Open in App
  • Local
  • U.S.
  • Election
  • Politics
  • Crime
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
  • Education
  • Real Estate
  • Newsletter
  • FOX 17 News West Michigan

    Historic Muskegon home ready to be moved again, this time without logs

    By Daren Bower,

    15 hours ago
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0pKZmk_0uIJ3AEk00

    Sometimes even a house needs a new home. The house at 1292 Jefferson St. in Muskegon originally belonged to lumber baron C.D. Nelson, and it’s on the move for the second time in its 156-year history.

    The house is being moved to save it from being demolished by Muskegon Public Schools, who owns the property.

    City of Muskegon Planner Jamie Pesch said, “Their plan was to clear the site, demolish the three buildings on the site; they had no use for them. And community outcry led us as the city to look into the potential for saving the Nelson House.

    In charge of the move is Deitz House Moving Engineers (DHME).

    “We just want to assemble a grid of steel and wood that recreates the foundation so that the house doesn't bend, twist,” said DHME Co-owner Dan Deitz.

    Once the house is secured to its portable foundation, it will begin its trek to its new home.

    “It's going to be moved right down Third Street, going to hang left on the Muskegon Avenue and it'll be at 382 West Muskegon Ave. right across from Nelson Place Apartments,” Pesch explains.

    Weirdly, this isn’t the first time the Nelson House has been moved. The house originally was at the corner of Third and Webster where the Lincoln statue sits in Hackley Park.

    Dan Dietz said, “The thing about these historical structures is they were built with redundant practices back in the day. So they're strong; they're stronger than a modern house. And I mean, my hat goes off to the people who moved it the first time.”

    In 1891, to make way for the park, the house was put on logs and rolled to its current location to be used as a church rectory.

    “I think the prominence of the original owner and just the value of the house itself was the reason it was saved,” said Pesch.

    He says, unfortunately, there has been a history of demolishing historical homes in the city and they want to turn that trend around. He says, “We really wanted to make sure that this one didn't meet the same fate as all the other houses in the past.”

    Follow FOX 17: Facebook - X (formerly Twitter) - Instagram - YouTube

    Expand All
    Comments / 0
    Add a Comment
    YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
    Most Popular newsMost Popular
    Total Apex Sports & Entertainment20 days ago
    Total Apex Sports & Entertainment25 days ago

    Comments / 0