Under $100K Sunday – Circa 1900 Duplex For Sale in Wabash, IN Under $100K – Off Market
OHU50K NOTES. $99,500. Off Market
Historical Circa 1900 home in Wabash. Originally constructed as a duplex, this home could be a rare beauty with some updating. Both units are very large 3 bedrooms units with almost identical floor plans. Live in one half and rent the other unit. One unit has 2 baths and one has 1.5 baths. Located on a corner lot, the duplex has a slate roof, large rooms, fireplaces, hardwood floors, built-ins and public water and sewer. AND a Jadeite bathtub (thanks to Steve H. for pointing out that awesome feature)!
Stone and brick exterior was tuck pointed last summer and the front porch concrete decking and steps were replaced. Home has a slate roof that has been repaired but still has roof leaks some and may ultimately need to be replaced, but slate is not required as a replacement. Home has all separated utilities. 2 older gas furnaces. Some updated wiring and 100 amp panel boxes but also some old wiring too that should be updated. Beautiful natural woodwork in both units with some beamed ceilings. 4-original fireplaces that may not be functional for wood burning. Full unfinished basement on each side with laundry area in the basement. One car detached garage. Large covered front porch. 2 enclosed rear porches. one rear patio. Partial privacy fenced back yard. ONE UNIT MUST BE OWNER OCCUPIED TO PURCHASE THIS PROPERTY. Buyer must agree to Indiana Landmarks protective covenants to maintain the overall historic appearance of the exterior. Listing
- 6bed
- 3.5bath
- 4,318sqft
- 5,227sqft lot
106-108 E Hill St, Wabash, IN 46992 $99,500
7 Comments
Steve Highbarger
WOW…a jadeite bath tub. Love it
[email protected]
Wow! Thanks for pointing that out!!
Sarabeth
Wow….with some cosmetic work this could be a beauty!
Joy Wright
Oohhh my dream home!
Someone pinch me, I would love to wake up being the owner of this property.
Howard Wells
Can anyone explain to me why so many of these older homes I have looked at have acoustic tiles on the ceiling? Was it a popular thing to do during some era?
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Usually dropped ceilings were installed to hide crumbling plaster ceilings. It was the cheap remedy. In the 1970s when gas and oil prices rose, some people also installed the dropped ceilings to save energy costs. They are the bane of old houses.
King
They also lowered the ceilings to lower their energy bills.