Bringing Back Sligo

Breathing new life into an Italianate home in Fredericksburg, Virginia.
Bringing Back Sligo
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  • Author Archives: Lauren Tepaske

    • The Grounds

      Posted at 9:25 am by Lauren Tepaske, on July 30, 2018

      One of the things that really appealed to Marcus when he found this property is that it is surrounded by the City of Fredericksburg’s Parks and Rec fields.  The house itself sits on an unheard of 1.5 acres within the city limits and next to that are soccer fields, a walking trail, and a public pool.  Personally, this was less than appealing to me.  I don’t necessarily care to wake-up to the sounds of early morning soccer games but I’m also not what one would call a “morning person” so pretty much any sound (with the exception of coffee brewing) is annoying.

      Along with the soccer fields, having a pool within walking distance is also appealing to Marcus and most definitely appealing to our girls but it all sounds tedious to me.  Personally, I’ve been having daydreams about lounging next to our own pool which would also serve as a babysitter in the years to come (because, let’s be honest, we are going to live for the rest of our lives in this house).

      Naturally, having been vacant for 10 years the 1.5 acres of the property itself is very overgrown though there is a beautiful magnolia tree that I can’t wait to free.  I also hope to bring-in my horticulturist sister-in-law (hi, Eleis!) to help lay-out a plan for a naturally beautiful and ecologically friendly landscape design.  We have a lot of work ahead of us.

      Posted in Grounds | 1 Comment
    • The Cottage and Barn

      Posted at 7:41 am by Lauren Tepaske, on July 28, 2018

      I realized that I haven’t even mentioned the other two existing structures on the property:  The cottage, built in 1950, and the barn, build date unknown.  It should be noted that “structure” is used quite loosely in terms of both of these buildings.  The cottage has a gaping hole in the roof and has been open to the elements for an unknown amount of time and it would take nothing less than the flutter of a butterfly wing to bring down the barn.

      We have every intention of saving both of these structures although Marcus is much more capable of seeing the potential in them than I am.  The cottage has most certainly been home to a number of homeless and there is a family of groundhogs in the attic (because why burrow in the ground when you can live in a house).  The barn requires a hard hat to enter (not really but, really) so I only tentatively walked a few feet in and then left.  To be perfectly honest, together they make the main house look immaculate.

      So, without further ado, here are reasons number two and number three why I was hesitant to purchase this property:

      201807 - back of cottage

      The back of the cottage, July 2018.

      201807 - barn

      The barn, July 2018.

      Posted in Barn, Cottage, History | 0 Comments
    • The House Wants Blood

      Posted at 8:00 am by Lauren Tepaske, on July 27, 2018

      I have jokingly stated that this house is haunted but, in all seriousness, this house is haunted.  At the very least there is a petrified British soldier lurking around, thinking he’s still alive, fighting a war.  This doesn’t even take into account the people who most certainly passed away peacefully in their beds and whose souls wander the halls of the home they once inhabited.  While the current house did not witness the horrors of war who’s to say what negative energy may be within the structure and land.

      The day we closed on Sligo Marcus took his brother, Jonas, to see the house.  It’s probably worth mentioning at this point that the house has been vacant for 10 years and, as such, has suffered it’s fair share of vandalism (which is only one of the myriad of reasons I was hesitant to buy this house).  So, when Marcus and Jonas arrived at the house they noticed a window had been newly broken.  I don’t know why Marcus felt compelled to fix the window (the house did it) because half of the windows are broken anyway and going to be replaced so what’s one more?  But, attempt to fix it he did and, in doing so, accidentally hit his right pointer finger on the broken glass which promptly “gushed blood” (his words, not mine and Lord Almighty am I glad I wasn’t there).

      You can then imagine my surprise when a few hours later I called to ask how the closing went and discovered Marcus and Jonas were at the hospital because Marcus needed stitches.  Imagine my even further surprise when I called hours after that and discovered they were still at the hospital because, as it turns out, Marcus had not only cut his finger he had severed the tendon by 50%.

      There are a few of you reading today that know my husband, Marcus, on a personal level and there are a few of you who do not.  For those of you who do not know Marcus very well, know this:  Through the years he has been known to break bones, need stitches, collapse lungs (twice), electrocute himself (resulting in hospitalization), and, in general seriously injure himself frequently.  In 2010 he fractured his skull and six weeks later fractured his collar bone.  Since then it’s mostly been black eyes and maybe some stitches here and there but this is all to say that Marcus was long overdue for another serious injury.

      Marcus’s injury has since resulted in a surgery which has left his right hand incapacitated at the moment.  The timing couldn’t be worse as we gear-up to move and still have many, many projects to finish at the current house (remember that fixer upper before this fixer upper).  Will the house be happy and leave us alone after this?  Or is this just the beginning?

      finger laceration

      Thank you, Marcus and Jonas, for sharing this extremely close-up picture of a gaping wound.

      splint

      Marcus’s current situation.  I can’t lie, I laughed a little when I saw this picture of Marcus’s hand after the surgery.

      Posted in Haunted, Injuries, Main House | 1 Comment
    • The History

      Posted at 3:16 pm by Lauren Tepaske, on July 26, 2018

      Did anyone else start humming “The Addams Family” theme song when they saw that house?  No?  Just me?  Given the age of the home and the history of the land I’m just going to assume that one day I’ll be home alone and I’ll hear a little boy upstairs, bouncing a ball, asking me to play with him.

      ghostly boy

      Please do not ask me to play with you…

      Speaking of the history of the land and house, I have done some research and all online therefore it’s not completely reliable but I’ll proceed as if it is.

