The St. Luke AME Windows Are Coming Back to Life!

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The restoration of the two large stained-glass gable windows for St. Luke AME Church is well underway at Hoefer's Custom Stained Glass in Hutchinson, and they look beautiful! We can't wait to see the final result in a few weeks.

But there's still so much more work to be done on this Lawrence landmark. Brick repair on two of the church's walls will begin soon, and we're still trying to raise money for restoration of the church's towers and one remaining gable.

LPA members and the community have donated more than $35,000 to date in our effort to help. Please be a St. Luke AME Friend! All LPA membership donations for the rest of the year are going to support this important community project. In addition, 25% of proceeds from the purchase of English muffins and sourdough sandwich loaves at the Cellar Door Café, 7 W. 11th Street, during November will go to the St. Luke restoration project.

Please click here to find out more and add your support:

Work Begins at St. Luke AME Church

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Your tremendous support of St. Luke AME Church is already having a visible effect: Hoefer's Custom Stained Glass has removed the glass from the church's two large gable windows for restoration at their Hutchinson shop. We can't wait to see what those windows look like when they're restored to their former glory.

Brick repair on those two walls will start in a few weeks. Restoration of the church's towers and one remaining gable remain unfunded, though LPA members have donated more than $35,000 to date in our effort to help. Please be a St. Luke AME Friend! All LPA membership donations for the rest of the year are going to support this important community project. Please click here to add your support. Thanks!

Shop at The Raven — Support St. Luke AME Church!

Get a jump start on holiday shopping and contribute to the preservation of our historic city AT THE SAME TIME this October 22nd and 23rd! LPA is proud to partner with The Raven Book Store to host a fundraiser in support of the St. Luke AME Church building at 9th and New York. Constructed in 1910, St. Luke AME Church has served as a community hub for Lawrence’s ethnically diverse community for over a century, but it is in need of restoration and repair. When you shop online at The Raven on October 22nd and 23rd, 5% of your purchase price goes to ensure that this architectural landmark is restored for generations to come. So get shopping! And learn more about ongoing efforts to save this historic building here.

The 'Friendly Church on the Corner' Needs Your Help

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The church’s beautiful stained-glass windows are in dire need of restoration.

The church’s beautiful stained-glass windows are in dire need of restoration.

For more than a century, St. Luke AME has been a leader in the cause of social justice within and beyond our city’s African-American community. Celebrated writer Langston Hughes worshipped there, along with many members of our Black community, and it’s listed on the National, State and Lawrence Registers of Historic Places.

But today, St. Luke AME, built in 1910 at 9th and New York streets, needs your help. Many of its red brick walls and original windows are in disrepair. A first phase of rehab was completed 10 years ago. Now it’s time to make exterior repairs and to complete an accessibility project begun last year. 

Two major grants have ensured that the church’s two large stained glass windows, and the walls in which they sit, will be restored this fall. The congregation is working to fund completion of the accessibility project. But there is still more work to be done.

 Lawrence Preservation Alliance is leading an effort to gather community help to contribute toward work on other exterior walls and windows in critical need of repair. To start, LPA is donating all membership funds we receive through the end of 2020 to the rehab effort at St. Luke AME. 

Please be a St. Luke AME Friend. Click here to sign up for membership. Or send your check to Lawrence Preservation Alliance, PO Box 1073, Lawrence, KS, 66044. All donors who are not current members will receive a free one-year membership in LPA. 

The church’s exterior brickwork is overdue for repair.

The church’s exterior brickwork is overdue for repair.

Thanks to a generous matching grant provided by Jeff and Mary Weinberg, the first $10,000 in gifts will be matched.. One hundred percent of your donation will go to the St. Luke AME Second Century Fund at the Douglas County Community Foundation

In addition, LPA is proud to partner with The Raven Book Store to host a fundraiser in support of the St. Luke AME Church building. When you shop online at The Raven on October 22nd and 23rd, 5% of your purchase price goes to ensure that this architectural landmark is restored for generations to come. So get shopping!

 St. Luke AME has served our Lawrence community for more than a century. Now is the time for this community to return that support. IT’S UP TO US. 

