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ON A Victorian High
Old House Journal
|October 2025
Inspired by their penchant for touring 19th-century house museums, a couple went looking for a spectacular mansion.

LEFT When these owners found the house, it wore heavy layers of white paint, inside and out. Removing it was a long, arduous process.
RIGHT When the house was built, during the 1870s, the staircase was at the center. Its orientation changed with the 1880s remodeling. The front doors open to a decorative vestibule and this second set of interior doors.
WHEN CARLA MINOSH, a nurse practitioner, and Tom Belles, a corporate attorney, were looking for a restoration project, their hearts were set on a Victorian house. “I love the over-the-top-ness of Victorian architecture,” Carla says. “It’s stimulating.”
“It was an interesting time in American history,” her husband adds. “The period after the Civil War was a time of growth and optimism, and the houses reflect that.”

At the entry, the interior set of doors had lost their stained-glass panels and transom. Homeowner Tom Belles made new glass panels with a design patterned after the intact exterior transom.

Fireplaces date to the 1870s construction. 'Seymour' pattern Anaglypta is hung over a Gothic dado of Lincrusta. The frieze is 'Diana' Lincrusta, polychromed. Herter Bros. furniture joins an 1876 Italian marble statue.

This story is from the October 2025 edition of Old House Journal.
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