
Couple brings Lake Bluff history to life with renovation of a Mawman Avenue home
In 2023, Chris and Brittany Davis, owners of Davis Home Renovations, Inc., a well-respected local contracting firm, bought the home at 775 Mawman Avenue in Lake Bluff
The house, Chris Davis says, according to local legend, is considered to be the second oldest home in Lake Bluff. The home was built before the Civil War, when Lake Bluff was known by another name, Rockland.
While other builders were talking about a tear down, Davis says, he and his wife decided to save the house, utilizing his years of expertise in historic renovations.
'She was in pretty bad shape,' Davis said, 'but in our family if there is one thing we love, it's a project.'
The property was purchased with the goal that it would become the Davis family home and they called it Mawman Manor.
'As a kid growing up in Lake Bluff, I used to ride my bike past this house, the cool house with the barn down by the railroad tracks, which even then seemed sort of overgrown and hidden,' Davis said.
On Sunday afternoon, the Davis family, Chris, Brittany, and their three sons Bryan, Brent and Christopher, held an open house at Mawman Manor.
According to Brittany Davis, friends and neighbors have taken great interest in the renovation and there has also been great interest from the community.
'An open house gives us a way to share the culmination of the years' worth of after-work hours and weekend work it took to complete the house,' Brittany Davis said.
Sunday's event also featured a few treasures unearthed during the demolition of the house — a gold tooth, a Daughters of American Revolution pin, a June,1903 issue of the Lake Forester, an old postcard, and a cannon ball, along with several other items.
Early on, Davis says, they consulted with the Lake Bluff History Museum.
'This house is actually an important part of the pre-Civil War, pioneer history of the town, built just around 1860, after railroad tracks were put in connecting the area to Chicago,' Lake Bluff History Museum president and historian, Kathleen O'Hara said.
O'Hara says the oldest home in Lake Bluff is at 666 Mawman Avenue, where a man named Henry Ostrander, built a tavern and boarding house for the railroad workers in 1855.
According to the History of Mawman Manor booklet distributed during Sunday's event, the original carriage barn is first shown on the 1860 plat along with the E. Hart Street. Edwin Hart originally built the home as a one-room structure known as the E. Hart General Store and Post Office before Lake Bluff was even Lake Bluff.
The main door faced east towards the railroad tracks with a second entrance on the southwest corner. The home sits on 10×10 hand hewn logs with a field stone and brick foundation. It is a balloon framed home constructed with hand cut, rough dimensional lumber that was notched into the logs, a practice used before nails became part of construction.
'What began as a one-room general store and post office has undergone many renovations and additions over the years,' Davis said.
Davis says that in addition to their research and conversations with historians, taking the house down to its shell has revealed some of the history of the house.
Additions to the single-story room were added sometime between 1860 and 1903, then in 1903 a second story was added, and in the early 1930s a third addition doubled the size of the home on the first and second floors.
Davis says now that the house is done, they will move into phase 2 of the project which will focus on exterior landscaping.
Today, 775 Mawman Avenue in Lake Bluff has undergone a contemporary transformation and stands as a 3,050 square feet, 5-bedroom, 3.5-bath, house, with a finished attic, a cellar, and full barn which conveniently doubles as a 3-car garage.
During renovations, Davis Home Renovations, Inc., collaborated with Laura Kaufmann of LBK Design Group of Lake Forest, who worked on floor plans, cabinetry, elevations, and other design aspects of the project.
Kaufmann says she is honored to work on such an iconic Lake Bluff property, which she describes as Victorian in the details and Farmhouse in the layout.
'The place has undergone so many different lives so many different variations, and renovations it's wonderful to bring it back to what a contemporary family needs, while paying homage to the past,' Kaufmann said.
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Chicago Tribune
a day ago
- Chicago Tribune
Flossmoor Juneteenth celebration continues to grow in fifth year
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Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Are banks, post offices open on Juneteenth? Here's what's closed on the federal holiday
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Los Angeles Times
2 days ago
- Los Angeles Times
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The museum's archaeologists uncovered the original church's foundation in 2021, prompting Pastor Davis to say then that it was 'a rediscovery of the humanity of a people.' 'This helps to erase the historical and social amnesia that has afflicted this country for so many years,' he said. The archaeologists also located 62 graves, while experts examined three sets of remains and linked them to the congregation. Scientists at William & Mary's Institute for Historical Biology said the teeth of a Black male in his teens indicated some kind of stress, such as malnutrition or disease. 'It either represents the conditions of an enslaved childhood or far less likely — but possibly — conditions for a free African American in childhood,' Michael Blakey, the institute's director, said in 2023. In the early 1800s, the congregation acquired the property for the original church from a local white merchant. 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White planters and business owners were often aware of the large gatherings, which technically were banned, while there's documentary evidence of some people getting caught, Gary said. Following Nat Turner's rebellion in 1831, which killed more than 50 white people in Virginia's Southampton County, the congregation was led by white pastors, though it was Black preachers doing the work, Gary said. The tornado destroyed the structure a few years later. The museum is rebuilding the 1805 meetinghouse at its original site and will use common wood species from the time: pine, poplar and oak, said Matthew Webster, the museum's executive director of architectural preservation and research. The boards are already being cut. Construction is expected to finish next year. The windows will have shutters but no glass, Webster said, while a concrete beam will support the new church directly over its original foundation, preserving the bricks. 'When we build the earliest part of the church, we will put bricks on their sides and will lay them in that strange way because that tells the story of those individuals struggling to quickly get their church up,' Webster said. 'And then when we build the addition, it will be this formal foundation that really shows the establishment of the church.' Janice Canaday, who traces her lineage to First Baptist, said Williamsburg's Black community never forgot its original location or that its graves were paved over in the 1950s. 'They will never be able to expunge us from the landscape,' said Canaday, who is also the museum's African American community engagement manager. 'It doesn't matter if you take out the building. It doesn't matter if you ban books. You will never be able to pull that root up because that root is so deep.' Finley writes for the Associated Press.