Urgent Call for Support!
The State Historical Society of Iowa has extended our access to the remaining money of our emergency acquisition and stabilization grant—about $7,400.00 of matching money that we can use for stabilization projects. We need to raise the matching $7,400.00 in cash-only donations and spend that on qualifying stabilization projects by November 30, 2011. Therefore we need larger (tax-deductible) donations immediately in order to get the matching state reimbursements, arrange and complete the projects. This matching grant doubles your contribution! Please donate as much and as soon as you can. Please make checks payable to Preservation Iowa with “Ira Sturdevant House Fund” in the memo line or cover letter. Mail to: Ira Sturdevant House; Preservation Iowa; P.O. Box 814; Mt. Pleasant, IA 52641.
The Ira & Asenath Sturdevant House
Ira and Asenath Sturdevant House, circa 1900.
Built of brick in 1855 and 1856, the Ira and Asenath Sturdevant house is the oldest surviving dwelling in Waverly, Iowa. Sold outside the Sturdevant family after Ira’s widow, Asenath, died in 1867, descendants repurchased it at a sheriff’s sale on April 14, 2009, loaning the money to the Iowa Historic Preservation Alliance (now Preservation Iowa) who will own it until it has its own separate non-profit organization.
Led by descendants of Ira and Asenath, the project will restore the house at 502 1st Street SW to approximate its original appearance. When finished, it will be opened to the public as a community, educational, living-history site.
A Living History Project
For Waverly and for Iowa
The June 2008 Cedar River flood filled the original cellar and damaged 150-year-old plaster and bricks on the first floor. Grant funds sponsored mold remediation in the cellar during summer 2009. In May 2010, project members scraped plaster, mortar, and crumbling brick from the brick that will survive and repaired exterior features. In July 2010, we began to remove modern wallboard and framing from the first-floor interior, exposing door casings, window frames, the kitchen chimney, and the original location of the stairs to the upper floor. In October, project members painted the trim to preserve it from further disintegration. During the fall Waverly salvage campaign by Preservation Iowa and AmeriCorps youth, they set aside materials salvaged from other flood-damaged, historic houses in Waverly for later use in the Sturdevant house project.
