small_e_900 (Ed),
Thanks for following our story. To put things in perspective about the family home currently on site, it is certainly not salvageable as a living space or even for storage for long term. I'm fairly sure that the structural integrity is not there to survive even a short move to a corner of the property. Granted, the family did live there for many years and it is inhabited currently, but the house is not a "period" piece from which there is much of value to be salvaged by our local preservation association. It was cobbled together over the years to be used as a residence and the family holds no sentimental value to the house itself. The working shop is the thing that is valuable to the family and the surrounding community. It speaks to the work Mr. Johnson carried on to support his family. It's the reason there are so many good memories associated with the five acres. Interestingly, when family members return, their first thought is of the shop, never of the house.
Tom knows more about this, but originally, the house was a one-story house. Mr. Johnson raised the house, digging a basement, most of which is still unfinished dirt floors/walls with the rest having a poured concrete floor. The washer/dryer, furnace and water heater are in the concrete basement area. At the same time he raised the house, he added a second level with two bedrooms (the main level of the house originally had a living room, 3 bedrooms, kitchen/dining room, with a small bathroom off to the side). He put an addition on the house to add a kitchen and enlarge the bathroom so that they had a tub (Lillie never failed to point out these additions to visitors because she was so proud that Virgil made these additions). Up until then, they heated up a huge cauldron of water once a week for bathing in the "dining room" where the cooking fireplace was located. By then, the oldest daughter was ready to graduate from high school and there were only a couple boys remaining at home.
So, for Tom, it is not out of character to raze this building. He'll, of course, salvage as much as possible, but the rest will be disposed of.
Chris