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Designed around 1910-12 by Frank Meade, this residence is a fine
example of the work done by the renowned Cleveland architectural firm of Meade
and Hamilton.The home was built for
Dora and Edwin Henn and their eight children who moved to Cleveland from
Connecticut.The neighbors bemusedly
referred to the home as the "Henn House."
Meade and Hamilton houses, of which this is typical, are characterized
by a long, horizontal profile and a sloping roof with wide eaves.A chimney, the entrance, and bay windows
near the center of the front wall break the monotony of the long faade.The Henn house also embodies Frank Meade's
belief in appropriateness of location for structure and his concern for the
relationship between the house and the garden.Above all, the Meade and Hamilton house was intended to be livable and
to reflect the standards of good taste prevalent at that time.
Reminiscences of a Henn daughter-in-law and the granddaughter of a
later owner bespeak the success Mr. Meade achieved in creating a livable,
tasteful home: The daughter-in-law remembers her Cleveland engagement party at
the house and saw the formal ballroom taken over by grandchildren as a
playroom.An old gardener who lived
over the garage fed the robins in the neighborhood and delighted passersby as
he walked down the adjoining lane trailed by robins and cats.Upon the accidental death of Mr. Henn in
1925, the house was purchased by John and Marie Coakley, who also had eight
children.Two more children were born
after the move.At the time, the
downstairs sunporch was enclosed and the two upstairs sleeping porches in the
southeastern part of the house were converted into two bedrooms and a bathroom.The house was always in a flurry of
activity.Later years often saw as many
as forty people, representing three generations, present for Sunday
dinner.After eating at the first
sitting, the grandchildren retreated to the large room in the basement for a
vigorous game of Blind Man's Bluff.The
adults then dined in relative calm.The
controlled chaos of the kitchen was always a treat to watch.The cook, waitress, laundress, nursemaid and
chauffeur had a separate dining room off the kitchen.
Activity spilled easily into the spacious yard; baseball games and
picnics were frequent sources of entertainment, particularly when one of the
Coakley daughters had a house built behind her parents' house and the two yards
were treated as one.A row of trees now
separates the two yards.The memories
evoked by this lovely old residence are irreplaceable treasures and can only
enhance a visitor's appreciation of the house itself.
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