Absolutely love this home, the flooring, cabinets, doors, room sizes and the very sweet kitchen! Wow! So refreshing to hear someone younger say they love the older cabinetry in the kitchen. I sometimes cringe when people's first comments are that the kitchen "needs updating!' This home looks perfect....and it's a treasure! If I bought it, I'd keep everything just as it is inside. Thank you for showing it!
I don’t blame you for being excited! It’s got so much character and charm. Saving the door through to the barn made everything on the other side such a surprise too. Great house.
Wonderful Historic Home! I loved your presentation. I like the features of older homes as well. The wide flooring is awesome. Your presentation was engaging, informative and a breath of fresh air! Really great property👍 Thanks for showing it on RUclips ✨️🕊
Oh, my…this is my dream house! We really thought about retiring in New England, but the lure of low humidity pulled us to Arizona, and this is the sort of property that makes me regret that decision.
I am originally from Long Island, NY and I moved to Arizona 23 years ago. Now, I want to move somewhere back east FOR the humidity. The summer's here are brutal!
@@kaebella2259 I agree about the summer heat! We lived all over the US for my husband’s work with the last place (before moving to AZ) being York, PA, so it would have been quite convenient to go to New England, certainly more than it would have been to move where we did. I really miss all the green foliage, distinct seasons (especially a beautiful Fall), and I really miss other architectural styles like old, true farmhouses that are made for antiques! Good luck with finding a home back east!
Not sure why people retire to the North East ?? NO country for old men, or women !! I have lived here all my life, & fear aging in this hostile environment !! Hot, & humid in the summer, cold, ice, & snow in the winter !! Looks good on a post card, but life threatening in real life ! We had a friend who slipped on ice, & froze to death...that's the reality. ..
@@anntrope491 30 below aint no joke. I lived in washington on top of the cascade foothills. high elevation. sometimes 4 ft of snow overnight. well below zero. every state has its hostile areas. I always have three winters worth of wood in the shed here in maine. never drive without my phone in the winter. always dress with extra layers incase the car breaks down. Alaska is pretty tough and I've lived in Montana as well. montana can be a REAL bitch.
And autumn makes up for it all. And we get more sunny days than rainy ones. The rest, BE PREPARED in winter, dress appropriately and don’t drive until roads are plowed which they do really well. I can see that winter is difficult for some older people here. My mom can’t stand the winter. AC in summer. No tornadoes, hurricanes, fires, or extreme and lengthy heat waves. Low crime, good schools, doctors, and hospitals. And did I mention autumn? I think overall it’s a good place to raise a family. You might like the North Pacific coast, although they are getting some extreme heat waves. I can’t imagine living anywhere else. Wayyyyy too hot and other crazy weather I don’t like. I’m sorry about your neighbor though. That is awful, and very, very sad.
I Love This Vintage Salt-Box Style Home. Love the Color!! This Home Could Be On The Cover of "Country Sampler Magazine" The Past Emanates From Each Room of This Treasure. Would Love to Own This Rustic Home!!
I have wanted to live in New England since l was 10 years old, love historical homes and antiques. My husband and l completely restored an 1898 Victorian a bit it a time. We're far from rich. But...rich or poor, if you're rudely treated as an outsider, left out of things, gossiped about, no wonder Maine is emptying. What a shame.
It's really nice. I could see why it's already under contract. However, why didn't you put the asking price on the video description? What's the point when you have no idea whether or not you could afford it?
In the area where the dining table is there was a niche with some piece of furniture? Or something but really couldn't tell, is that another fireplace?
Do some digging if you can in local records, that house has late 18th century (1700s) nuances, low ceilings very tight staircase centered in the front hall, center chimney, low wainscoting wide plank floors, federal style front entry, entablature tucked under the roofline on the front facade etc..... I'd take a gamble at 1790s-1820s typical clapboard fronted cape cod style indicative of early new England..
@@donnagagne3813 yep, that configuration as well as the board and batten doors went out of style by the mid 1800s. Too bad they didn't show the basement, that would be the tell tale sign, bark timbers, hand hewn, pegs and square cut nails, hand stacked stone foundation etc...