Summer 2020 Preservation in Progress Award Winners Announced

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Our Summer 2020 Preservation in Progress Awards honor the renovation of a home on Rhode Island Street that LPA helped save, the rehabilitation of a mid-century modern home, the restoration of a 156-year-old bell at a downtown church, and a downtown retailer that has reclaimed its building’s past.

904 Rhode Island Street

Built before 1889, this beautiful brick house at 904 Rhode Island helps anchor one of the most historically important corners in Lawrence. Located at East Ninth two blocks from downtown and two blocks from nationally recognized St. Luke AME Church, a passionate local preservationist is making great progress with this award-winning renovation.

The home was most likely built by German–American members of the Turnverein community organization, who also built the Turnhalle next door. It is a contributing property to the North Rhode Island Residential District and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. 

904 Rhode Island before and after rehabilitation.

904 Rhode Island before and after rehabilitation.

After stewardship by the Ernst family for 80 years, the LPA purchased the property to place covenants on architecturally significant features. Angie Blair, who has renovated other historic Lawrence homes, purchased the building in December 2018. Since then, she and her team have poured a love of preservation into every corner of the historically accurate rehabilitation.

Angie decided to save and repair the home’s original plastered walls because, she says, “plaster helps preserve the historic value of the home, and it’s a higher-grade product than commercial sheetrock because it’s stronger.” Angie worked with local plasterer Tom Wheat to remove countless layers of wallpaper and re-plaster every wall. Painting is now in progress. 

The elegant windows were painstakingly disassembled, repaired and reinstalled by Angie’s friend and master craftsman, Carl Arnett, to comply with the home’s architectural convenants. Missing pieces were replaced with sections cut from vintage salvaged wood.

Missing staircase balusters were crafted by Carl to match the originals. Rather than replace the wavy, well-worn stair treads, the team preserved them to tell the story of the passage of time. And the old hardwood floors were solid and plumb after 130 years, so they were simply buffed and finished rather than replaced. 

The team’s thoughtful approach is also evident behind the house. A new utility room was cleverly tucked into the rebuilt and expanded back porch, complete with period fixtures and a doggie door for Angie’s one-year-old Lab mix, Millie. The addition conforms to the historic preservation covenants attached to the house while creating new functionality for today’s lifestyles.

By making wise choices and taking extra care, Angie and the 904 Rhode Island team are stewarding the existing quality materials and construction to make this property a true preservation showplace. The LPA salutes their great effort!

408 Iowa Street

After deciding to move to Lawrence from Seattle, architect Roy Ley bought the house at 408 Iowa Street, sight unseen, while on a road trip in California in 2016. It was in need of much work, but according to Roy, “it reminded me of the house I grew up in and I knew it would feel like home, and it possessed pretty much all of the design characteristics I was looking for.”

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The rehabilitation of mid-century modern architecture has its own unique demands, and 408 Iowa is no exception. The house, which was built in 1957, does not have a basement or attic, so replacing plumbing and HVAC that were not to code was a challenge. Replacement of the forced-air HVAC system with a mini-split system required cutting interior surfaces and the strategic placement of new closets and cabinets. Replacing obsolete plumbing was no picnic either. At one point, in the height of summer, Roy was living with a four-foot pile of dirt in the kitchen, no plumbing and no AC for an extended period. Two years were spent living out of boxes, with one “sanctuary room.”

But after nearly four years of hard work, rehabilitation is almost complete and it looks fantastic. The street-facing brick chimney, perhaps the house’s defining feature, was rebuilt using bricks salvaged from planter boxes on site. Roy, an architect at Lawrence’s Hoke Ley: Architecture + Interior Design Studio, hired Jonah Seibel of Seibel Fabrication to design a beautiful chimney shroud/spark arrestor. The home also features unique rows of louvered openings with tilt-in panels for ventilation. These have been restored, including the original casement sash locks, which resemble what you would find on an old-time icebox. The wood breezeway between the carport and house has been restored to match the original design and a new metal roof was installed.

408 Iowa features plenty of arresting mid-century modern details, down to the light trough that runs through the center of the house. But it’s the natural simplicity and grace of the house that is perhaps most striking. It’s tucked away on a seldom-traveled street and nestled beneath a large stand of trees. Roy says it reminds him of a picnic shelter house in a park. LPA applauds Roy’s vision, meticulous attention to detail and dedication to this unique, hidden “shelter house.”

