My Mother’s House Sold!

2125 Broderick St. San Francisco CA . 2125 Broderick St. San Francisco CA

Hooray! After two weeks on the market, my mother’s Victorian in San Francisco’s Pacific Heights has sold. We listed at $1.4 Million and the home sold for $1.775 Million. There were seven bids. Our family is very happy to be almost done with the sale process and the new family seems very happy with their new house. Thanks to our broker, Charlene Delaney of Keller Williams, for her good work.

2125 Broderick was built by Harry Jay Summerhayes in 1878 for himself and his bride. The Compagnon family moved into the house in 1900. The Dickinson family started living there in 1963. At the end of this month, the fourth family to own 2125 Broderick in 134 years will take possession.

Image by Katy Dickinson 2012 Copyright

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My Mother’s Moonshine Still

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One of the items we moved out of my mother’s house while clearing it for sale was her old moonshine still. Eleanor Dickinson was born in Knoxville, Tennessee, near the Great Smoky Mountains. One of the cultural artifacts she brought home to San Francisco was an old still which lived in the garden for many years. It consists of a 3′ wide 15 gallon copper tank and a copper coil. There used to be a wooden barrel but that fell apart years ago. The still was originally owned by some mountain men near Elkmont whose grandfather provided “white lightening” liquor to my grandfather, R.E. Creekmore. My grandfather specialized in Criminal Law, including defending moonshiners, who paid in kind when they lacked the cash.

The 1958 song and movie Thunder Road was about running illegal moonshine along roads that included Kingston Pike, near where my grandparents lived in Knoxville.

Image by Katy Dickinson 2012 Copyright

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Open House Today – San Francisco Victorian

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John and I went by the open house event today at my mother’s 1878 Victorian home in San Francisco’s Pacific Heights neighborhood. There were some items to collect and we wanted to see how everything was going. Even though we got there just at the end, there were still two dozen people looking around. It is both exciting to have such interest in our family home and sad to see it go. The house looks so big without the furniture in it!

Address:

2125 Broderick Street (at Washington)
San Francisco

Realtor:

Charlene G Delaney
Keller Williams Benchmark Properties
415-786-7632
delaney@kw.com
http://www.charlenedelaney.com

Image by Katy Dickinson 2012 Copyright

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Disposing of Toxics

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One of the challenges of clearing my mother’s San Francisco house for sale has been disposing of the toxics.  Every household probably has some medicine, paint, cleaners, or household chemicals long past their useful life.  Disposing of these properly can be difficult.  When the home includes a professional artist, the problem is bigger because many art supplies are particularly toxic (toluene, lead, strychnine…). When the containers are glass or metal, these items are usually safe to handle but we did have a plastic bottle of furniture finish disintigrate when picked up, leaving my poor husband coated in stinking ancient tung oil.

We have been blessed with the energetic support of Marian, a long-time family friend, who took on the much-appreciated task of finding a safe and appropriate disposal site for each type of toxic we discovered.  Over the last two months, Marian has found a pharmacy that will take old medicine, a paint shop that will take partial cans of venerable latex paint, and even a San Francisco city site for collecting hazardous household waste. It is a big relief to get all of this nasty stuff safely out of the house. Thank you Marian!

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Images by Katy Dickinson 2012 Copyright

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Thinking Inside the Box: Medicare

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In the last few weeks, I have been on the phone many dozens of times trying to sort out my 81-year-old mother’s health insurance. When she moved 52 miles, from San Francisco to live with us in San Jose, California, my mother had to change doctors and insurance coverage. As I understand it, the Medicare rules provide for a 30 mile radius around your home address for allowed health providers (except in emergencies and special circumstances). Getting her address and coverage transferred turned out to be very complex, so much so that my mother asked me for help in sorting out the mess.

Shortly after my father’s death in November 2011, my mother moved in with us. She thought she followed the rules and notified the right people of the move but soon started receiving NOTICE OF DENIAL OF PAYMENT letters from her health insurance company. Because she no longer permanently resided in the coverage area, she was disenrolled in her Medicare program and her doctor bills went unpaid.

Since then, I have talked with many staff members at my mother’s Medicare supplement insurance (“Medigap”) provider, sometimes several times a day. Some have been officious and bureaucratic, others have been thoughtful, supportive, and energetically helpful. In the past few weeks, we have managed to get her insurance reinstated and we are now discussing the effective date for coverage in our area. My mother gets letters almost every day giving complex and sometimes conflicting information. For example, on 10 February, there were two letters: one confirming disenrollment and the other confirming receipt of enrollment papers. Yesterday, there was an unsolicited 12″ x 9-1/2″ x 4-1/2″ box full of paper: instructions, lists, and rules documents. In my Silicon Valley world, these kind of documents only exist in electronic form.

In 2009, I wrote about my son’s $163,613 hospital bill as a specific example of how very broken the financial side of America’s health system is. My mother’s Medicare rules box and associated correspondence, which would mystify anybody even if they were good at paperwork and in excellent health (not the target audience for this material), seems to be another great example of a sadly broken system.

Image by Katy Dickinson 2012 Copyright

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Sacred Threads

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Sacred Threads gave a presentation during this morning’s service at our home church of Saint Andrew’s Episcopal (Saratoga, CA). Sacred Threads is a group of women and men who stitch intricate embroidery in service to the church. St. Andrew’s was founded in 1957 and over the years, groups like Sacred Threads have created kneelers and seat coverings to honor and brighten the sanctuary. Today, Sacred Threads donated a set of six portable kneelers designed to coordinate with those which already ring the altar rail. Each new kneeler was created to honor someone, including the three Rectors who have lead the church since it was founded: The Rev. Ray Strasburger, Rev. Ernest Cockrell, and Rev. Channing Smith. Ernest Cockrell was himself one of the Sacred Threads group and proudly told me that he stitched two of the kneelers.  In her presentation, Carolyn Wilson said that the six kneelers required over half a million stitches to complete.

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Photos by Katy Dickinson Copyright 2012

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Silicon Valley Supports Technical Women

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In the last week, I have been to three interesting events supporting technical women and girls here in the Silicon Valley:

It feels good to have strong support from such a wide variety of organizations for women in technology.

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Images by Katy Dickinson 2012 Copyright

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