I don't know, 375 seems too much for me. First, the main issue is that it is under contract. How and at what price to make it free. Location can in fact not really serve, you'll sit in a small community and far away. The building on itself has charm the roof looks good but all the rest needs overhauling even the garden. Then it will come very costly for such a small house. I also find there is too less light in that house, I would do a depression. This is also cuz it sits in a wooded area. I am not saying it is bad but there is no project to recupe money on it. Can you make a guest house out of it? Can you make a shop out of it? A restaurant? I don't see much opportunity in space unless you start building. So overall very charming but lacking in business opportunity.
Mandy, you need to do your homework. You apparently don’t know what you are talking about other then things are “cool” and “lovely”. Just saying. Don’t mean to embarrass you, but really girl. What year was the house built? Are the floors hard or soft wood? How old is the plumbing? The electrical? It looked like there was one of those wonderful deep cast iron tubs in the upstairs bathroom. You breezed right by that. When was the breezeway added?
Chances are it has an old stone foundation with a dirt floor. Not a selling point especially if the cellar has some water in it. These are normal things you'll find in old New England houses. Maine is gorgeous and so is this house. Old cellars would not change my mind at all.
@@donnagagne3813 a dry old stone cellar would be splendid for storage of root veg and cool temp great for canned stuff.apples. I lobe New England but my arthritis and the weather are not good together. LOL
I like the house, however to me it would have been even more beautiful inside if all the white paint were gone, in places we got a glimpse of the wood without white paint and it was so warm and inviting not cold and sterile feeling like the white. I'm so happy that the beautiful brick fireplace didn't get white paint on it or the exposed chimney upstairs. One question, can the wood stove insert in the fireplace be removed in that fireplace and the fireplace still be used as a wood burning fireplace? Where does one park their car at this house, would a garage need to be built?
We Mainers really wish out of staters would stop out bidding us in the housing market. I know where this is. My uncle lives not far from this home. We Mainers are losing most of our historical homes to wealthy out of staters. We cannot compete with them in the bidding process, even though we can meet the asking price, and as such are being driven out of our small hometowns- towns that our families helped establish back in the 1600's. These videos actually kind of frustrate me, every time I see them.
Hi Emo! As a born and raised Mainer myself (shoutout to Lewiston, lol!) I respectfully disagree as I think we are all, ultimately, foreigners. And we should come together with love instead of divide and resistance. But it will do your heart good to know that this house is now under contract and the buyer lives locally. 🧡 Thanks for watching!
@@MandyWheelerRealEstate Then you respectfully do not listen to the locals. This has gained coverage in the Bangor Daily news and is a real problem for Mainers. Outsiders cause a great deal of problems for our state and culture. Are you not familiar with the current red list of our important lobster industry? Which happens to be the heart of our culture? Being led by Wholefoods? Please do not patronize us with your 'inclusivity' nonsense. 'Out of staters' have been an issue for quite some time, and if you're a 'born and raised' Mainer you would know exactly what I'm talking about. Period.
@@mossyoakmom8880 The Somalian refugees we have keep to themselves. If anything they helped clean up dirty Lew, which for a long time was filled w nothing but drug abusers/dealers. It wasn't a great place to be. No, what's killing Maine is that wealthy people from other states buy our beautiful historical homes, and then rent them out for an arm and leg, without ever having moved to Maine. They take advantage of our tourist season, but never spend a full winter here- because they're pussies. They also out vote Mainers and force us into policies that we natives would have not typically agreed to. As such with the offshore wind turbine efforts, by Janet Mills. These people who come here bring their politics with them and force their liberal ideologies on our state and drive us further North every time. It's ridiculous! Now these assholes are going after our lobster and fishing industry! I think there should be a law that states you cannot vote, nor buy property, or sell in a new state until you have lived there for a full five consecutive years straight. Mainers should have first dibs when it comes to buying property in our state and should be able to have more say in our legislation and local govt. It's become such an issue that Mainers have really had to take less than adequate housing further away from job opportunities, just to have a roof over their head. And trust me when I say- 'out of staters could care less'. They don't care, and never will.
@@emo516 I sympathize with you. Here in Southern California we have dealt with people not only from other states but other countries buying up our land. Chinese, Koreans, middle eastern Muslims have really changed our state for the worst. We have some cities that are fully taken over by these people. The signs are in their language, you really feel like you’re in a different county. It shouldn’t be aloud.
