferson Street and the Andrew Frame House in Waukesha.

The Keenen House, built in 1860, was designed by Milwaukee architect Edward Townsend Mix. Raasch described it as a brick Italianate double house with two entryways and six bays or quadrants and said he’s restoring the front porch, including the porch’s balustrade­s.

At the Frame House, an 1879 Cream City brick Italianate also designed by Townsend Mix, work has been done inside and outside, and started soon after Karen Frame, the current owner, purchased it in 2017. The house was built by her great-great-grandfathe­r, Waukesha philanthro­pist Andrew Jay Frame.

One of the major projects outside was re-creating a rear porch that had been removed. To be sure the porch fit the style of the house, Raasch looked to the design of the front porch. He also built new decorative storm and screen doors and added newel posts with rounded tops that fit the style of the house.

Inside he added a transom window over a first floor bathroom door, filling the opening with a piece of decorative stained glass he designed. The glass complement­s an exterior stained glass window already in the bathroom.

In an area at the front of the house that was originally a parlor but was later used as an office, he changed a bookcase that had been added by attorneys who worked there after members of the Frame family sold the building and it was zoned commercial.

“It was something Karen knew was not original. It was literally two boxes above four doors. There wasn’t even a quarter round on top. It had no sense of style. It was simply a functional bookcase for the attorneys who occupied the house for decades,” Raasch said. “I asked her to consider letting me help the bookcase belong to the house. She basically said, ‘OK, I know you will do a nice job.’”

To create a design for the top of the bookcase, he looked to her family history for inspiratio­n. He ended up using artwork found on the cornice of the former Waukesha National Bank in downtown Waukesha that her great-great-grandfathe­r built.

“I copied part of the cornice that was above the entryway, but I also added a thistle because the Frame family emigrated from Scotland and a thistle is an emblem of Scotland,” he said.

Another project was to turn a former pass-through between the home’s kitchen and dining room into a display area for a collection of antique firearms and family photos.

“The suggestion from Karen was for me to ‘put the firearms on the wall someplace.’ They had been lying on the floor . ... I said, let me sleep on it. The former passthroug­h was just deep enough to allow me to make something more playful and to depict the family history.”

He built a display where he mounted the firearms, and he also had historic photograph­s enlarged and built decorative frames for them, carved a garland of flowers at the top of the display, and added doors.

Karen Frame called Raasch “a detailed craftsman” and said he has been helping her fine-tune her home since she bought it.

“Ron is fantastic with details and bringing the things that looked real basic from the ‘70s to life,” she said.

After Andrew Jay Frame died, she said various members of her family lived in the house and she remembers how grand it was.

“I remember being there as a child when my aunt, Mable Frame, lived there. Then later it wasn’t in the family for a few years, and I always wanted to buy it back.”

She said when she bought the house the front half of the first floor was being used as offices by attorneys, but the two upper levels were residentia­l.

Today, she uses the commercial space as a family museum of sorts, and there are residentia­l units on the second and third floors. She said she currently rents the units to relatives, but she hopes to live there one day.

In addition to work done by Raasch she also had a new kitchen added as the original kitchen had been removed by the previous owners. She also remodeled the first floor bathroom, and on the second floor she updated a guest bathroom and added a primary suite with a bathroom.

Her biggest project was in 2019 when she had the home’s original belvedere replicated. She said the space, at the very top of the building, had been taken down in the ‘50s or ‘60s after it had fallen into disrepair.

She had it rebuilt on-site, then two cranes hoisted it up and it was bolted on to the existing structure.

Raasch said he believes these kinds of restoratio­n projects are important because the kind of work done years ago is a lost art.

“It’s something that is less and less available. There are fewer and fewer people practicing these skills,” he said. “It’s also environmen­tally sound to maintain things that are already built versus building something new. It’s a bigger carbon impact, to build something new versus to restore or maintain a structure.”

He added that while so many wonderful historical buildings were lost when the freeway system was built in the Milwaukee area, there is still “an enormous amount of old housing stock here on the east side, in the Bay View neighborho­od, Waukesha” and other areas in southeaste­rn Wisconsin.

Raasch recently answered a few questions about his background and his business.

What is it about historic homes you love so much?

The sense of understand­ing a developing community and how people lived at whatever level they could afford. And all the building techniques. Things dramatical­ly changed in building materials, techniques and aesthetics after World War II. Then everything shifted. It was the era of the ranch home.

What’s the oldest building you’ve ever worked on?

An 1830s log cabin in the Town of Erin.

Any other interestin­g finds on projects?

At a building on Brady Street I found an old radio transmitte­r in the attic that no one had seen in the last 40 years. It was from the ‘30s. It was probably used by a hobbyist and was very elaborate.

What are the oldest tools you have?

I have some marking tools and calipers that are quite old. I have some handsaws that are unique because of the number of teeth they have or the way the teeth are set. My father would sharpen his own saw blades and I still sharpen some of mine by hand. Nowadays most people throw them away. I have some of my dad’s old tools and some of the machinery he brought after he graduated from Boys Tech.

Do you still have the coffee table you first made?

No. But I have a couple of little tables my dad made when he was at Boys Tech. They are little walnut side tables.

Has there ever been renewed interest in this kind of work?

When the PBS Program “This Old House” came out in the late ‘70s there was a rise in awareness, but that’s fallen off. There is a shortage of young people entering all trades in general. Therefore the skills for older more unique rebuilds are harder to find. This has me considerin­g more consulting and teaching as time goes on.

Do you have to follow certain regulation­s when restoring historical structures?

Sometimes you have to set up a meeting and talk to historic preservati­on organizati­ons or other bodies that have a say on the house. If you want to get the tax credits, you have to go along with what they say you can do. You say, ‘This is what we propose to do.’ But this is mostly about the exterior of the house and what the public sees.

Any more projects planned at the Frame house?

No. Just maintenanc­e work. That’s always required when you have an old house.

 ?? PHOTOS BY JOVANNY HERNANDEZ / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Ron Raasch, owner of Two Hands Restoratio­n, stands next to a bookcase he enhanced at the Andrew Frame House in Waukesha on Dec. 8.
PHOTOS BY JOVANNY HERNANDEZ / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Ron Raasch, owner of Two Hands Restoratio­n, stands next to a bookcase he enhanced at the Andrew Frame House in Waukesha on Dec. 8.
 ?? ?? Raasch holds a photo of a bank building that was the inspiratio­n for the bookcase he enhanced at the Andrew Frame House in Waukesha on Dec. 8.
Raasch holds a photo of a bank building that was the inspiratio­n for the bookcase he enhanced at the Andrew Frame House in Waukesha on Dec. 8.

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