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Talk about old-school. According to the cover story in this weekend’s City section, the house at 312 Clinton Street in Cobble Hill has been in the same family for five generations, and it’s filled with mementos (“collections of bottled fainting remedies, thigh-high men’s socks, and mint-green sales slips for coal”) and obsolete appliances, like an Easy brand washing machine built around 1940. The house was purchased in 1866 by the great-great-great-grandmother of its current resident, Nora Geraghty. Geraghty says the house’s collection of antiques and lack of some modern amenities have occasionally made her feel like she couldn’t “live a modern, normal life,” but that the way it connects her to her family’s past ultimately justifies the clutter and lack of some mod cons. The way I feel about my great-great-grandmother, says Geraghty, my great-great-grandchildren will feel about me, unless New York is gone by the time they’re born. Because in a thousand years, this place will never be sold. Are there readers who have been living in the same house as their ancestors and can relate to Geraghty’s reluctance to change her property?
The Ghosts of Clinton Street [NY Times]
Photo of 312 Clinton by Kate Leonova for Property Shark.


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  1. 11:06 – Sounds like its time to ditch the old stuff and get something that reflects you. Our place was full of stuff that that came from the “Early Mom & Dad” period. We recently renovated and gave everything we could away and threw out what no one wanted. Bought everything new (made some really happy salespeople). Now our place is ours. It feels much more comfortable when your home is filled with things you picked out.

  2. If 11:51 were a regular reader of Brownstoner, s/he would know that regular readers of this blog value absolutely EVERY building, appliance, fixture or door handle over 50 years old. You’ve found your soul mates here, chap!

  3. 11:51 may be a European snob, but that doesn’t make her/him wrong. We do put a monetary value on everything, and appreciation of the past is kicked to the curb, over some cash, 8 times out of 10. Sad but true.

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