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Village Craftsmen
170
Howard Street
PO Box 248
Ocracoke Island,
NC
252-928-5541
info@villagecraftsmen.com
The Homer & Aliph Howard Home
Ocracoke Island, on the Outer Banks of North Carolina, was first settled by
Europeans in the mid 1700's. In 1759, at nearly 60 years old, William
Howard purchased the entire island for £105, and moved here.
Over the years the village grew. Families built modest homes, a church
was established, schools were built, and businesses flourished as shipping,
fishing, and, eventually, tourism blossomed.
Many island homes in the nineteenth century were constructed from materials
salvaged from schooners that wrecked on Ocracoke's beach. These and other
historically significant structures are included in an area of approximately 200
acres around Silver Lake harbor. In 1990 the Ocracoke Historic District was
established, with more than 200 contributing structures identified.
The Homer and Aliph Howard home is one of these contributing structures.
In 1893, Homer Howard (great-great-great grandson of William Howard) married
Aliph Dean O'Neal (great-great-great-great granddaughter of William Howard). As a wedding present, Homer's father, James Howard,
purchased a nearby small home and had it moved to his property on Howard Street.
(This house is being rehabilitated. As work proceeds, additional
information and photos of the project will be posted here. Please scroll
down, and check back periodically to follow our progress.)
You can click on most of the photos below to view a larger
version.
The Homer & Aliph Howard Home, on the left, as it
appeared ca. 1932, and, on the right, January, 2004:
 
This house is representative of the basic island home, the historic
"story and a jump," a diminutive frame house, one and a half stories
high. In typical fashion, it has a front porch and a one-story shed addition in
the rear. It was built ca. 1860 for Thompson Bragg (born ca. 1837/38), who
never married, and it originally sat where the School Road lies now, not far
from NC Highway 12.
Homer and Aliph Howard had 13 children. Although only eight of these
children lived to attain maturity (listed below in bold type), all of them were born and reared in
this 1000 square foot home. The house was heated, first by
wood, and later by a kerosene space heater. There was no indoor plumbing and the kitchen was a
separate building connected to the rear of the house by a wide wooden
boardwalk. Aliph prepared meals on a cast iron wood-burning cook
stove. Family members obtained water from a pitcher pump that was
connected to a large round wooden cistern.
|
Name |
Sex |
Birth Date |
Death Date |
|
Aliph Dean O'Neal Howard |
F (Mother) |
March 19, 1876 |
December 13, 1950 |
|
Homer Howard |
M (Father) |
June 21, 1868 |
May 15, 1947 |
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Agatha |
F |
May 11, 1894 |
March 11, 1986 |
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Marvin Wyche |
M |
September 11, 1897 |
March 26, 1969 |
|
Failing H |
M |
November 04, 1899 |
July 14, 1900 |
|
Beatrice |
F |
March 04, 1901 |
Died at birth or soon after |
|
James Enoch |
M |
January 21, 1903 |
January 04, 1972 |
|
Evans |
M |
October 26, 1905 |
January 21, 1923 |
|
Cordelia Zilphia |
F |
May 16, 1908 |
April 19, 1993 |
|
Neva May |
F |
June 09, 1910 |
Died at birth or soon after |
|
Lawton Wesley |
M |
October 10, 1911 |
March 23, 2002 |
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Thelma Gray |
F |
December 23, 1912 |
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Aliph Carena |
F |
May 13, 1915 |
July 22, 1915 |
|
Homer Rodheaver |
M |
July 13, 1917 |
May 29, 1966 |
|
Aliph Dean |
F |
September 26, 1918 |
October 12, 1918 |
Thelma Gray Howard Babb (Aliph & Homer's tenth child), a feisty, witty,
active, and fun-loving woman who turned 91 years old in December of 2003, lives
in Texas.
Aunt Thelma, March 29, 2003:

Homer & Aliph Howard with Thelma's daughter Becky (note
round cistern behind Homer), 1939:
This house was sold outside of the family in the mid 1960's (about a decade
after Aliph died), but Philip Howard, Homer and Aliph's grandson, bought the
property again in 1990. Although several people have owned this house, and
even more have lived in it, no truly major renovations were ever
made.
Aliph & Homer Howard, mid-1940's:

In the mid-1930's the small open porch on the rear shed addition was
converted to an indoor kitchen. And in the mid-1950's a small bathroom was
added on the first floor, the roof was replaced, and plywood was nailed to all
of the floors and to most of the walls and ceilings. Otherwise, few
alterations were made. As a result, although the house shows the effects
of nearly 150 years of wear from humans, critters, and storms, it remains
remarkably well preserved.
In 2003 Philip obtained approval from the North Carolina State Historic
Preservation Office for an historic rehabilitation of this significant island
structure. Work was begun in January 2004.
Philip Howard on porch with Ginger, ca. 1954:

Use the links at the top of the page to see a record of ongoing work done on
the Homer & Aliph Howard home.
Check back periodically for additional photos and more information about the
progress of this project.
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