608-1 Myrtle Avenue
PhotosLegacy VersionGeneral Information
No: 608-1
Street: Myrtle
House Name:
Historic Plaque:
Owner Info: N
Built: 1930
Sec: 23
Subdivision: C. R. Stuntz's Terrace Park
Lot: 10, 11, 12
Architect:
Cont/build: John Busam
Description:
2 story white stucco Colonial with 2 car garage underneath,
hip roof: living room,
dining room, kitchen with central hall and side screened porch downstairs, 3 bedrooms,
study and bath upstairs.
Owners: 2F
Original Use: Residential
Current Use: torn down (see 608-2)
CHANGES:
As Built: Y
Added To: N
Subtracted From: Y
Replaced: Y
Description Of Changes: 1995/96 - 1930 house destroyed and 608-2 Myrtle built.
Stories:
Story 1: Henry and Sarah Kurtz both sang in the St. Thomas Church choir for many years. Sarah was from the White Mountains in NH and went back there every summer. The last memory of Sarah by a neighbor on a very snowy day just before she moved to Dayton OH was of Sarah calling in her son, David, for maple sugar on snow - certainly a New England tradition.Story 2: John Busam, builder, owned several properties in the Myrtle/Home block. This house was built for his daughter who was married to Fred Schmidt, interior decorator in Oakley. John Busam also built 315 Harvard for John Schmidt's aunt and uncle H. A. Ratterman. Mrs. Ratterman and Mrs. Fred Schmidt must have been sisters, daughters of John Busam. John Schmidt was 5 years old when his parents moved into the 608 Myrtle home. He once told Patti Normile that one summer he had the job of stenciling house numbers on the edge of the street. I wonder if that was when Terrace Park houses first got street numbers. In later life John Schmidt (now dead) had a superb eye for mixing paint colors - a real art!