Fatcow Icon
Fire brings new chapter to lives of Ivanhoe couple
by Brooks Barwick
Sports Writer
All that remains of the Hartmann's house.
All that remains of the Hartmann's house.
slideshow
Photo by Brooks Barwick
Walter Hartmann stands where his front porch would have been on his house that burned down after it was struck by lightning over the weekend.
Photo by Brooks Barwick Walter Hartmann stands where his front porch would have been on his house that burned down after it was struck by lightning over the weekend.
slideshow

IVANHOE — When Walter Hartmann first saw the Robinson house that he would come to call home in Ivanhoe, he thought immediately of his native Germany.

“Before then, when I would think of America, I thought of Hollywood,” said Hartmann. “When I saw this house, I said, ‘This is different.’ It reminded me of Germany.”

The former plantation house dated back to 1910 and the Hartmanns had lived there since 1993. The couple, now 86 and 85, realized that the 12-room, seven-fireplace house was, as Hartmann pointed out, “entirely too big,” but they enjoyed the house’s location and history far too much to even consider moving.

Now, all that is left of that house are its three chimneys which remain standing upright among the still-smoldering burnt wreckage.

The house caught fire when lightning struck it in the early hours of Saturday morning and was completely destroyed.

Hartmann and his wife Marion lost everything, but the damage could have been far worse.

He recalled Monday what happened, starting with hearing a noise above his bedroom. The noise woke him and it didn’t take long, he stressed, for him to realize what was happening.

“I wasn’t thinking at all,” said Hartmann, “except I knew that my wife was lying beside me and I had to get us out of the house.”

Hartmann emerged from the burning house with his wife, who is confined to a wheelchair, and let their dog out of its kennel beside the house. Without any shoes, wearing only his pajamas, and without a way to contact anyone, he knew immediately that it would be impossible to salvage anything else.

“When I looked back, it was bad,” he recalled.

While he no longer has his driver’s license, Hartmann had his car and key close by and, as a measure of last resort, he piled his wife and dog into the car and began to work his way towards the highway.

As they reached the road, though, a man on his way to the night-shift saw the fire and called 911.

The Hartmanns were taken to their son Stefan’s house just a few miles down the road, where they remain.

“It’s been a little bit like sleepwalking,” said Hartmann. “You think you have to do something but then you realize that you can’t.”

The couple are determined to remain upbeat. They have already started making plans to clear the wreckage off the land and to begin work on a new, smaller house that would be better suited for them.

But while the fire destroyed all of their possessions, it also took a piece of Ivanhoe history.

The house had been built in 1910 by J.W.S Robinson, who was replacing a house on the same spot built in 1884 but was destroyed by fire in 1909.

The Robinsons used the surrounding land as a plantation and kept the house in the family for nearly 90 years.

Marion Hartmann (formerly Fisler) was born and raised in Ivanhoe and was good friends with Caroline Robinson.

Her brother was roommates with Walter, who had just months earlier moved to America from Germany, at Union Theological Seminary in Richmond, Va. The two met that Christmas when Walter was a guest at her house.

Walter would return to Ivanhoe that summer after Marion’s father asked him to preach at some churches in the area. He agreed, and by the end of the summer he and Marion had decided to marry.

The marriage would be put on hold, however, when Hartmann was offered a position at a German monastery. What he calls “a trans-Atlantic courtship” continued until Marion finally moved to Germany and they were able to marry.

It was not until decades later that the couple would find their way back to the United States and Ivanhoe around 1980.

In 1993, Caroline Robinson’s mother died and she passed the home on to the Hartmanns.

“They practically gave it to us,” asserted Mrs. Hartmann. “We had a great relationship with the Robinsons. (The house) was so beautiful. We had just had it painted last year. It looked lovely.”

“This house was too big for us,” interjected Walter, “but on the other hand, it was fascinating.”

The Hartmanns do not consider moving to a different location even a remote possibility. They had made the property their own with its own aspects and quirks and, while the house was destroyed, much remains on the land.

Surrounding outposts that house goats and free-range chickens owned by the Hartmanns were unscathed by the fire.

“I still have access to the riverbank,” says Walter with a smile, “so I can still go swimming.”

While they have lost everything, the Hartmanns are intent on working their way through the tragedy. The process will start this week as they begin to clear the lot of whatever remains.

They begin the rebuilding process not as victims of a tragedy, however, but as a couple that will continue to look optimistically towards the future.

“They’re using this as a good excuse for a new beginning,” says their son Stefan.

