Sandy Mansmann, a preservationist from Nottingham Township, Pa., sizes up a double outhouse behind the closed Mt. Zion Church near her farm.
By Scott Beveridge
By Scott Beveridge
Sandy Mansmann's restored 1870s farmstead includes many original  outbuildings, from the old chicken coop to a spring house.
But, there is one building missing: the outhouse. And, she has been on a difficult journey to find a replacement to move to  her farm in Nottingham Township, even though she has an indoor toilet.
"It was probably the first thing to go when they got indoor  plumbing," said Mansmann, a preservationist and member of Washington  County History and Landmarks Foundation.
Oddly, outhouses have become a hot,  trendy landscaping decoration – maybe because so few of them have  survived and people are longing for nostalgia, Mansmann said. They also  make great conversation pieces, she added.
"They can be charming little buildings," she said.
To keep them was a sign that homeowners "were not modern enough," she  added.
Retired antiques dealer Lorys Crisafulli said she knows a guy who  wants an outhouse so bad he is willing to  pay $500 for one.
"All of a sudden, everybody wants one," Crisafulli said.
The buildings are featured annually in outhouse  calendars, and replicas come in all sizes and shapes, from Christmas  ornaments to birdhouses.
"They are real popular. I have no idea why," said Stan Fidorek,  manager of Over the Garden Gate greenhouse on a century-old farm  complete with a sagging outhouse in  Richeyville.
He found it amusing that a stranger stopped at the store one day  inquiring about purchasing the outhouse,  which has the traditional crescent moon carved out of its door.
"He never came back," Fidorek said.
The customer would have been out of luck, though, because the owner  of the farm on Route 40 – Bunny Waleski – wants to keep her outhouse.
"She doesn't want to destroy anything," he said. "She wants to  restore everything, even the chicken coop."
Preservationists who have old farms believe the outbuildings –  including barns and summer kitchens – help to tell the story about how  the property was originally used, Mansmann said.
"Placement was very important," she said.
The outhouse needed to be erected away  from the spring so as not to contaminate the water supply, and downwind  from the kitchen, she said.
Not everyone remembers them so fondly.
Bill Miller said he was "glad to see them go" when public sewerage  arrived in 1990 in his hometown of Beallsville.
"If you had to go in the night, you had to run through the yard or  find a stream," said Miller, 72. "You'd sit there at night with the door  open and see the skunks run by."
"I hated using them at night. Sitting out there alone was scary,"  added Crisafulli, 84. "It made me think twice before I ate or drank much  after dinner."
But, Fidorek believes an outhouse is a  "good standby" in case something goes wrong with the modern plumbing.
"It's good forever," he said.
(This story first appeared in the Observer-Reporter newspaper in Washington, Pa.) 

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