The No. J-6 (then House Design No. 6) in the 1909 Book of Plans from the Chicago House Wrecking Company. "This is our own design--Economical and modern." I wonder who they hired as the architect. |
Despite its popularity, the J-6 design is polarizing. When my mother saw this house she said, "It's not the most attractive house."
Interestingly, I have seen only one of these in the Chicago area. You would think that Harris Brothers, based on 35th Street in Chicago, would have sold a large number of J-6's in the city and suburbs. Perhaps they did but most were torn down over the next 100 years... who knows?
Ad from the Chicago Tribune in 1912. "Here is a house that has been built about 400 times. It is our Leader." Harris Brothers often referred to this model as the "Leader" in its advertising |
Harris sold this house in two floor plans. The No. J-16 was two feet longer and two feet wider than the No. J-6 but the room layouts were the same.
But housing styles change, and despite the fact that over a thousand J-6's were built, Harris Brothers stopped selling the house by 1920.
There's a No. J-6 in Glen Ellyn.
410 Prospect, Glen Ellyn. |
The Harris Brothers No. J-6. |
This is the only No. J-6 I've ever seen in person. I shouted "There it is!" when I was walking down the street in Glen Ellyn, attracting the attention of passersby. It's an easy house to spot with that unusual turret.
Photo from Realtor site. |
Photo from Realtor site. |
Photo from Realtor site. |
Photo from Realtor site. |
Photo from Realtor site. |
Photo from Realtor site. |
The No. J-6 was built in 1909 by Charles and Hattie Wimpress. The Wimpresses never lived in the house, but rather on their 233 acre farm in Glen Ellyn (the Chicago Tribune called Charles a "well to do farmer").
They sold the house around 1912 to the Whitcomb family.
2 comments:
I live in a Harris J-6! Personally, I love it, especially with the unusual turrey.
Hi, Anthony! If you email me your address, I can add it to the national database of Harris Homes. lara@sears-homes.com
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