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You've touched on something deserving of its own thread (and a book or three as well, come to think of it).
What little I've seen of those Sears-Roebuck houses (Richard Nixon's first home and place of birth, for instance) impressed me as being typical structures of their time. But your post has me wondering if they were not quite up to snuff. Was it the materials? Or the sometimes-shoddy workmanship? (They were hammered together on site, often by their owners.)
They were kits, right? Pre-cut lumber shipped out on the railroad and assembled on site?
http://www.presidentsusa.net/nixonbirthplace.html
EDIT: Further reading suggests that the Nixon birthplace house is very likely a house built from a kit. But that it is a Sears-Roebuck kit is one of those things everybody knows that just ain't so. It seems likely that it was supplied by a long-defunct Los Angeles area maker of house kits. And it appears that there were several other house kit suppliers early in the last century, including Monkey Wards.
What little I've seen of those Sears-Roebuck houses (Richard Nixon's first home and place of birth, for instance) impressed me as being typical structures of their time. But your post has me wondering if they were not quite up to snuff. Was it the materials? Or the sometimes-shoddy workmanship? (They were hammered together on site, often by their owners.)
They were kits, right? Pre-cut lumber shipped out on the railroad and assembled on site?
http://www.presidentsusa.net/nixonbirthplace.html
EDIT: Further reading suggests that the Nixon birthplace house is very likely a house built from a kit. But that it is a Sears-Roebuck kit is one of those things everybody knows that just ain't so. It seems likely that it was supplied by a long-defunct Los Angeles area maker of house kits. And it appears that there were several other house kit suppliers early in the last century, including Monkey Wards.
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