In 2007, we had a post about Edith Macefield and her refusal to sell her home, even though a high-rise was going up all around her little house in Seattle. Edith died in 2008.
In 2009, we posted a picture of Macefield’s house festooned with balloons as a promotion for the then-new Pixar movie Up. Many speculate that the movie was inspired by Macefield.
You might not know the rest of the story. Who got the house when Macefield died? She willed it to Barry Martin, the construction chief of the project that went up around her house! The two had become good friends during the building controversy. He is making sure that Macefield's legacy lives on. Read the whole story, with pictures, at Buzzfeed.
(Image credit: Ben Tesch)
A 1942 book written and illustrated by Virginia Lee Burton is the same story. A little house, out in the country, well loved and well tended. then the city got closer and closer until the little house was crammed between big buildings and abandoned and ramshackle. until saved by a descendent of the builder and moved to a new location out in the country. I loved that book growing up.
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