Subject

DT

Restored DeTurk kitchen door jambs (2009)
Photos 1001.01.135

Kitchen door jambs and sill

DeTurk · 08/13/2009

Digital photograph showing detail view of lower segment of DTR09PH50--1001.01.134, showing receding water table. Water table at kitchen door sill dropped about 6 inches during 3 days without rain. Pumping after heavy rainfall had only temporary effect on lowering the water table inside or outside the entry threshold because of the continuous percolation

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DeTurk stone sill and restored jambs at kitchen door (2009)
Photos 1001.01.137

Kitchen door sill and jamb feet

DeTurk · 08/13/2009

Interior view of door sill and jamb feet [detail of DTR09PH52--1001.01.136]. The restored south jamb is set on the original stone door sill, which exhibits a full-width transverse fracture [visible between plank and left (north) door jamb]. This fracture is probably related to the deflection and dislocations in the east kitchen wall masonry and timber suppor

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DeTurk, detail of exterior view of restored kitchen door sill & jambs (2009
Photos 1001.01.144

Kitchen door sill and jamb feet

DeTurk · 09/03/2009

Exterior view of restored east cellar door sill and jambs. The stone sill [original] was shifted 2-3 inches to the right [north] to accommodate the adjusted jamb alignments [see DTR09PH4--1001.01.124 for discussion of the effects of this relocation of the sill on the relationship between the doorway jambs, lintel, sill, abutments and hood outlookers, and DTR

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Detail of DeTurk kitchen door sill and root cellar vault abutment (2009)
Photos 1001.01.130

Kitchen door sill and vault abutment foundation

DeTurk · 7/27/2009

Interior view of southern end of original stone sill [center left] and foundation of vault abutment pier [right half of photo] at east entry to ground-level kitchen. Irregular block in upper left corner is a later plinth ["pedestal stone"] for the south door jamb, with barely visible anchor-pin mortise [small brown circle just to right of mossy green face of

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DeTurk, East kitchen cellar entry (2009)
Photos 1001.01.128

Kitchen door sills and plinths

DeTurk · 7/21/2009

East kitchen door sills and jamb plinths. The half-millstone stoop{1} visible here extending from barrow wheel at left across upper half of photo [see DTR09PH43--1001.01.127] is higher than the earliest entry elevation; the later plinth-blocks [right center and lower left] are set on the original (split) sill at bottom of photo, which is 6-7 inches above

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Deturk House, lower-level kitchen doorway and door, multiple images.
Photos 1001.01.028

Kitchen doorway

DeTurk · August 1958

Digital image (Image#1) of photographic print showing exterior of frame and doorway to lower ground-level kitchen of DeTurk House. Details include: figural folk paintings of birds/animals on door; oak frame; softwood door set at higher elevation than original position as grade was raised to mitigate flooding; vertical framing members of pent hood braces

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DeTurk, east kitchen cellar entry (2009)
Photos 1001.01.127

Kitchen doorway

DeTurk · 07/21/2009

East kitchen cellar entry after excavation to the original stone door sill. The half-millstone stoop [location detail in photo DTR09PH44--1001.01.128 and see note {1} to DTR09PH41--1001.01.125] along the lower edge of the photo [left of the barrow's wheel] is at an intermediate elevation between the original door-sill [with dark transverse split] and the

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Exterior view of DeTurk masonry cellar-drain conduit
Photos 1001.01.172

Kitchen drain stonework exterior to north wall

DeTurk · December 3, 2009

Exterior portion of masonry drain-tunnel from DeTurk cellar-kitchen. Further excavation at this site uncovered stones aligned with the skewed course of the tunnel through the wall [see DTR09PH85--1001.01.174--right edge of photo], indicating a drainage course angled toward the creek. Larry Ward, 2010

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Partially removed DeTurk interior wall under kitchen window
Photos 1001.01.157

Kitchen exterior window sill and interior wall during restoration

DeTurk · 07/30/2009

Interior foundation wall under east kitchen window after removal of displaced stonework. The interior layer of stones will be re-laid and the deformed inner oak sill replicated in its original form [see DTR09PH11--1001.01.092 for pre-restoration view of this sill].

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DeTurk cellar floor drain opening, interior (2009)
Photos 1001.01.169

Kitchen floor drain during restoration

DeTurk · December 4, 2009

Interior view (inlet) of enlarged drain opening prior to restoration of masonry "tunnel" through east wall of lower ground-level kitchen. This drain-inlet site and the 1970s terra-cotta pipe through the north gable wall [see DTR09PH82--1001.01.171 left side of photo] were buried under the stratified floor-fill (see DTR09PH14--1001.01.095 for a pre-restora

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Floor-fill layers & early brick paving in DeTurk kitchen celllar, 769 (2009
Photos 1001.01.234

Kitchen floor fill and brick paving

DeTurk · 07/21/2009

The earthen layers appearing in these two photos, of varying compositions of clay, sand, gravel, and [probably] floor sweepings, document the incremental raising of the floor levels in the kitchen and "root" cellars as occasional creek floods, and frequent water table incursions, inundated the working kitchen and food storage areas. Brick floor paving and fi

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Limestone vein in Little Manatawny Creek east of DeTurk House (2009)
Photos 1001.01.181

Limestone vein in creek bed.