Please watch other realtors' videos, and use more descriptive language. Really cool, old, sweet, and 'I'm so excited" are not enough info about this house. The windows? They're 'replacement'. The roof is 'new'. Bet the town records will have the age of the house, which is pretty fundamental info for a potential buyer.
Stella, with all due respect, just don’t watch me then! ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ Maine has some of the oldest homes in the country and even town hall records estimate the age sometimes. There is a link the in description with ALL the info you could ever need. The video is for you to get a sense of the layout. If you don’t like the way I do it, please just watch someone else!
Absolutely love this home, the flooring, cabinets, doors, room sizes and the very sweet kitchen! Wow! So refreshing to hear someone younger say they love the older cabinetry in the kitchen. I sometimes cringe when people's first comments are that the kitchen "needs updating!' This home looks perfect....and it's a treasure! If I bought it, I'd keep everything just as it is inside. Thank you for showing it!
I don’t blame you for being excited! It’s got so much character and charm. Saving the door through to the barn made everything on the other side such a surprise too. Great house.
Lovely home. Unfortunately electricity is going up in Maine 20% so you really need to be sure you're buying something that is energy efficient.
Wonderful Historic Home! I loved your presentation. I like the features of older homes as well. The wide flooring is awesome. Your presentation was engaging, informative and a breath of fresh air!
Really great property👍
Thanks for showing it on RUclips ✨️🕊
Oh, my…this is my dream house! We really thought about retiring in New England, but the lure of low humidity pulled us to Arizona, and this is the sort of property that makes me regret that decision.
I am originally from Long Island, NY and I moved to Arizona 23 years ago. Now, I want to move somewhere back east FOR the humidity. The summer's here are brutal!
@@kaebella2259 I agree about the summer heat! We lived all over the US for my husband’s work with the last place (before moving to AZ) being York, PA, so it would have been quite convenient to go to New England, certainly more than it would have been to move where we did. I really miss all the green foliage, distinct seasons (especially a beautiful Fall), and I really miss other architectural styles like old, true farmhouses that are made for antiques! Good luck with finding a home back east!
Not sure why people retire to the North East ?? NO country for old men, or women !! I have lived here all my life, & fear aging in this hostile environment !! Hot, & humid in the summer, cold, ice, & snow in the winter !! Looks good on a post card, but life threatening in real life ! We had a friend who slipped on ice, & froze to death...that's the reality. ..
@@anntrope491 30 below aint no joke. I lived in washington on top of the cascade foothills. high elevation. sometimes 4 ft of snow overnight. well below zero. every state has its hostile areas. I always have three winters worth of wood in the shed here in maine. never drive without my phone in the winter. always dress with extra layers incase the car breaks down. Alaska is pretty tough and I've lived in Montana as well. montana can be a REAL bitch.
And autumn makes up for it all. And we get more sunny days than rainy ones. The rest, BE PREPARED in winter, dress appropriately and don’t drive until roads are plowed which they do really well. I can see that winter is difficult for some older people here. My mom can’t stand the winter.
AC in summer. No tornadoes, hurricanes, fires, or extreme and lengthy heat waves. Low crime, good schools, doctors, and hospitals. And did I mention autumn? I think overall it’s a good place to raise a family.
You might like the North Pacific coast, although they are getting some extreme heat waves. I can’t imagine living anywhere else. Wayyyyy too hot and other crazy weather I don’t like. I’m sorry about your neighbor though. That is awful, and very, very sad.
I Love This Vintage Salt-Box Style Home. Love the Color!! This Home Could Be On The Cover of "Country Sampler Magazine" The Past Emanates From Each Room of This Treasure. Would Love to Own This Rustic Home!!
Cute home! Knowing older homes have smaller closet space, it would be nice to see inside the closets.
Lovely, lovely, unique place.
Lovely home! My friend has a similar home in Durham that I fell in love with. Almost identical features. Very tempting to move from Ohio!
You should have an independent show where you do three to four home tours to perspective buyers. That would be so much fun.
Congratulations on your engagement.
I'm in Pennsylvania. I live in an old farmhouse built in 1850 on 3 acres of land.
