Updated photos of my house

The building on the left as you're looking at the front is the 5-unit rental where some tenant has night parties in the backyard. It used to be a Masonic Temple. The building on th right is a one-family home. They had a garage sale a few weeks ago.
oh that's the building where the problem tenants are is it ?... I see...
 
Deb,

Very nice!

Based on the photos I would make a few basic repairs/improvements and stay put.

For me, the biggest change/improvement would be the addition of a bathroom on the main floor so I could convert a parlor or the dining room into a bedroom and be self-contained on one floor in the years to come.

Good luck!
 
For me, the biggest change/improvement would be the addition of a bathroom on the main floor so I could convert a parlor or the dining room into a bedroom and be self-contained on one floor in the years to come.

There is a half bath off of a side room off of the middle parlor. Hasn't been used since mom passed so I am hesitant about using it. She used that side room as a bedroom so she wouldn't have to climb the 16 stairs and that little bathroom was convenient. Her bed is still there, but piled high with baskets for sale. :)

middle_parlor.jpg
 
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I really like old homes. They have a lot of character and charm. I see a radiator. Are they still being used?
 
It does have a historic marker out front. Needs repainting.

View attachment 125877
Do you get a tax break for the home having a historical background? Here in Pennsylvania, you may.

I had a small garage on my patrol. It was previously an old stone mill way back in the day, like early 1800’s. I stopped at the old mill one day, just to verify his state inspection vehicle license. I asked him if he had a history on the okd mill, which he replied to me that he didn’t. I told him that if he had the history for it and depending on its age, he could get a really nice tax break.

He became excited when I told him that. A few months later, I stopped in again and asked the owner if he checked up on the mill’s history. He said he had, BUT because he replaced the windows in the rear, it disqualified the building from being granted a Historical Site. It was the only fully standing stone mill in the County. He said he became ill. Had he left the old windows in, he was told that he would have saved about $8000 a year.
Radiators are in use - it's an oil/hot water heating system.
I remember my grandparent’s house having radiators. When we came in from playing in the snow, we would put our gloves on the radiators to dry.
 

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