DeTurk · 09/03/2009

Limestone vein ["shelf" or "bench"] in bed of Little Manatawny Creek east [downstream] from the DeTurk House. This bedrock layer ["shelf"] forms the natural bedrock "footings"{1} bearing the foundation walls of the house, which has been more accurately described as an "ancillary," multi-purpose structure, acknowledging its affiliation with the original (expa

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Restored masonry pier south of DeTurk ground level kitchen door jamb (2009)
Photos 1001.01.145

Low retaining wall at kitchen doorway

DeTurk · 10/08/2009

Restored masonry pier south of kitchen door jamb. The restoration masons have retained or inserted large stone "key" blocks projecting from the north-south plane of the wall for bonding with a possible future restored retaining wall. This cross-bonding takes advantage of the interlocking angles and reciprocal bearing surfaces of the stones forming the wal

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Restored DeTurk low retaining wall (2010)
Photos 1001.01.222

Low retaining wall at kitchen doorway

DeTurk · 05/09/2010

Exterior view of low retaining wall abutting the high retaining wall which meets the upper grade rising to the south of the kitchen doorway. This restored wall segment [lighter parging to the right] is laid with bed mortar but no pointing in the exposed joints. The upper surface is parged, as was the unrestored section [darker parging to the left] and sloped

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Masonry joint failure and displaced stone
Photos 1001.01.099

Masonry joint failure and displaced stone

DeTurk · 05/09/2009

Digital photographic print showing displaced wall-stone at grade, and joint fracture in western wall. Image depicts conditions existing immediately prior to and necessitating the 2009 restoration of building. This is a low resolution image (72 ppi).

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DeTurk masonry pier between cellar doorway and window
Photos 1001.01.153

Masonry pier in cellar wall

DeTurk · 07/28/2009

East cellar wall pier between doorway and window prior to restoration. View from inside the lower ground-level kitchen showing excavation to base blocks set on bedrock, the natural "footings"{1} underpinning the foundations. Further excavation, conducted within archaeological screening methods, will be undertaken to determine the extent of instability in

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Half millstone stoop at DeTurk kitchen doorway (2009)
Photos 1001.01.228

Millstone stoop

DeTurk · 11/27/2009

Half millstone stoop removed from intermediate elevation outside DeTurk kitchen doorway [see DTR09PH43--001.01.127, bottom edge of photo, and DTR09PH44--1001.01.128, taken from inside the doorway and showing the position of the millstone approximately 8 inches above the original stone sill at the bottom of the photo]. This furrowed millstone was probably cut

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Original header mortised for tenon of DeTurk door-hood outlooker (2009)
Photos 1001.01.207

Mortised oak header for kitchen doorway hood outlooker

DeTurk · 12/07/2009

Interior detail view of the northern header mortised to receive the outlooker tenon. The remnants of the previous outlooker have been removed preparatory to fabricating a replacement. (See records DTR09PH108, …111, and …115 showing installation of replacement outlookers). This header [sometimes “anchor beam” in the British tradition] is an original and i

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Restored DeTurk interior kitchen window sill and foundation wall (2010)
Photos 1001.01.214

New oak window sill and repointed stonework

DeTurk · 05/05/2010

Replaced oak sill inside DeTurk House kitchen window in east eaves wall, installed in April and May, 2010 in conjunction with repointing of surrounding stonework with mortar consisting of the traditional mixture of lime, local sand, and a small percentage of cement [an increased percentage of “Portland” cement is introduced below the high water table level].

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image#1: DeTurk House, NE perspective view, (1941)
Photos 1001.01.029

Northeast perspective view

DeTurk · Summer 1941

Series of 3 digital images from photographic prints showing NE perspective view of DeTurk House, showing the Little Manatawny Creek; images 4 & 5 show details discussed below. Image#1 details include: 20th-century braced clay-tile roofed pent hood over lower-level kitchen door, 19th-century slate roof [replaced with clay tiles in the 1970s], gable-end chi

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West eaves-corner tie plate in DeTurk north gable-end wall (2009)
Photos 1001.01.186

Oak corner tie joined to wall plate

DeTurk · 10/22/09

Oak corner tie joined to wall plate at NW corner. See discussion to DT09PH93--1001.01.185. Restoration and preservation will include consolidation of the oak plates through application of best-practice preservation materials and methods. Larry Ward, 2010

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Oak wall-plate tie in north gable wall of DeTurk ancillary building (2009)
Photos 1001.01.185

Oak plate tie

DeTurk · 10/22/09

An embedded four-foot oak tie, probably joined to the east eaves-wall plate at the NE corner to restrain lateral thrust from the roof loads. This timber [also called a "spreader" plate because it spreads masonry and roof loads over a larger segment of the wall and across multiple mortar joints] and its western counterpart [see DTR09PH94--1001.01.186] also ma

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