View of our house at 5433 Kirby Road (1940s-50s numbering system), about
1950. Living room, dining room, kitchen, bathroom, 2 bedrooms, no
basement. And a small utility room with a concrete tub where my mom did the
laundry with brown soap and a washboard. The house cost $7000 in 1947 when
it was new. This was one of very few of the GI-Bill cubes left standing
when I first wrote this page (according to Google street view). My Dad and
I built the addition on the back ourselves, with the help of a professional
carpenter named Julian. Forest in the background, brand-new 1950 Ford in
the driveway, our first car. There were no sewers then so we had a septic
tank under the front lawn. Wild onions grew with the grass, and my Mom had
mint planted around the perimeter of the house but I don't see it in this
picture. Next door: our neighbors the Casons, a retired couple whose phone
we used until we got our own. A lot of sharing in those early postwar
years.... The first family that got a TV set was suddenly very
popular, everybody went to their house to watch Martha Raye or Sid Caesar or
a Washington Senators ball game. Nobody had air conditioning though,
so TV parties in the summer would be cooled by oscillating electric fans
with ice-cube trays in front. The normal thing, however, was to stay home
in the evenings and listen to radio dramas: Lone Ranger, Dragnet, Gang
Busters, X Minus One,
...
The original house was replaced in 2015 at age 68 by a frame house at 1849
Kirby Road (new numbering system), valued
by Zillow
at $1,812,900 as of late 2023.