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This
Not-So-Old House
To Date Historic Homes, Owners
Try Reading the Wood Rings;
Meet the 'Dendrochronologist'
By KATHERINE ROSMAN
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
April 8, 2005; Page W1
For Steve Nicklin, buying a rural estate called Bowling Green
earned him the ultimate in historical-house bragging rights. The
$750,000, 4,200-square-foot home not only had some of its original
glass, floors and hardware intact, but records showed that George
Washington had dined there, and that it had been built in 1669
-- making it one of the oldest houses in Virginia.
Just to be sure, Mr. Nicklin called for a professional opinion.
Not an architect or residential genealogist, but a special technician
who bored into a couple of beams with a hole saw -- only to determine
that Bowling Green was 71 years younger than Mr. Nicklin had thought.
"I would have loved it if it was built in 1669," says
the advertising executive, who paid $2,000 for the service. "But
I want to be accurate from a historical perspective."
Is your old house as old as you think? Thanks to a little-known
science called dendrochronology, you can find out -- by hiring
a technician who takes samples from your wood beams, then counts
and measures the rings to determine when the wood was harvested.
A technique originally used by researchers interested in astronomy
and weather patterns, dendrochronology is catching on now with
old-house buffs.
In Rensselaer, N.Y., the research firm Hartgen Archeological says
75% of its architectural history clients are homeowners wanting
their homes "dendrodated"; five years ago, only a quarter
of their historical work came from such clients. One geographer
at the University of Tennessee fielded 10 requests to dendrodate
private homes last year -- up from one request in 2002. Coming
this spring in Massachusetts: a ring-counting symposium for the
public that includes historians, architects and a "tavern
dinner" with wood experts for $45.
The dendrodating movement is mostly being fueled by architecture-preservation
types, primarily those in the South and Northeast whose homes
are among the oldest in the country. Current consumer fascination
with early American history and the Founding Fathers is also playing
a role. But dendrochronologists -- earth scientists, historians
and others trained in the technique -- say the trend has a lot
to do with the cachet of owning an antique house. "It's very
sexy to be able to know the exact year your house was built,"
says Walter R. Wheeler, an architectural historian in New York.
The only problem: Instead of proving a house is as old as its
owner thinks, dendrodating in most cases shows buildings to be
decades younger. Joanne and Emerson Tuttle, for example, had always
thought their home in Ipswich, Mass., was built in the 1630s.
Mrs. Tuttle says she was excited to learn from oral histories
that the house -- two adjoining cottages -- might be the oldest
in all the areas settled by the English. But when the Tuttles'
home got a dendrochronology in December 2001, there was some harsh
news: The house was built with wood cut in the 1670s.
"Disappointed?" says Mrs. Tuttle, without being asked
to describe her reaction. "Of course I was."
Witch
Trials
Deane and Joan Kemper had a similar experience. The couple moved
cross country, from San Francisco to Andover, Mass., five years
ago after buying a house with a colorful past: Its original owner
had accused a neighbor of witchcraft at the time of the Salem
witch trials.
But during a dendrodating filmed by the PBS show "History
Detectives," the Kempers in 2003 learned the house hadn't
been constructed until 1711 -- well after the trials were over.
By 2004, the couple had listed the house for $620,000 and relocated
to South Carolina. "I think that had something to do with
it," says Mrs. Kemper. "We live on a golf course here."
The Kemper's new home was built in 1979. The Andover house is
still for sale, at $449,000.
Dendrodating goes back to the turn of the last century when an
astronomer in Flagstaff, Ariz., started looking into how weather
and solar patterns were reflected in the ring patterns of trees.
Archeologists have long used it too, to establish the age of everything
from Native American ruins to antebellum homes. But it wasn't
until the process proved workable in less arid climates that architectural
historians started avidly applying dendrochronology to residences
in the East.
Dendrodating is fairly straightforward, and not all that expensive
-- about $2,000-$3,000 in most cases. (The University of Arizona's
Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research in Tucson will run the test for
as little as $250 if you bring in your own samples). The dendrochronologist
uses a coring hole saw to extract a sample the diameter of a dime
from a wood beam in the house. The rings on the core are then
counted and measured, and their width mapped out so the dendrochronologist
can compare the data to that of other trees in the region. (In
case you slept through sixth-grade science, the more rain and
sunlight a region gets in a year, the wider the tree rings. Rings
also reflect trauma like fire and drought.) Getting the results
takes weeks, or more.
