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The Lay of the Land: Houses by Mail — The Rosetta Stone? The Book Every Kit House Lover Should Have.

Houses by Mail: A Guide to Sears, Roebuck and Company is book written by Katherine Cole Stevenson and H. Ward Jandl. Published in 1986, it is the encyclopedia of Sears homes! Organized by house style, it lists every Sears model known up until then. Basically one house per page with information reproduced straight from the Sears catalogs in facsimile. Each page contains a catalog image and description, alternate model names or numbers along with which catalog year for which (In the early years the houses were numbered. Many were given names later on), the years offered, floor plans, alternate floor plans, models that were similar, etc. Everything you ever wanted or needed to know arranged neatly and sensibly, and easily accessible (at fingertip, as my husband would say). It is indexed by named models and numbered models. Frequently there are locations listed and an occasional testimonial all reprinted from the catalogs. In indispensable resource. I have used mine so often, the spine is broken in multiple places and a signature has fallen out.

My beloved copy of Houses by Mail. You can see the signature sticking out. I'll have to dig out my book-binding glue.
Poor book 😢
The first thing I did when my book arrived in the mail was to go through and mark all the pages where houses were built in Western New York (in the broadest sense of the term).

Western New York locales mentioned in Houses By Mail are:
Niagara Falls (Niagara) — Argyle
Black Rock (a neighborhood in Buffalo) (Erie) — Arlington
Rochester  (Wayne/Monroe) — Hazelton, #164
Hamburg (Erie) — Silverdale
Buffalo (Erie) — #306
Addison (Steuben) — Concord (aka #114, #2021, etc.)
Lancaster (Erie) — Saratoga
Dunkirk (Chautauqua) #124, #164, #225, Sherburne
Covington (Wyoming)  Westly
I discovered that the places mentioned came straight from the original catalogs and therefore could more or less be considered authenticated once they were found.

. . . and then I started searching.


7 comments:

  1. Ha! Your copy looks like mine, only my sticky notes have addresses written on them. :)

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  2. Double Ha! I lost a whole 'nother section today writing this post! I have to get my book repair kit out.

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  3. I think I know the one in Lancaster! It's what got me researching kit homes tonight. 192 Central Ave looks just like the Saratoga (except the porch is different): https://www.google.com/maps/place/192+Central+Ave,+Lancaster,+NY+14086/@42.9084718,-78.6715676,3a,37.5y,248.18h,96.9t/data=!3m6!1e1!3m4!1sm3abMYoHM4Xnjzcsgsc3QA!2e0!7i13312!8i6656!4m5!3m4!1s0x89d30abbbade6c6f:0xb9e20122cc1c434e!8m2!3d42.9084096!4d-78.6718511 If you go back to the September 2016 street view, it had more of its details then. I'm going to get the book from my library now; thanks for the post about it!

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    1. Hi Tabitha, Thank you so much for your comment. I've been looking for the Saratoga in Lancaster for a while now. I will check it out more closely. I should be back up and writing again soon. I'm working on another website for a relative.

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  4. Hi Tabitha! This is definitely a Saratoga, probably the one that is mentioned in Houses By Mail. The columns were offered in a special catalog and the fireplaces matches one that Sears offered. I am going to write a blog post about it.

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    1. That's awesome! I know there are a few other houses in the area that have those mail-order columns from Sears, so I figured it was something that could be swapped out. Looking forward to the blog post!

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