Mandy you are adorable..love your energy on this property
I have wanted to live in New England since l was 10 years old, love historical homes and antiques. My husband and l completely restored an 1898 Victorian a bit it a time. We're far from rich. But...rich or poor, if you're rudely treated as an outsider, left out of things, gossiped about, no wonder Maine is emptying. What a shame.
I like your listings because you show the cost up front. Good job!
Where?
Maine? Lol. Did 30 years there. Hope you like long winters
Maine is 4 seasos 6 months winter 2 months spring 2 months summer 2 months autumn lol
It was nice of you not to use the word miserable 😪 winter's
@@bm8893 9 months winter, 3 months bad sledding
It's really nice. I could see why it's already under contract. However, why didn't you put the asking price on the video description? What's the point when you have no idea whether or not you could afford it?
I LOVE IT ❤❤❤❤
LOVE!
Beautiful and charming.
They took out the old windows????? What a shame!! They could have just put up storm windows.
In the area where the dining table is there was a niche with some piece of furniture? Or something but really couldn't tell, is that another fireplace?
Do some digging if you can in local records, that house has late 18th century (1700s) nuances, low ceilings very tight staircase centered in the front hall, center chimney, low wainscoting wide plank floors, federal style front entry, entablature tucked under the roofline on the front facade etc..... I'd take a gamble at 1790s-1820s typical clapboard fronted cape cod style indicative of early new England..
I thought the same thing right away. From the outside to the inside.
@@donnagagne3813 yep, that configuration as well as the board and batten doors went out of style by the mid 1800s. Too bad they didn't show the basement, that would be the tell tale sign, bark timbers, hand hewn, pegs and square cut nails, hand stacked stone foundation etc...
It was built in 1840.
Wholesome
Lovely
Just subscribed
Nice❤❤❤❤❤
darling home and agent
I'm surprised how many Maine homes use electric stoves ? This isn't practical in a power outage !
how is it heated
I don't know, 375 seems too much for me. First, the main issue is that it is under contract. How and at what price to make it free. Location can in fact not really serve, you'll sit in a small community and far away. The building on itself has charm the roof looks good but all the rest needs overhauling even the garden. Then it will come very costly for such a small house. I also find there is too less light in that house, I would do a depression. This is also cuz it sits in a wooded area. I am not saying it is bad but there is no project to recupe money on it. Can you make a guest house out of it? Can you make a shop out of it? A restaurant? I don't see much opportunity in space unless you start building. So overall very charming but lacking in business opportunity.
Those rooms aren't the length of the house. It's the width of the house. Big difference.
I know, you’re the second one to correct me. Sometimes I make mistakes. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Excellent video Mandy ..may I suggest that tell us the selling price..
As always the price is in the description
Link isn't working
How much?
It is the width. Not the length.
🙈 Thanks Paul! It’s hard to make a 9 minute video in one take. I make mistakes all the time. 🤷♀️ Thanks for watching!
Price please??
Don't like the slanted walls in the upstairs bedrooms
Who cares what you don't like
@@daveklein2826 Aww that's not nice to say.
655k off the market
Mandy, you need to do your homework. You apparently don’t know what you are talking about other then things are “cool” and “lovely”. Just saying. Don’t mean to embarrass you, but really girl. What year was the house built? Are the floors hard or soft wood? How old is the plumbing? The electrical? It looked like there was one of those wonderful deep cast iron tubs in the upstairs bathroom. You breezed right by that. When was the breezeway added?
And it definitely was built before the 1800s.
There ARE! Not There’s…….a plural, like ‘floors’ requires ARE…..basic stuff.
Who are you the grammar monitoring police?!!
@@cynthia8343 nothing wrong with correct grammar…….if you want to sound like a fifth grader with fifth grade ideas go ahead. Just ask a teacher.
@@marthachabinsky3048 ok teacher, thanks for that
@@cynthia8343 😂🤣
Nice but too close to the road
I am retired and have a home in Florida and a home in Harrison Maine. I am a lways looking for realestate for investment
$375,000
Basement?
Doubt it in a house that old or maybe a crawl space and granite foundation.walls
Chances are it has an old stone foundation with a dirt floor. Not a selling point especially if the cellar has some water in it. These are normal things you'll find in old New England houses. Maine is gorgeous and so is this house. Old cellars would not change my mind at all.
