There’s a pretty ordinary house up for sale in Akron’s Kenmore neighborhood.
Ordinary from the curb.
But what’s hidden inside is quite extraordinary.
Inside of the well-maintained quaint brick Cape Cod on the corner of Jason Avenue and 9th Street SW is a collection of artworks by late Barberton muralist Ralph Herzog.
His works cover the ceilings and the walls and even the cupboards of many of the rooms inside of the home.
And how it came to be that an artist − best known for his mural work found inside and outside of area businesses − ended up spending 10 or so years painting inside of the home is a curious story in and of itself.
Like many such tales it starts with a unlikely friendship.
The home’s owner, Donald Nichols, was a former Navy man, semi-professional wrestler, and president of a local Boilermakers Union.
But like Herzog he had an interest in music, antiques and the arts.
Nichols also enjoyed surrounding himself with interesting people so he struck up a friendship with Herzog.
The commission for one mural inside of the home led to another and another and another before Herzog passed away in 2020.
And when Donald Nichols passed away in March 2022 − the house and its permanent artwork was left to his two children, a daughter, Nicole Carl and his son Aaron Nichols.
See the inside of the Kenmore home:Home for sale in Akron’s Kenmore neighborhood features artwork by Ralph Herzog
Carl said the first real estate broker they contacted suggested just painting over all the murals and artwork to get it ready to be put on the market.
But the artwork is extraordinary and personal for the family and they felt it should be preserved if at all possible.
An upstairs mural features sheep.
Carl said her dad thought her then infant daughter, Skylar, now 25, should be able to count the sheep when the granddaughter would sleepover in the room.
Selling the home built in 1942 − now listed for $130,000 − was a difficult decision for the family.
“It’s time for someone else to love the home and appreciate it,” Carl said.
They turned to a family friend Realtor Eric Cooper who grew up in Akron’s Kenmore neighborhood and is a partner in its redevelopment and works for Coldwell Banker Schmidt Realty Portage Lakes.
Cooper said he’s listed hundreds of houses over the years, but this was is perhaps the most unique he’s ever seen.
It would be a shame to paint over the murals, Cooper said, so he suggested the family preserve and market its unique features that includes some stained glass doors and one room that has a wooden floor that Nichols salvaged from a church that was being torn down near his childhood home in West Virginia.
“This is a great house,” he said. “Someone is going to love this house. It is so cool.”
Craig Webb can be reached at [email protected].