Sears Kit Homes
Sears, formerly known as Sears, Roebuck and Company, used to sell kit homes from 1908 through 1940. One kit sold for $191, but most were sold in the $500 through $2,000 range. You may live in or near a Sears kit home. They sold more than 70,000 of them. The house I grew up in in Connecticut had two Sears kit homes very nearby. One was diagonally across the street, and the model in the picture below was less than a block away. Many more were in the area.
Few if any of the Sears homes were big by today's standards, but some were pretty large for their time. The $191 one I mentioned above had only three rooms total, and none of them were bathrooms. It was a vacation home that would have had an outhouse. Most of the kit homes actually did have modern conveniences like bathrooms, separate sleeping quarters, kitchens, and central heat. The materials for the house, framing, siding, drywall, windows, doors, right down to the nails were delivered to the home buyer's area by train car.
Few if any of the Sears homes were big by today's standards, but some were pretty large for their time. The $191 one I mentioned above had only three rooms total, and none of them were bathrooms. It was a vacation home that would have had an outhouse. Most of the kit homes actually did have modern conveniences like bathrooms, separate sleeping quarters, kitchens, and central heat. The materials for the house, framing, siding, drywall, windows, doors, right down to the nails were delivered to the home buyer's area by train car.
Over the years, Sears developed 447 different house designs according to their archive site, which can be viewed by clicking on the following link... searsarchives.com.
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