@@donnagagne3813 a dry old stone cellar would be splendid for storage of root veg and cool temp great for canned stuff.apples. I lobe New England but my arthritis and the weather are not good together. LOL
Asking price?
$375,000. There’s a link in the description that shares a ton of helpful info!
Learn how to use RUclips features
@@daveklein2826 thank you !
375K soon to be ALOT cheaper
Not
I like the house, however to me it would have been even more beautiful inside if all the white paint were gone, in places we got a glimpse of the wood without white paint and it was so warm and inviting not cold and sterile feeling like the white. I'm so happy that the beautiful brick fireplace didn't get white paint on it or the exposed chimney upstairs. One question, can the wood stove insert in the fireplace be removed in that fireplace and the fireplace still be used as a wood burning fireplace? Where does one park their car at this house, would a garage need to be built?
Acreage?
3.1
We Mainers really wish out of staters would stop out bidding us in the housing market. I know where this is. My uncle lives not far from this home. We Mainers are losing most of our historical homes to wealthy out of staters. We cannot compete with them in the bidding process, even though we can meet the asking price, and as such are being driven out of our small hometowns- towns that our families helped establish back in the 1600's. These videos actually kind of frustrate me, every time I see them.
Hi Emo! As a born and raised Mainer myself (shoutout to Lewiston, lol!) I respectfully disagree as I think we are all, ultimately, foreigners. And we should come together with love instead of divide and resistance. But it will do your heart good to know that this house is now under contract and the buyer lives locally. 🧡 Thanks for watching!
@@MandyWheelerRealEstate Then you respectfully do not listen to the locals. This has gained coverage in the Bangor Daily news and is a real problem for Mainers. Outsiders cause a great deal of problems for our state and culture. Are you not familiar with the current red list of our important lobster industry? Which happens to be the heart of our culture? Being led by Wholefoods? Please do not patronize us with your 'inclusivity' nonsense. 'Out of staters' have been an issue for quite some time, and if you're a 'born and raised' Mainer you would know exactly what I'm talking about. Period.
I live in Southern California and the Chinese and other foreigners are buying up land here. It’s terrible!
@@mossyoakmom8880 The Somalian refugees we have keep to themselves. If anything they helped clean up dirty Lew, which for a long time was filled w nothing but drug abusers/dealers. It wasn't a great place to be. No, what's killing Maine is that wealthy people from other states buy our beautiful historical homes, and then rent them out for an arm and leg, without ever having moved to Maine. They take advantage of our tourist season, but never spend a full winter here- because they're pussies. They also out vote Mainers and force us into policies that we natives would have not typically agreed to. As such with the offshore wind turbine efforts, by Janet Mills. These people who come here bring their politics with them and force their liberal ideologies on our state and drive us further North every time. It's ridiculous! Now these assholes are going after our lobster and fishing industry! I think there should be a law that states you cannot vote, nor buy property, or sell in a new state until you have lived there for a full five consecutive years straight. Mainers should have first dibs when it comes to buying property in our state and should be able to have more say in our legislation and local govt. It's become such an issue that Mainers have really had to take less than adequate housing further away from job opportunities, just to have a roof over their head. And trust me when I say- 'out of staters could care less'. They don't care, and never will.
@@emo516 I sympathize with you. Here in Southern California we have dealt with people not only from other states but other countries buying up our land. Chinese, Koreans, middle eastern Muslims have really changed our state for the worst. We have some cities that are fully taken over by these people. The signs are in their language, you really feel like you’re in a different county. It shouldn’t be aloud.
Please watch other realtors' videos, and use more descriptive language. Really cool, old, sweet, and 'I'm so excited" are not enough info about this house. The windows? They're 'replacement'. The roof is 'new'. Bet the town records will have the age of the house, which is pretty fundamental info for a potential buyer.
Stella, with all due respect, just don’t watch me then! ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ Maine has some of the oldest homes in the country and even town hall records estimate the age sometimes. There is a link the in description with ALL the info you could ever need. The video is for you to get a sense of the layout. If you don’t like the way I do it, please just watch someone else!
@@MandyWheelerRealEstate We don't agree with Stella, great job, keep up the good work!
Get a life Stella
@@biblicist1014 thank you 🙏🥹
Chill Stella 🤗
must be free or they would have stated the price.......lol
Asking price, taxes?
$375K. In the description above.
Again no price !