But what sounds like an innocuous process is putting the scientists
who embrace it out on a limb. Last year, University of Tennessee
professor Henri Grissino-Mayer finished dendrodating Rocky Mount,
a log-cabin complex long believed to have housed the territorial
government before Tennessee was founded. Instead, Mr. Grissino-Mayer's
testing showed that timber in Rocky Mount was felled between 1827
and 1830. That was at least 60 years later than thought, and suggested
that the state government had been created elsewhere. (Gary Walrath,
executive director of Rocky Mount Museum, says not all historians
accept Mr. Grissino-Mayer's findings.)
In an earlier study, Mr. Grissino-Mayer concluded that a building
in Cocke County, Tenn., long believed to have been used by settlers
to hide from Cherokee Indians in the 18th century, was actually
a pig sty built in 1860. "We're not very popular," he
says.
It's a similar story in New Paltz, N.Y., where the Huguenot Historical
Society is half-way through commissioning dendrodatings of nine
structures and stone homes it owns in the area. The Jean Hasbrouck
House, it turns out, was completed in 1721 -- not 1712 as long
believed -- and was likely built by a son, not the family patriarch.
Ditto for the Abraham Hasbrouck House -- the timeline now suggests
the house was built by a son. The discoveries are causing some
"head -scratching" among Hasbrouck descendants and other
locals, says Susie Wilkening, a spokeswoman for the society, who
thinks the affected buildings will eventually be renamed to reflect
the actual builders. "It's going to take some getting used
to," she says.
Market
Value
Having your house dendrodated rarely affects its market value,
since the difference of a couple of decades one way or the other
-- the typical dendrochronology age correction -- isn't enough
to derail a sale, real-estate agents say. In fact, the historic
home market has been so strong since the mid-1990s, the value
of well-located historic homes is appreciating as fast as, or
faster than, luxury homes in parallel markets, according to Joseph
Carini, the president of a real-estate firm in Great Barrington,
Mass.
Many homeowners like Dan Chaika in Newcastle, Maine, say they
commission dendrochronologies just for the pleasure of knowing.
While waiting for the results of a dendrodating ordered in November,
Mr. Chaika is outfitting the 18th-century house with wireless
Internet access and installing modern bathrooms and kitchen. "If
only these guys 200 years ago knew what was in their house now,"
says Mr. Chaika.
Write to Katherine Rosman at katherine.rosman@wsj.com
There are dozens of specialists around the country who help homeowners
learn the history of their homes and land. Below, a handful who
perform everything from genealogical studies on buildings to dendrochronologies.
Keep in mind that old deeds and tax records can be misleading
-- just because a deed notes a structure sitting on your land
in 1750 doesn't mean it's referring to your exact house:
Dendrochronologists/Architectural
Historians
MICHAEL WORTHINGTON AND DANIEL MILES, Oxfordshire, England
www.dendrochronology.com
These dendrochronologists date structures throughout Great Britain
and New England. They divvy travel expenses among customers.
NEIL LARSON, Woodstock, N.Y.
845-679-5054
An architectural historian who has found several Hudson River
Valley historic buildings to be a generation younger than thought.
"Seventeenth century houses are dropping by the wayside,"
says Mr. Larson.
CAMILLE WELLS, Richmond, Va.
camillewells@earthlink.net
An assistant professor of history at the College of William and
Mary in Williamsburg, Ms. Wells focuses on colonial homes in the
Chesapeake Bay area -- and how their design and construction reflect
upon the economy and culture of the time.
GREG HUBER, Macungie, Pa.
www.past-perspectives.com
A barn specialist, Mr. Huber is working with a realtor in New
York state who offers dendrochronology to historic home buyers.
Building Genealogists
KELSEY & ASSOCIATES, Washington/Baltimore
www.washingtonhistory.com
Prices range from $735 to $2,500 for services that include house
histories, commercial-building histories and National Register
of Historic Places application writing.
TIM GREGORY, Pasadena, Calif.
626-792-7465
Mr. Gregory is partly known for his work preserving Janes Village,
a historic neighborhood north of Pasadena. Mr. Gregory calls himself
"The Building Biographer."

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