The Robinson house may be gone, but the Hartmanns are now beggining a new chapter.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
JSCC Phi Theta Kappa wins regional awards
KENANSVILLE – The James Sprunt Community College Phi Theta Kappa National Honor Society won seven...
Apr 05, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 8 8 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Mount Olive College Spring alumni weekend April 19 – 21
MOUNT OLIVE – Mount Olive College is preparing for its 2013 Spring Alumni Weekend which will take...
Apr 05, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Free spirit spring concert at Mount Olive College
MOUNT OLIVE — Free Spirit, a Mount Olive College Christian vocal ensemble, is presenting a Spring...
Apr 05, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Union has ‘perfect’ drill team season
Union High School’s Army JROTC Drill Team finished a perfect drill season on March 16 at Over Hil...
Mar 28, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend
full story


News
R-S students chosen for Duke camp
Two students from Roseboro-Salemburg Middle School, Sarah Wallace Strickland and Alondra Flores, have been selected to participate in the Duke University Health Careers Camp, from June 24th-28th. The students are 7th graders, Sarah Wallace Strickland and Alondra Flores. The camp is for students who have an interest in pursuing a career in healthcare. Students will get the opportunity to interact with healthcare professionals and participate in several workshops. This camp is designed to provide the students with hands on experiences in various careers in the healthcare field. There will be students from around the state participating in the camp. The camp is sponsored by the Duke AHEC program. (Courtesy photo)
R-S students chosen to Duke camp
Courtesy photo Two students from Roseboro-Salemburg Middle School, Sarah Wallace Strickland and Alondra Flores, have been selected to participate in the Duke University Health Careers Camp, from...
May 18, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
TIP students recognized
The following students were recognized during Clinton City Schools' May board meeting for participating in the Duke TIP Program: Edith Carr, Austin Johnson, Logan Spell, William Sutton, Greylon Barwick, Jacob Bauman, Parker Johnson, Charlie Marshburn, Zachary Parker, Lauren Strickland, Raegan Thornton, and Robert Turlington. (Lauren Williams/Sampson Independent)
TIP students recognized
Lauren Williams/Sampson Independent The following students were recognized during Clinton City Schools’ May board meeting for participating in the Duke TIP Program: Edith Carr, Austin Johnson, L...
May 18, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Read More News
Sports
Union's Dustin Alphin slides into second underneath Raider Heath Smith as the two teams collide in the third round of the state playoffs Friday. (Savanna Pope/The Sampson Independent)
Midway baseball wins 3rd round over Spartans
For the fourth time this season, the Raiders and Spartans met up on the baseball diamond, but this time the stakes were a little higher, as it was the third round of the NCHSAA state playoffs. Jus...
May 18, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Hobbton High School's outstanding softball catcher, Taylor Bowden has signed a Letter of Intent to play softball for Barton College in Wilson in her college career. With Ms. Bowden are: Pat Bowden, mother; Rodney Bowden, father;  Dr. Wesley Johnson, Hobbton Principal; Wildcat softball coach, Morgan Farroll; Brett Bowden, her brother; and travel ball coach David Mixon. (David Johnson/The Sampson Independent)
Wildcat Bowden to play softball at Barton
David Johnson/The Sampson Independent Hobbton High School’s outstanding softball catcher, Taylor Bowden has signed a Letter of Intent to play softball for Barton College in Wilson in her college...
May 18, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Read More Sports
Editorial
Sampsonians respond in a big way
It has been said that the things we have in common are far greater than the differences that often separate us. That is never truer than when one looks at the way this community gives back to those who are less fortunate. No matter the cause, Sampsonians respond, and they respond in a big way....
May 17, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Garden’s success grows
A butterfly garden, started last year as a Clinton Garden Club project, has seen its second metamorphosis in its fledgling existence — from the creative minds of club members to a joint venture between the club and Sampson Community College that brought in dozens of youngsters during its infancy...
May 14, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 6 6 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Read More Editorials
Weather
Sponsored By:

RSS Feeds
All articles feed
News feed
Sports feed
Videos feed
Obituaries feed
Opinion feed
Local Features
Stylist Rose Soto prepares to snip off one section of Rosemary Hunter's hair. Hunter, who turned 66 Wednesday, decided she would offer her hair to Locks of Love, a way, she said, of giving back. (Sherry Matthews/Sampson Independent)
A birthday gift
Local nurse uses her birthday to give back — cutting her hair for Locks of Love
May 15, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Shutterbugs 2 student Marcia Jackson's photograph, entitled 'Morning Paradise' was taken at Cashwell in Southport. She said she thought the photograph was a good example of what she had learned in class about silhouette and framing. The picture was taken without a flash.
Reflections
SCC’s Shutterbugs 2 students capture the beauty of nature as they hone their skills behind the camera
May 12, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Read More Local Features
Poll
Sponsored By:

Farmers Market
May 14, 2013 | 86750 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Have you shopped the Farmers Market in Clinton yet?

View Previous Polls
Special Sections
Living 50 plus
HealthMind&Body2012
Medical Guide 2011
Law Day Salute 2009