The Red House
Introduction
Text-to-speech Audio
The Red House, now part of the Rochester Hills Museum at Van Hoosen Farm, was built circa 1850. Dr. Sarah Van Hoosen Jones purchased the home in the 1920s for use as a tenant farmhouse for employees of the Van Hoosen Farm. Decorated with furnishings of the late 1800s, the Red House is currently used as an educational space for school programs, public tours and special events.
Images
The Red House in its original location across the street from the Van Hoosen Farmhouse. Sarah Van Hoosen Jones (right) sits on a horse-drawn cart with an unkown woman.
The Red House is shown in the top center of the photo in its original location. The Milk House, Big Barn and Dairy Barn on the Van Hoosen Farm are shown in the foreground.
Tucked behind the stone wall, the Red House is shown its current location at the northwest corner of Van Hoosen and Tienken Roads.
Backstory and Context
Text-to-speech Audio
The one-thousand square foot home originally stood on the lot opposite the Van Hoosen Farmhouse in Stoney Creek Village. There appears to have been three additions to the original structure, making room for additional bedrooms and an indoor bathroom.
The Red House was one of several homes purchased by Dr. Sarah Van Hoosen Jones in Stoney Creek Village. While managing the Van Hoosen Farm, Dr. Jones rented these Village homes to her employees and their families.
Inspiration for the home’s color came in 1955 when Sarah was traveling with Alice Serrell, her close friend and former Van Hoosen Farm bookkeeper. While in Vermont, they saw a similar house painted a shade of bright red and on their return, they decided to paint their little brown house a similar color. Around the same time, Dr. Jones had the house moved from its original location across the street and over the stone wall.
The City of Rochester Hills received the Red House as a gift from Michigan State University in December 1996. Since then, the building, which is on the National Register of Historic Places, has had a complete restoration. The Red House is one of eight historic buildings making up the 16-acre Rochester Hills Museum at Van Hoosen Farm site. Guided tours of the Red House take place during the Museum’s public hours.
Sources
Jones, Sarah Van Hoosen . Chronicle of Van Hoosen Centenary Farm. 1969.
Carthew, Annick. Stony Creek Village. Museum Visitor. 2012.
Archives of the Rochester Hills Museum at Van Hoosen Farm
Archives of the Rochester Hills Museum at Van Hoosen Farm
The Rochester Hills Museum at Van Hoosen Farm