RetroToday
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Just thought I'd share a personal experience that has left me a little unsettled... Too many historical houses in my area are being lost to fire lately, this was one of them.
What a sad state this house turned to in ten years since I first visited in 1997. That year I was 20 years old and had recently joined the Scarborough Historical Society of Ontario, Canada.
I was very "gung-ho" about taking photos of all the known buildings that were from the 19th century in Scarborough, when I discovered the beautiful Rittenhouse property.
I knocked on the door of the pretty yellow and white and green farmhouse there and spoke with the elderly gentleman who still resided there, Joe Rittenhouse.
I told him I was from the Historical Society and he invited me in to chat about the long history of the house and farm. To my amazement, nothing had changed in the house since the 1930s!
Joe explained that his direct ancestors had not built the house, but they had owned and farmed the land since the 1870s. He described living in the house when his parents were there, his first trip to the City of Toronto as a kid (around 1919) and many other tidbits of very interesting history. He also said that the film crews based in Toronto loved to use this property for movie and video shoots. So, after I learned this information I kept my eye peeled for the house and barns when I watched movies and television - I was very surprised and happy that I found it a few times!
A couple of the films that used his property:
Men With Brooms (movie) 2002
Kids in the Hall (TV) - various comedy skits
Road to Avonlea (TV)
Bobcaygeon - song (Music Video by The Tragically Hip)
The list goes on...
I kept in touch with Joe from time to time after that visit, dropping in to see that he was doing well. During one visit I happily bought a couple of ornately printed wooden shipping crates that dated from the early 1900s from him.
Joe, in his late 80s, passed away in 2005. Having no children, the contents of the house were auctioned off and the house sat derelict.
Unfortunately In early November of 2007 some people looking for a place to party one Saturday night discovered the Rittenhouse home and for some reason started a fire. The house soon burned to the ground.
I almost wish that I hadn't gone to see the remains of the house shortly after the fire was put out. We salvaged a few historical remnants that weren't melted.
I'll fondly remember chatting with Joe on the porch about the ways of the past and will try to not remember the wonderful smell of the burnt wood of his house on that cold November day in 2007. I do my best to be a Steward of the Past, but in the last couple of years I feel like an undertaker, saving bits of importance rather than the whole buildings.
The demolition permit was issued in December and now one of my personal favourite trips back in time no longer exists. That's life I guess?
Well, at least I wrote down all he told me and I plan to write and publish an article about those interviews in a Scarborough Historical Society periodical. All is not lost after all.
I posted a few images here in this thread, but you can see more images and news articles in this Flickr image album I set up:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/jeremyhopkin/sets/72157602995122928/
The Rittenhouse farmhouse in 1997 - my photo.
The Rittenhouse farmhouse in 2007 - my photo.
Joe Rittenhouse on the north side porch of his farmhouse - 1997, my photo.
Joe has now passed and so too has the farmhouse - 2007, my photo.
A frame from the 1998 music video for "Bobcaygeon", a song by band "The Tragically Hip" - The Rittenhouse farmhouse is featured prominently in the video. You can easily find the video on Youtube.
One of the several articles published about the fire
What a sad state this house turned to in ten years since I first visited in 1997. That year I was 20 years old and had recently joined the Scarborough Historical Society of Ontario, Canada.
I was very "gung-ho" about taking photos of all the known buildings that were from the 19th century in Scarborough, when I discovered the beautiful Rittenhouse property.
I knocked on the door of the pretty yellow and white and green farmhouse there and spoke with the elderly gentleman who still resided there, Joe Rittenhouse.
I told him I was from the Historical Society and he invited me in to chat about the long history of the house and farm. To my amazement, nothing had changed in the house since the 1930s!
Joe explained that his direct ancestors had not built the house, but they had owned and farmed the land since the 1870s. He described living in the house when his parents were there, his first trip to the City of Toronto as a kid (around 1919) and many other tidbits of very interesting history. He also said that the film crews based in Toronto loved to use this property for movie and video shoots. So, after I learned this information I kept my eye peeled for the house and barns when I watched movies and television - I was very surprised and happy that I found it a few times!
A couple of the films that used his property:
Men With Brooms (movie) 2002
Kids in the Hall (TV) - various comedy skits
Road to Avonlea (TV)
Bobcaygeon - song (Music Video by The Tragically Hip)
The list goes on...
I kept in touch with Joe from time to time after that visit, dropping in to see that he was doing well. During one visit I happily bought a couple of ornately printed wooden shipping crates that dated from the early 1900s from him.
Joe, in his late 80s, passed away in 2005. Having no children, the contents of the house were auctioned off and the house sat derelict.
Unfortunately In early November of 2007 some people looking for a place to party one Saturday night discovered the Rittenhouse home and for some reason started a fire. The house soon burned to the ground.
I almost wish that I hadn't gone to see the remains of the house shortly after the fire was put out. We salvaged a few historical remnants that weren't melted.
I'll fondly remember chatting with Joe on the porch about the ways of the past and will try to not remember the wonderful smell of the burnt wood of his house on that cold November day in 2007. I do my best to be a Steward of the Past, but in the last couple of years I feel like an undertaker, saving bits of importance rather than the whole buildings.
The demolition permit was issued in December and now one of my personal favourite trips back in time no longer exists. That's life I guess?
Well, at least I wrote down all he told me and I plan to write and publish an article about those interviews in a Scarborough Historical Society periodical. All is not lost after all.
I posted a few images here in this thread, but you can see more images and news articles in this Flickr image album I set up:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/jeremyhopkin/sets/72157602995122928/
The Rittenhouse farmhouse in 1997 - my photo.
The Rittenhouse farmhouse in 2007 - my photo.
Joe Rittenhouse on the north side porch of his farmhouse - 1997, my photo.
Joe has now passed and so too has the farmhouse - 2007, my photo.
A frame from the 1998 music video for "Bobcaygeon", a song by band "The Tragically Hip" - The Rittenhouse farmhouse is featured prominently in the video. You can easily find the video on Youtube.
One of the several articles published about the fire