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HOME WORK: Building a dream

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Almost 45 years ago, Jeff Hallock was a kid riding his bike

past a creaky old house on South Jamesport Avenue, thinking the same spooky

thoughts his friends were thinking. "To all of us kids, it was a haunted

house," Hallock says of the 19th century Jamesport mansion. "When we got older,

in high school, we'd sneak in on Halloween nights, just for something to do."

For decades, the five-story Italianate villa on South Jamesport Avenue sat

vacant, falling deeper and deeper into disrepair. Village residents and summer

visitors viewed the rickety structure with a mix of curiosity and creepiness,

like a setting from a Stephen King novel.

Today, Captain Jedediah Hawkins' house is a plush restaurant and inn,

breathtakingly restored to the tune of nearly $3.5 million. A blend of original

materials - virtually all the doors and windows and much of the wood flooring,

wall trim and stair rails remain intact - and modern technology, including

wireless Internet, plasma televisions in every bedroom and central

air-conditioning, the project is more a tribute to builder Jeff Hallock's

perseverance than historical preservation.

Yes, the Hallock house is a link to a Long Island of the past, when

sea-faring entrepreneurs like Jedediah Hawkins, who died in 1901 at age 63,

built sprawling homesteads. But the Hallock house isn't the first area

residence from the 1860s to be restored. It probably won't be the last.

However, it stands as a testament to Hallock's vision. And it's a story today's

children of the North Fork can tell their children and grandchildren.

"I think I feel relief, more than anything," says Hallock, 53, who still

makes Jamesport his home and who literally saved the Hawkins house from the

wrecking ball. "For almost three years, the house consumed me, took up all of

my time. Ever since I was a kid, I had wanted to see it saved. It's good to

keep a little history. It's here so everyone can see it, everyone can visit."

Until the recent renovation - the Hawkins house opened to the public last

fall - most Jamesport residents had never set foot in the mansion. From 1949 to

2003, it was owned by Stephen Sikorski, a New York City firefighter, and his

wife, Helen. Originally, they planned to make a renovated Hawkins house their

full-time residence. Hallock says the idea fizzled because the Sikorskis

couldn't come up with enough money. Instead, they built a small ranch-style

home in front of the Hawkins mansion.

Meanwhile, Hallock watched from a distance, first attending college and

then becoming a third-generation builder, following his father, Norm, and his

grandfather, Dick. Over time, he befriended the Sikorskis. "They were sort of

distant to almost everyone," Hallock says. "But after a while, they opened up

to me. I think they realized my intentions were sincere."

For years, curious tourists and passersby would pull into the driveway and

ask the Sikorskis to see the Hawkins house. They almost always refused. Hallock

believes it was an insurance issue; the house had deteriorated so badly the

Sikorskis didn't want anyone to walk through and get injured. Only Hallock, it

seemed, had won the Sikorskis' confidence. And as he began to restore other

homes in the area, Hallock continued to dream about the Hawkins house.

Then, in 2003, with the Sikorskis in their 90s and the house facing

demolition after being declared a safety hazard by the village fire marshal,

Hallock came to the rescue. He and a partner, Dr. Frank Arena, a Great Neck

oncologist, purchased the house and property, about three acres, for $500,000.

The sale allowed the Sikorskis to remain in their ranch-style home, too.

(Stephen Sikorski died in April 2004; Helen died in June.)

The deal allowed Hallock to go to work on the mansion. "The first thing we

did was put on a temporary roof," Hallock says. "The house had suffered years

of water damage, and we had to put a stop to that."

Once the roof was installed, the next task was massive cleanup. All the

plaster walls and ceilings were removed. The attic, inhabited by dozens of

animals and once struck by lightning, required drastic action. "Every kind of

critter native to Long Island had taken up residence here," says Hallock, as he

recently toured the attic, which was remade into a two-room bedroom suite.

As the cleanup stretched from August to December and his crew fortified the

structure, Hallock mulled several plans. "But you can't really develop a

restoration plan until you see what you have," Hallock said. "Cleaning out the

interior and removing overgrown shrubs and weeds was a big, big task."

At first, the structure was going to be a premiere show house. Riverhead

designers Robert Clark and Raymond Le Cuyer worked with about 30 professionals

from Manhattan and Long Island to decorate the interior and landscape the

grounds. Last fall, the house opened as part of a Designer Showcase, a six-week

public viewing that benefited Central Suffolk Hospital. The response was so

great, Hallock and his partners - in addition to Arena, they are Barbara

Kammerer, Lia Polites and Frank McVeigh - decided to create the inn and

restaurant.

Area residents and visitors still are intrigued by the homesite, Hallock

says. "For years, people just went past it, wondering what was inside." Hallock

tells of the first time he and his workers opened the home to the public, in

the winter of 2004. "We had cleaned it up, but it was still somewhat of a

mess," he says. "We had a Christmas party and expected about 40 or 50 people to

respond. Almost 300 people walked through the front door."

The restored mansion features a variety of modern materials, such as

fiber-cement siding, which replicates wood; slate-like roof shingles of a

rubber-plastic composite; radiant heat; PEX (polyethylene) plumbing; a

fire-sprinkler system; and propane heat. At the same time, whatever could be

salvaged was reused; wood from the demolished barn - the only original building

that did not survive - was used to panel the finished basement-wine cellar.

Several original pieces of wood siding were used in residing the front

entrance. Brick and stone from the foundation also was reused in the basement.

"About 75 to 85 percent of the building is original material," Hallock says.

The five-story mansion has five guest bedrooms, including the attic suite

with a belvedere that opens to views of the Great Peconic Bay. The ground floor

features a greeting room for the inn, with a concierge, a lounge and a small

service bar. The restaurant has three separate dining areas, plus a back patio

where guests can dine al fresco.

In addition to the mint-green main house, trimmed in chocolate brown and

orange, three original buildings remain - an outhouse (nonfunctional, of

course), a small milk barn and the summer kitchen. The summer kitchen, usually

situated at the rear of large homes, was used to prepare meals in warm months.

This way, the rest of the home would remain cool. A new barn has been built,

and Hallock envisions it being used as guest bedrooms for the inn.

"My crew went from not wanting to be here to never wanting to leave," says

Hallock. "And my father was here a lot, too."

Norm Hallock died in July 2005, a few months before the completed project

opened to the public. "He didn't get to see us finish," Jeff Hallock says, eyes

misting, of his father, mentor, friend and role model. "But I know he would

have been really proud of what we have done."

As proud as any father when a son's dream finally comes true.

WRITE TO: Gary Dymski, 235 Pinelawn Rd., Melville, NY 11747-4250 or e-mail

Gary.Dymski@newsday.com

TOUR

Shelter Island Heights Historic House Tour & Tea, 1 to 5 p.m. Saturday starts

at Union Chapel. Tickets are $25 in advance, $40 at door; 631-749-2315.

While you're in Jamesport ...

Go to a tasting at the Jamesport Vineyards, Main Road/ Route 25,

631-722-5256. Open daily 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; tastings, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Buy sweet corn at the Harbes Family Farm Stand, on Main Road opposite the

Jamesport Vineyard, 631-722-2022.

Dine at the Jedediah

Hawkins Inn & Restaurant, 400 S. Jamesport Ave., 631-722-2900.

Dinner: Sunday to Wednesday, 5 to 9:30 p.m.; Thursday to Saturday, 5 to 10

p.m. Lunch: Monday to Saturday, 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.; Sunday brunch, 10:30

a.m. to 2:30 p.m.

Gary Dymski and Jeff Hallock discuss the repairs done on the Jedediah Hawkins

House in a video on newsday.com/explore.

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