IBA SUCCESS MAGAZINE Issue 5 Volume 5 | Page 17

• List of owners: • James Seymour Capen (1885-1898) • Amelia Weed Hopkins (1898-1904) • Snow family (1904-1910) • J.F. Johnson (1910-1923) • Howard and Anna Showalter (1923-1949) • Dr. Wilbur and Edith Jennings (1949-1995) THE MOVE • The house used to be located on Interlachen Drive, about two blocks from Park Avenue. • In July 2013, the house was threatened with demolition when new owners of the property determined to tear down the house. • The Winter Park History Museum, the Friends of Casa Feliz, and the Albin Polasek Museum worked together to start Preservation Capen (directed by Christine Madrid French) to save and move the house. • The team had four months to raise $450,000 or the house would be demolished. • 20 professional trades represented in the moving and renovation project, from plumbers to architectural historians. • More than 100 contractors worked on the project under Frank Roark General Contractor. • The house had to be cut into two pieces to make the trip downslope and to the lakeside. • Each side of the house weighs 100 tons. • The two pieces were named Fred and Ginger, after Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers, a famous dancing couple in the 1930s. • The movers (T&T House Movers and Heavy Rigging) took hours to balance the pieces on the barge, but the trip across the water only took about 15 minutes. The barge was pushed by a tugboat. THE RESTORATION • Many details are original to the home, including the polished heart pine floor (installed in the 1880s), and the grand staircase (installed in the 1920s). • The lighting is mostly vintage fixtures, though not original to the house. • Over $1 million was raised through grants, private donations, foundations, and in-kind services to restore the house. • More than 400 people, foundations, organizations, and businesses donated to save and restore the house. • The house opened in October 2015, after two years of moving and renovations. THE CAPEN-POLASEK FAMILY CONNECTION • Albin Polasek was close friends with descendants of James Seymour Capen when he lived in Chicago, IL. • James Capen’s niece, Charlotte Capen, married Percy Eckhart. Percy was a trustee at the Art Institute of Chicago, where Polasek worked as head of the Sculpture Department. • Polasek created sculptures of each member of the Capen-Eckhart family. Many of those sculptures are now on display in the Capen House. o Charlotte Capen Eckhart: marble relief installed above the mantle in the Welcome Room; o Elizabeth: daughter of Charlotte, terra cotta bust in Welcome Room; o Elizabeth: daughter of Charlotte, bronze statue with a small bird in the Grand Parlor; o Eleanor: daughter of Charlotte, bronze bust in the Sitting Room. THE FUTURE • A portion of our art and sculpture collection will be displayed in the home which will be open regularly for public tours. • The upstairs bedrooms provide critically needed office space for the staff and operation of the museum. • The downstairs is used as an exhibition area for selections from our permanent collection, and will also be used for community events, private rentals, art courses, yoga, and meetings. n VOL 4, Issue 5 n IBASuccessMagazine.com 15