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    HomeTop StoriesThis couple bought a 110-year-old schoolhouse for $175,000 sight unseen and converted...

    This couple bought a 110-year-old schoolhouse for $175,000 sight unseen and converted it into their family home—take a look inside

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    Stacie Grissom and Sean Wilson lived in New York City for almost a decade, and then the covid-19 pandemic hit.

    In early 2020, Grissom was pregnant with their first child and working in marketing at BarkBox, while Wilson was working as an orthopedic surgeon in NYC hospitals.

    Seeing the state of the city during that time made Grissom realize she was ready to move back to Franklin, Indiana, their hometown, which is about 30 miles from downtown Indianapolis.

    “We had a reevaluation that it’s the people who matter the most, so we wanted to move back to our hometown to be by our families,” Grissom tells CNBC Make It.

    “We got our chosen family in New York, and it’s the best city in the world, but we had to go where our family was.”

    The couple officially moved into the schoolhouse in September 2024.

    Kate Wilson

    A couple of months after their son was born, Grissom contacted a realtor friend in Franklin and told him to start looking at “weird old houses.”

    “I told him the quirkier, the better, and to send us a fixer-upper,” Grissom says. “His dad saw a school for sale and immediately said, ‘Send it to Stacie.'”

    Since Grissom and Wilson were still in New York City at the time, they asked her parents to check out the property instead.

    Grissom says the building was a school for local children between 1914 and 1934. After the schoolhouse closed, it was used as a barn.

    The school was originally named Union Joint Graded School No. 9.

    Johnson County Museum of History

    Since Grissom’s dad had experience running a commercial real estate business, she knew he would give her an honest and expert opinion on the school’s state.

    After getting her parents’ approval, Grissom and Wilson made an offer on the schoolhouse without ever seeing it in person themselves — and it was accepted within 24 hours.

    “We wouldn’t have bought it if my parents hadn’t agreed because we knew with this kind of project we were going to need the entire village,” she says.

    ‘It’s like a Midwestern castle in the middle of some cornfields of Indiana’

    ‘I never thought my house could be a job’

    Grissom admits that nothing about the renovation has been easy, but a highlight of the experience has been being able to focus full-time on being a content creator and sharing the schoolhouse journey on social media.

    “It has been fun to document this process and find this old home renovation community online. I never thought my house could be a job,” she says. “It’s nice to be able to make an income from some of the storytelling while also getting advice and having a community of people who like restoring old stuff.”

    The couple had to have brand new windows installed and new floors in most of the rooms too.

    Stacie Grissom and Sean Wilson

    Amid ongoing renovations, the couple and their now two kids moved into the home in September of this year.

    “Moving into the schoolhouse was easier than moving into any New York City apartment we ever had,” Grissom says. “It was nice to wake up and see the sunrise over the cornfields. It will be a tornado in here for a while, but it was really crazy to finally set up a place that we’ve been thinking about for three years and pouring all of our money, energy, sweat, and tears into.”

    The schoolhouse now has four bedrooms and two and a half baths, all on the 4,000-square-foot upper level. The couple still has a lower 4,000-square-foot sub-basement that they are trying to figure out what to do with.

    The building served as a school from 1914 to 1934.

    Stacie Grissom and Sean Wilson

    The best part of finally moving into the schoolhouse and being back in their hometown, Grissom says is that her kids will grow up around their families.

    “After living through the pandemic and all of the stress and anxiety, we all had a confrontation with our mortality at a much earlier age than most generations do and that totally shifted stuff in my brain. It’s beautiful to see my parents are healthy, our kids are happy and just appreciate the small things,” she adds.

    Since moving in a few weeks ago, Grissom says that while she realizes it was a long road to move in, she would go through it again.

    “I never want to lose the naivete of whatever made us say that we wanted to buy a school and it was going to be our house,” she says.

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