      The original owner of the land was Roger Dixon and the oldest part of the home’s foundation that still exists today dates from about 1770.  Apparently there is a piece of the cellar wall that is 18 inches thick and which is the original portion of the house.  As I have spent all of 10 minutes in the cellar I cannot say where that may be definitively but once the house is a little more walkable I’ll be sure to investigate.

      I digress.  Roger Dixon was a businessman and owned a mill and the area referred to as “Hazel Hill” in Fredericksburg, VA.  Upon his death in 1771, the property passed to Roger Dixon’s widow who eventually sold the portion of the land known as “Sligo” to Charles Mortimer, physician to Mary Washington and first mayor of Fredericksburg.  In 1786, Charles Mortimer sold Sligo to Michael Ryan.

      From here things get tricky.  It would appear that Charles Mortimer owned Sligo along with two others:  Lucy Minor and William Smith and somehow a man named Gen. Posey comes into the picture.  I have to be honest, I am not entirely sure what happens at this point with the property.  The more I try and comprehend what happened the longer I stare at the computer screen and ohmygodmybrainhurts, am I drooling?  Let’s just skip this part as there are a lot of deaths and widows and deeds.

      The next owner of Sligo is John Lewis, Fielding Lewis’s oldest son, who purchases the home from Gen. Posey in 1794.  However, John Lewis and his family do not own the property for long because in 1795 John Ferneyhough Sr., an immigrant from England, purchases the home and it stays in the Ferneyhough family until 1903.

      John Ferneyhough Sr. was a coach and carriage maker who aided in the Revolutionary War.  He also owned a public ice house which sat on today’s Sophia Street in Fredericksburg, VA.  From what I gather the original house was a one story, wood frame home and John Ferneyhough Sr. owned over 30 slaves.

      Ferneyhough chair at The Mary Washington House of the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities

      Chair of John Ferneyhough which can be seen in the Mary Washington house.  Image retrieved 31 July 2018 from http://jfjm100.com/the-virginia-museum/the-peter-scott-shop.html

      None of the documents I have seen indicate how many homes have stood on the site.  Soon after the end of the Civil War the Ferneyhough family left for Richmond and did not return to their home until 1865.  In 1889, the home that stands today was built.

      In 1903, Hazel Hill and Sligo was sold to Henry Warden though it was at Hazel Hill that Henry Warden and his family lived.  Grace Warden, Henry Warden’s daughter, married Sydney Shannon and in 1907, Sligo was occupied by P. L. Shannon, Syndey Shannon’s father.  With that being said, both Hazel Hill and Sligo fell under the name of the Grace Warden Shannon Estate.  For those Fredericksburgians reading, the name Shannon may be familiar as it is Syndey Shannon, Jr. who brought to fruition Shannon Airport and who once owned the golf course that the lovely Central Park sits upon.

      There were rumors many years ago that the property was used as a hospital for wounded British soldiers during the Revolutionary War.  It was more probable that it was used as a hospital for the Gunnery Factory which sat near by.  It is also said to have been a hospital for Federal soldiers and the land was used for drills.

      Finally, I leave you with this little tidbit:  “One informant, Mrs. Daniel, says that as a child…she was told that on the grounds of “Sligo”…was found a prisoner (presumably British) who had been put in an iron cage and left to die.  She said as well as she could remember he had been petrified.”  So…yeah.  Does anyone have a room I can stay in?

      N. M. Deaderick, 2 June 1937, Works Progress Administration of Virginia Historical Inventory, “Sligo” – Site.

      N. M. Deaderick, 14 June 1937, Works Progress Administration of Virginia Historical Inventory, “Sligo.”

       

      Posted in History, Main House | 6 Comments
    • In the Beginning

      Posted at 1:53 pm by Lauren Tepaske, on July 25, 2018

      This is Marcus:

      Marcus

      Son, husband, and father extraordinaire.

      This is Lauren:

      Lauren

      Daughter, wife, and the world’s okayest mom (also a fan of self-deprecation and the author of this story).

      Currently, Marcus and Lauren live in a fixer-upper they purchased three years ago because Marcus wanted a project to fill his time between a full-time job and raising two little girls (if you’re sensing an eye-roll at this point you would be correct).  Three years later, and Marcus and Lauren are still living in a fixer-upper though it recently occurred to Lauren that withholding sex might have proven to be a good motivator.  Granted, the roof is no longer leaking, there is flooring throughout the home, and the back deck doesn’t have a two foot wide gap at the door effectively resulting in a deathtrap but, the pressure is on because Marcus, Lauren, and girls are gearing up for their third move in five years and this one is a doozy.

      Main House

      “Sligo” as it stands in July, 2018.

      Back of Sligo

      The back of Sligo, July, 2018.

      37.245747 -76.646810
      Posted in History | 3 Comments
    Newer posts →
    • Recent Posts

      • Preoccupied December 20, 2021
      • The “Haunting” of Sligo August 4, 2021
      • Rehabilitation Tax Credits April 27, 2021
      • Put Me in Blogger Jail April 6, 2021
      • Virginia Historic Registry and the National Landmark Registry August 6, 2020
      • My Good Boy, Axel July 14, 2020
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