First United Methodist Church, 946 Vermont Street

The congregation at this historic downtown church is in the latter stages of a preservation project that’s been ongoing for more than a year. Some of the more critical tasks have involved dusty, gritty work, but on July 13, the congregation and our town got treated to the cherry on top: placement of the 156-year-old bell in its tower after a complete offsite refurbishment by the Verdin Bell Company in Cincinnati. The church used a $29,000 grant from the Douglas County Heritage Conservation Council to complete this special task.

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A larger portion of the project has involved refurbishing exterior walls and identifying why some of the limestone blocks in the towers were spalling and even shedding pieces onto the sidewalks below. The cause was traced back to a pointing job in the 1980s in which an incorrect hard mortar was used. Over this past year, workers have removed the incorrect mortar down to a 1.5” depth and replaced it with softer mortar appropriate for use with historic masonry materials.

Other repairs to wood trim and masonry surfaces also have been addressed, and the bell tower received a new Vermont slate roof with stainless steel trim. A number of interior tasks have been part of this project as well. 

The 130-year-old church, listed on the National Register of Historic Places, was designed by John G. Haskell on a commission from former KU chancellor James Marvin, who was the church pastor in 1888. The bell is actually 26 years older than the building. It was moved from a previous location when the new church was built.

Facilities Manager Marc Ridenour has kept busy leading the congregation through the development and execution of this comprehensive work plan, and it was a thrill for him to give the bell a practice ring before it went up, and then another once it was secured in place. “I felt joy and satisfaction,” Marc says, “knowing how long the process had taken, and finally getting it back up to where it belonged, ready to ring true for another 156 years.”

Congratulations to Marc, the congregation, the Heritage Conservation Council, and everyone involved in bringing this special part of Lawrence history back to life.

Striped Cow, 805 Massachusetts Street

Lawrence native David Jess has been a downtown retailer since 1993, when he opened Third Planet in the little building on the 9th Street alley long occupied by the Bourgeois Pig. After moving to 846 Massachusetts Street and being a renter all these years, David wanted to own the building that his latest boutique would occupy. His purchase of the old J.C. Penney building at 805 Massachusetts, which was later occupied by the Ben Franklin store and then The Buckle, has been a preservation success as well as a cultural upgrade for downtown.

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Rehab work was more about removal of inappropriate interior buildouts than restoration. When David found the one significant indoor feature that hadn’t been compromised beyond repair, the decorative tin ceiling, he and his crew did a masterful job of restoring and featuring what is now one of the focal points of this beautiful commercial space.

The ceiling had been hidden under not one but two drop-ceilings. The obvious one was installed by the corporate owners of The Buckle, who also built new interior walls in an attempt to duplicate the look and feel of their mall stores. The removal of that revealed the Ben Franklin buildout, with materials mostly from the1950s or 60s. Nine dumpsters in all were filled before the new finishes and look of the Striped Cow could be applied.

The storefront received a light touch, preserving the original glazed terra cotta ornamentation that early LPA architectural historians described in their surveys as making it “the only Sullivanesque or Art-Nouveau-influenced building in this region."

How does the space feel now as opposed to before? “It doesn’t seem like the same building,” David says. But he notes that the project was easier than he thought it would be, and he credits the structure’s good bones. This beautiful downtown space is worth a look—masked and distanced of course!—and LPA is pleased to recognize this positive investment in this city’s downtown.

For Sale:  Historic Lawrence Turnhalle

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LPA’s longrunning effort to preserve and revive the historic Turnalle building (built in 1869) at the corner of 9th and Rhode Island streets has taken another turn: The current owner, Flint Hills Holding Group LLC, has decided to offer the building for sale. Considering the current economy and the scope of the challenge that rehabilitiating the Turnhalle presents, it seems best for the building to have a new owner.

The Turnhalle’s interior during rehabilitation

LPA supports the sale and is confident that the Turnhalle will be protected. Turnhalle is listed on both the State and National Registers of Historic Places as a contributing property in the North Rhode Island Historic District. LPA also listed Turnhalle as a Landmark on the Lawrence Register of Historic Places while we owned it from 2012 to 2014.

