Kirk Haines
- 1883
Eventually sold his land to Seabury and Gardner, and Edward Gardner built his house on the former VB ranch.
John Griffin made a lot of babies with three different wives.
David Griffin was the father of the Griffin brothers who moved to Bear Creek.
David is buried somewhere on Bear Creek.
Bear Creek
According to a research paper written by Amy Green, from LaGrange, in 1977:
Curtis and his family lived in a log cabin which still stands about 100 yards from the Griffin House. This cabin is the oldest building on Bear Creek.
The house had indoor plumbing with pressurized running water.
Spring water was surge fed via a simple siphon to a ram pump that used the energy of the falling water to pump a fraction of it into a cistern high on the west hill. That cistern was then connected via buried pipe to a cistern on the hill north of the house, and that cistern was piped to the house to deliver gravity pressurized water.
Artesian Well
Former Ram Pump Location
Cistern
Cistern
Spring water was routed through the yard, into a
2
(not to scale)
Dimensions are approximately 30' x 40' in front, and 24' x 40' in back
Built from locally quarried stone
In the front part, walls are approximately 18" thick.
In the back, walls are approximately 12" thick.
Quarry location?
Perhaps sources from surface deposits along the exposed ridge?
According to the Amy Green research paper:
In building the Griffin House, Gardner imported masons,
along with a hardwood stair rail from England, which arrived either
too small or damaged. He sent for a second one and it is still in the
Griffin House today.
Whether imported from England or not, who knows? We've also been told that the actual problem with the first staircase was that it turned the wrong direction.
The Hi Kelly house, near Chugwater, was being built in the same timeframe. Before that house was demolished, the staircase in it was salvaged, and is in the Baptist Church in Chugwater now. It looks rather familiar. It just turns in the opposite direction.
The decorative detail towards the top of the walls
The fireplace is a shallow
In the kitchen, looking into the dining room. At some
Unfinished full sized attic above the front portion
Total potential indoor space, including attic, is around 4000 ft sq.
Stones of the house are cemented with a lime based mortar.
Joints are raised, and are sometimes faked for appearance's sake on the front of the house.
Contrast to the joints on the sides of the house. Less uniform stone sizes, and no raised bead.
Slowly doing some mortar repointing and repair.
Some experimentation.
Modern lime mortars are very white. Dye to match
Dad likes red. Can raised joint be reasonably reproduced, in red?
Has weathered for 13 years quite well.