Charlevoix specialty
Detroit Free Press
CHARLEVOIX, Mich.
Last summer, 760 lucky people got to walk through eight Earl Young houses. It was the first tour of interiors ever offered.
“We could have put through 1,200 at least; the phone was ringing off the hook for tickets,” says David Miles, co-director of the Harsha House Museum, part of the Charlevoix Historical Society.
When tickets ran out, “we had tears. We had people upset. We had people arrive from at least 20 states. We had no idea of the interest nationwide. What I didn’t know is the emotional attachment to these houses, because a lot of people have been coming to Charlevoix since they were children.”
Earl Young tourism is a Charlevoix specialty.
The quirky builder erected 30 stone homes in town between 1918 and the 1950s, all so unusual they are often compared to works of art.
Some look like mushroom houses, with undulating roofs capping boulder walls. Some are tiny. Some are enormous. Most have incredible detail — doorways of stone, window frames made of boulders, chimneys that look frosted by a giddy cake decorator.
The early houses are arts and crafts or chalet style, but the later homes are rounded and organic, part Tolkien, part Keebler elf.
And each summer, busloads of tourists drive down Park Avenue, Clinton Street and Boulder Avenue, snapping photos and ringing doorbells.
“We are used to it,” says Jennie Silva, who owns 304 Clinton, for which Earl Young did the exterior. “It is a piece of art that is livable. He oddly had a sense of humor.”
Karen Stankovich, who owns a Cotswold-style Earl Young house at 14915 Boulder Avenue, lives in the 1929 main house but in summer rents out a diminutive stone house that appears to have sprouted on her property.
Despite demand, the next Earl Young interiors home tour won’t be for at least two or three years from now, says Mona Bergeon, historical society president. “We need to let the owners indicate when they are going to be ready again.”
But that does not mean you can’t do your own Earl Young tour, any time of year. Here are some suggestions:
Come off-season. Summer is crowded in Charlevoix, so try winter, when houses are snug against the snow.
Stay in an Earl Young house. At least three of them are vacation rentals.
Pick up the free self-guided tour brochure “A Guide to Earl Young Structures in Charlevoix, the Beautiful.” Get it at the Chamber of Commerce office or Harsha House Museum.
Visit Harsha House Museum’s Earl Young exhibit. Start with a virtual tour at the museum’s website, www.chxhistory.com. Or book a tour (exteriors only, $50 an hour, 231-547-0373).
Buy the 2009 book “Mushroom Houses of Charlevoix” by photographer Mike Barton (Boulder Press, $19.95). It has amazing photos and all the stories. Of which there are many.
Like all local characters, Earl Young, who died in 1975, was larger than life and often brusque. One local architect, Jack Begrow, 80, knew Young and has done many interior renovations and even additions to Young houses, which tended to have irrationally tiny kitchens, closets and bedrooms.
Young’s appeal endures because “he had a feeling for the little cottages,” Begrow says. The houses, which Begrow calls “early Mother Goose,” are happy and serene, “and a little goofy,” he says.
Although many people come to Charlevoix believing they have seen other Young houses around the country, it’s not true. Young built every one of his houses in Charlevoix except for one in Alma.
To people in Charlevoix, the houses are pieces of art — and you have to come here to see them.
“People ask if the home-owners mind tourists coming by, but I say, if you buy an Earl Young house, it comes with the territory,” says Miles.
Charlevoix is 41/2 hours north of Detroit on Lake Michigan. For more information, visit www.charlevoix.org.
Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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