Even more important, LPA has a Historic Preservation Covenant for Turnhalle. That “Running With The Land” covenant gives LPA rights in perpetuity to ensure the preservation of Turnhalle. LPA must be consulted and provide our approval for any project that impacts the character-defining features listed in the Historic Structure Report that was done for the LPA shortly after our purchase of the building. These rights remain in force for all future owners of Turnhalle. The Kansas Historical Society website has copies of the Historic Structure Report and the Historic Preservation Covenant.

LPA also owns the parking lot directly across E. Ninth Street from the Turnhalle, which we purchased to leverage rehabilitation of Turnhalle. Any major project at Turnhalle will require parking.

We hope that the right buyer will now come forward and invest in this important Lawrence landmark. Once again, we’d like to thank all our members and donors who joined with LPA to make our work on Turnhalle possible. More information on the history of the building and the work we completed can be found here.

Download a copy of the Turnhalle sales flyer (PDF).

Photo on left courtesy of The Kansas State Historical Society; photo at far right courtesy of Watkins Community Museum of History as printed in "Lawrence:: Survivors of Quantrill's Raid" by Katie Armitage.

Photo on left courtesy of The Kansas State Historical Society; photo at right courtesy of Watkins Community Museum of History as printed in "Lawrence:: Survivors of Quantrill's Raid" by Katie Armitage.

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945 Kentucky Street: A Virtual Tour

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One of Lawrence’s most sterling recent renovations projects is the A.K. Allen house at 945 Kentucky St., a two-story brick house built in 1862 that survived Quantrill’s Raid. Classical Developments LLC, with KU grad Mike Heitmann as managing member, oversaw the rehab of the property, which was recently completed—and we’ve got before and after photos, inside and outside the house, to share with you.

The house was in foreclosure and had sat vacant for many years. The gable-front National Folk nine-room house was designed by architect Ferdinand Fuller, one of the leaders of the New England Emigrant Aid Society, and built for Asaph King Allen, a free-state settler to Lawrence in the 1850s.

Preservation consultant Dale Nimz was hired to research the history of the house and to help the ownership group identify qualified craftspeople to work on the project. The wood windows in the original portion of the house were fully restored by Oklahoma-based Wood Window Rescue Inc., in its Kansas City shop. New wooden storm windows also were fabricated and installed.

The exterior brick was repointed using mortar mixed to historic specifications. An appropriately sized addition was framed in back, and additional work, including a reconstruction of the original front porch was undertaken by General Contractor Mark Engleman. The structure is now being rented as a duplex.

These two photo galleries show you the poor shape the house was in when restoration began, and how it was restored to its former glory—and beyond. The house was a winner of LPA’s Preservation in Progress award for Summer 2019.

945 Kentucky is a contributing property in the Oread Historic District on the National Register of Historic Places, and historic tax credits are being used to help finance the work. Saving a pre-Quantrill house near downtown is an extraordinary thing.

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Photo Gallery: Before

(click image to see other photos in gallery)

Photo Gallery: After

(click image to see other photos in gallery)

Fall 2019 Preservation in Progress Awards Announced

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For our fall 2019 Preservation in Progress Awards, LPA celebrates the major rehabilitation of a key 9th Street commercial corner property and the rehab of a historic, affordable house.

900 Mississippi Street

Brad Ziegler has made a Lawrence career buying, renovating and maintaining commercial and residential properties. He purchased Louise’s downtown in 1989 and owns the Tap Room and Six Mile Chop House, among others, but his recent focus has been on 9th Street just west of downtown.

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He owns the Basil Leaf building and just completed a good-looking renovation of the old gas station next door for Mama’s Tamales. But for perhaps the crown jewel of his recent efforts, cross to the south side of 9th and take a look at the longtime laundromat on the corner at Mississippi: a full rehab under the watchful eye of the Kansas State Preservation Office is nearing completion and a new life as a restaurant to be called Big Mill.

