Johnny Unitas' Former Home To Hit the Market
Scott Van Horn grew up in the home where Colts great Johnny Unitas once lived while building a football legend.
Scott Van Horn returned to his hometown of Towson a few weeks ago from Denver to fix up his parents' house in Campus Hills and ready it for sale. His dad died last August and his mom passed away a few years ago.
He’s completed the paperwork to have the house in the 900 block Starbit Road registered as an historic place. While the house appears to be just another of the many tri-level homes in the popular neighborhood off Providence Road, it is no ordinary dwelling.
This was Johnny Unitas' house.
“Johnny Unitas lived here from ‘58 through ‘65 with his first wife Dorothy and their children,” said Van Horn. “It was the place he came home to after the ’58 championship game. He lived here when he broke the record for consecutive games with a touchdown pass. He wasn’t even aware that he broke that record when they told him.”
The Van Horns moved into the home in 1968. Scott’s father, Gail Van Horn, needed more room to raise a family and a place for his wife, who didn’t drive, to walk to everything. Awarded the Silver Star in World War II, Gail worked in television and was instrumental in syndicating the popular show Romper Room across America.
“We had the Farm Store, the Colt Lanes for bowling and a pool with blue-and-white tile,” said Van Horn. “Everything was close by.”
Built in the 1950s, these homes featured state-of-the-art upgrades like all-electric kitchens and intercom systems. Unitas had a built-in trophy case off the dining room. Behind the paneling, there are glimpses of the original, light-blue paint used by the builders. Legendary coach Don Shula and Colts player Alan Ameche also lived in Campus Hills.
Scott was 7 when he first learned about the previous owner. Unitas died of a heart attack in 2002 at age 69.
“We were watching the Colts play the Cardinals in 1976 and they were doing a special on Johnny Unitas. Dad said, ‘You know, son, he lived in this house.’ I remember we lost the game and my father was upset.”
Scott only missed one Baltimore Colts game until the team left in 1984. He and his friends would cut through the trail behind his house and watch Colts training camp at Goucher College. They would hide in the woods and wait for the kickers and punters to rain footballs down on them.
“I remember it snowed on the day the Colts left town,” he said. “I stayed in the master bathroom, the one Johnny used, and refused to go to school. I wish Irsay would have left us the name.”
Scott is also a big Ravens fan who thought this was the team's year based on the fact that Raymond Berry was giving out the Lombardi Trophy and the game will be held in Indianapolis. He attended the Texans game and watched in disbelief Sunday as the Ravens fell to the Patriots in the AFC championship.
“I’m still recovering. It was a really disappointing loss. It reminded me of the 1958 game. Unitas didn’t want to leave it up to the kicker. That’s why they went in for the score,” he said. “He wanted the touchdown.”
The house is filled with Colts pennants, helmets, programs and memorabilia. Gail Van Horn’s military trunks and medals, including a Silver Star, are also there. He received the medal for disabling a German roadblock with four other soldiers by “crawling under furious enemy fire … and in fifteen minutes removing it by hand.”
Gail Van Horn will always be his youngest son’s favorite hero.
“I miss him, I really do. We’re still not sure what we are going to do about the house,” he said. “It will be tough to sell it.”
Buzz Beeler
1:38 am on Thursday, January 26, 2012
I grew up in Campus Hills. Walked home from Immaculate School with Gino's son. We always stopped by his dads place on York Road just down from the school. At that time in the 50's Gino lived on Shelly Road.
I think, because its been a few millenniums now, that Roy Campanello also lived there. I know he was on of our coaches during that time.
We had a youth football team and the Colt players were our coaches.
The practice field backed up to the beltway which was under construction. After practice we would go down and play on the tractors and graders.
I'd like to see all of those Colt's homes be made historic. One of the most prominent parts of this town's history and for that matter the nations - The Greatest Game Ever Played!
My 91 year old mother still lives there. The house's are still the same but the trees grew and grew.
God those were the good ole days. Where have they gone?
Buzz Beeler
8:29 pm on Sunday, January 29, 2012
Shame, shame. A great part of our sports heritage and no one notices. What's up with that?
Bill McAllen
8:56 pm on Sunday, January 29, 2012
Who cares besides the guy trying to make a few bucks on the Unitas name.
I wonder if that is the house Unitas walked out of when he left the wife and kids
for the new wife?
Sean Tully
10:56 pm on Sunday, January 29, 2012
That house is not an historic place. Give me a break. Maybe the house Unitas was born in could be called an historic place but that is in the Pittsburgh area somewhere.
M. Sullivan
8:37 am on Monday, January 30, 2012
I think the truly important hero who lived there was not Johnny Unitas, but Gail Van Horn, whose true heroism in WW2 earned him the Silver Star.
Buzz Beeler
10:19 am on Monday, January 30, 2012
M Sulivan, you are 100% correct. My father served in the Philippines as a paratrooper and received the purple heart. Mr. Van Horn's experiences would make a great story.
Bill what you said is also correct also, but then I think of people like Kennedy, Clinton, Jackson, Kennedy again, Eisenhower and about half of the humane race.
The memories that the story brought back flooded out, for the moment, the reality of life, which never stops until death and never changes until death.
I probably went a little overboard, but when you grew in that era and it is gone, so is part of your life. It just back a lot of memories.
Chris Ross
10:30 am on Monday, January 30, 2012
I also lived in Campus Hills during those times and was good friends with Ernie, Gino's son. Gino could pick me up straight-armed out of a chair after practice.
Mrs. Unitas yelled at us for running through her yard. I remember crawling through the storm water system all over Campus Hills (entry was at the outlet on the other side of Providence Road).
Great neighborhood - wish I appreciated it more when I lived there.
Chris
Buzz Beeler
11:03 am on Monday, January 30, 2012
Chris, I wonder if we ever crossed paths? Did you know the Currnan's who lived on Shelly Road. Pat and went to school together at TC. He went on to coach over at Calvert Hall. A great guy.
Did you play on any of the community sports teams? Remember our baseball uniforms with the white pin stripes and the blue C over the H, or the field we practiced football on behind what is now Colt Lanes?
I remember when the pool club was built and our family joined.
My brother and I started our working careers there delivering papers for the Sun. If I remember, I think we had close to 300 papers on Sunday to deliver.
I guess that is why the historical aspect of the story stuck a chord with me.