The Preservation Office is involved because Brad is using a 20% state historic tax credit and a 25% federal credit for commercial properties to help offset rehab costs. Stan Hernly wrote the nomination for the building, now listed on both the state and national historic registers as Klock’s Grocery and Independent Laundromat.

Image provided by the Douglas County Historical Society, Watkins Museum of History.

Image provided by the Douglas County Historical Society, Watkins Museum of History.

Built by Fred Klock in 1922, the building replaced one at the same location that housed his grocery. In both buildings, Klock advertised his business as Klock’s Windmill Grocery, a reference to the community landmark that long stood at the top of the 9th Street hill. When the current building first opened, the eastern half was occupied by Beal Brothers Meat Market. The building transitioned in 1959 into Independent Laundry and Dry-Cleaning, which made a name for itself by providing a self-serve, coin-operated dry-cleaning service.

Image provided by the Douglas County Historical Society, Watkins Museum of History.

Image provided by the Douglas County Historical Society, Watkins Museum of History.

Mike Myers of Hernly Associates has provided all the architectural work and Joni Hernly is overseeing compliance with the tax-credit process. Andy Fletcher is the work coordinator on site, and Brad also points to Harvey Brothers Construction as a big help to the project.

Two outstanding features of the project are the pressed-tin ceiling inside and the transom windows. Portions of the original ceiling were damaged or missing, so Brad hired W.F. Norman in Nevada, Mo., to reproduce the stamp and fabricate new matching material. The windows were cleaned up and masterfully restored by Dave Anderson of Globe Art Glass.

Thanks Brad for bringing this corner commercial property back to tip-top shape!

723 New York Street

City leaders looking to improve affordable housing options should be paying attention to what Marci Fransisco and Joe Bickford have been doing for some time now. Each year they rehabilitate an older property that has served its entire existence as an affordable house. Plenty of sweat equity, rehab knowledge and use of salvage materials help to ensure each house remains affordable as it is improved. When the work is done, they tackle the financing portion of our affordable housing problem. Many people cannot purchase a home because they lack funds for a downpayment or can’t qualify for a conventional mortgage. But Marci and Joe, once they find the person or family they wish to hand the house off to, work out a payment plan that allows them to buy the house on contract.

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For Joe in particular, this year’s project at 723 New York returns full circle to where this financing lesson was learned. This was the family home in which he grew up. Parents Gene and Dessi were renting when the owner decided to sell. When Gene and Dessi expressed interest but lacked the funds, the owner allowed them to purchase it on contract.

Joe’s many hours of work on the project this year brought back some childhood memories. His dad would walk to work at the box factory near the river. Joe enjoyed playing near the river and on the New York School playground. He would run errands for his mother to the grocery store on 416 E 9th Street, where Marty Olson’s shop is now. Working this summer in the living room, he could picture Dessi sitting in her recliner by the window where she would watch the trains roll by. He could still smell her cooking as he worked on the chimney in the kitchen.

Family ties to this project were made even stronger as longtime collaborator Ernie Fantini decided towards the end to move back to Delaware to care for his mother.  Ernie had begun working alongside Marci and Joe in 1991 on recommendation from master stonemason Keith Middlemas, and had participated on virtually every one of their projects since then.

With the Habitat for Humanity ReStore right across the alley, salvage opportunities were easy and included the sink, tub, tile, lighting fixtures and more.

723 New York offers Lawrence history as well as family history. Along with the house one door south, it was moved from another location by Park Hetzel in 1958. Behind both houses sits an old stone barn where the aunt of Langston Hughes kept her dairy cow.

In an era when traditional affordable starting homes in Lawrence core neighborhoods are being torn down and replaced with new homes that are unaffordable for many, Marci and Joe are preserving affordable options and maintaining the historic structures and character of  those neighborhoods. We’re sure LPA isn’t the only one who wants to say “thanks”!

New Edition of "Embattled Lawrence" Announced

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Longtime Lawrence historian Dennis Domer announced a new three-volume edition of his landmark book, “Embattled Lawrence” to a crowd of about 100 people at Cider Gallery Tuesday night. The three books are expected to be published over the next three years and cover many facets of Lawrence history, with contributions from other local historians. The work on the books can be supported through contributions of $100, $500 or $1,000 to the Douglas County Historical Society..