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Contents.
Index.
List of Plates (In certain versions of this etext [in certain browsers]
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THE ARCHITECTURE OF
COLONIAL AMERICA
DOORWAY OF WYCK, GERMANTOWN, PHILADELPHIA.
An excellent example of the Pennsylvania Colonial type. Built 1690.
Frontispiece.
THE ARCHITECTURE OF
COLONIAL AMERICA
BY
HAROLD DONALDSON EBERLEIN
ILLUSTRATED FROM PHOTOGRAPHS
By MARY H. NORTHEND
AND OTHERS
BOSTON
LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY
1915
Copyright, 1915,
By Little, Brown, and Company
———
All rights reserved
Published, October, 1915
Norwood Press
Set up and electrotyped by J. S. Cushing Co., Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.
FOREWORD
IT is the purpose of this volume to set forth a brief history and an
analysis of the architecture of Colonial America, in such wise that they
may be of interest and value both to the general reader and to the
architect.
The subject will be treated with reference to the close connexion
existing between architecture and the social and economic circumstances
of the period, so that some additional light may fall upon the daily
conditions of life among our forefathers. At the same time, there will
be a careful critical analysis of the origin and development of the
several seventeenth and eighteenth century styles that have left us so
wealthy an architectural heritage, an heritage based upon a groundwork
of traditions brought across the Atlantic by the early craftsmen and
artisans.
Such an analysis, it is hoped, will materially contribute to a broader
appreciation of our possessions and will not be without value in the
interpretation of modern buildings in which the traditions of the past
have been perpetuated. Perhaps it is not too much to hope that a more
exact knowledge of early achievements may even supply a measure of
inspiration and guidance to those who purpose building homes for
themselves.
In thanking those who have so courteously assisted in the preparation of
this book, acknowledgment must first of all be made to Miss Mary Harrod
Northend, to whose suggestion the undertaking was entirely due, and
whose illustrations have, in large measure, made it possible of
realisation. The author gratefully records his indebtedness also to
Messrs. J. B. Lippincott Company, of Philadelphia, for permission to use
a number of illustrations of Pennsylvania houses that appeared in “The
Colonial Homes of Philadelphia and its Neighbourhood”, by H. D. Eberlein
and H. M. Lippincott, and likewise for permission to reproduce an
illustration of the Adam Thoroughgood house from “Historic Virginia
Homes and Churches”, by Robert A. Lancaster, Jr.; to the Architectural
Record for permission to incorporate, in chapters IV, VIII and XI,
parts of papers contributed to that magazine; to Dr. George W. Nash of
Old Hurley, for generous assistance in supplying many illustrations
drawn from a wide geographical area; to H. L. Duhring, Jr., of
Philadelphia, for suggestions that bore important fruit in the progress
of the work and for the illustration of the Saal at Ephrata; to Messrs.
R. A. Lancaster, Jr., G. C. Callahan and Joseph Everett Chandler for
sundry items of assistance; to the Librarian and staff of the Library
Company of Philadelphia, and to the Librarian and staff of the
Pennsylvania Historical Society for continued courtesies while the
following pages were in course of preparation, to the Brickbuilder, to
Mr. Edmund C. Evans and, finally, to Messrs. Horace Mather Lippincott
and Philip B. Wallace for valuable help in the matter of photographs.
HAROLD DONALDSON EBERLEIN.
Philadelphia, August, 1915.
CONTENTS
| CHAPTER | |
PAGE |
| I. | Introductory | 1 |
| II. | The Dutch Colonial Type, 1613-1820 | 14 |
| III. | The Colonial Architecture of New England | 38 |
| IV. | Pre-Georgian Architecture in the Middle Colonies | 57 |
| V. | The Colonial Architecture of the South | 77 |
| VI. | The Georgian Mode in New England | 99 |
| VII. | Georgian Architecture in New York | 113 |
| VIII. | Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware Georgian, 1720-1805 | 120 |
| IX. | The Georgian Architecture of the South | 156 |
| X. | The Post-Colonial Period and the Classic Revival | 166 |
| XI. | Public Buildings of the Colonial and Post-Colonial Periods | 182 |
| XII. | Churches of the Colonial Period | 205 |
| XIII. | Materials and Textures | 236 |
| XIV. | Early American Architects and Their Resources | 252 |
| | Index:
A,
B,
C,
D,
E,
F,
G,
H,
I,
J,
K,
L,
M,
N,
O,
P,
Q,
R,
S,
T,
U,
V,
W,
Y. | 275 |
LIST OF PLATES
| Doorway of Wyck, Germantown, Philadelphia. 1690 | Frontispiece |
| | Facing Page |
| Senate House, Kingston-on-Hudson, N.Y. 1676 | 4 |
| Ward House, near Salem, Mass. | 4 |
| House at Yorktown, Va. | 5 |
| Exterior of the Lee House, Marblehead, Mass. 1768 | 5 |
| Laurel Hill, Fairmount Park, Philadelphia. 1762 | 10 |
| Pingree or White Portico, Salem, Mass. | 10 |
| Typical Houses, Old Hurley, N.Y. | 11 |
| Elmendorf House, Old Hurley, N.Y. | 11 |
| Van Deusen House, Old Hurley, N.Y. | 16 |
| Hallway, Van Deusen House | 16 |
| Hoffman House, Kingston-on-Hudson, N.Y. | 17 |
| Characteristic Old Dutch House, Kingston-on-Hudson, N.Y. | 17 |
| Ackerman (Brinckerhoff) House, Hackensack, N.J. 1704 | 24 |
| Verplanck House, near Fishkill Landing, N.Y. | 24 |
| Hall, Bowne House, Flushing, Long Island, N.Y. | 25 |
| Dining Room, Van Cortlandt Manor House, Croton-on-Hudson, N.Y. | 25 |
| House of Seven Gables, Salem, Mass. 1669 | 40 |
| Fairbanks House, Dedham, Mass. 1636 | 40 |
| Whipple House, Ipswich, Mass. | 41 |
| Whipple House, Ipswich, Mass. | 41 |
| Paul Revere House, Street Front, after Restoration. 1676 | 46 |
| Paul Revere House. Great Room, Ground Floor | 47 |
| Doten House, Plymouth, Mass. 1640 | 52 |
| Narbonne House, Salem, Mass. | 52 |
| Wynnestay, Philadelphia. 1689 | 53 |
| South Front of Wyck, Germantown, Philadelphia. 1690 | 53 |
| Little Tavern at Ionic and American Streets, Philadelphia. 1692 | 60 |
| William Penn House, Fairmount Park, Philadelphia | 60 |
| Gloria Dei Glebe House | 61 |
| Oldest House in Dover, Dela. | 61 |
| Quaker Alms House, Philadelphia | 66 |
| London (Bradford’s) Coffee House, Philadelphia. 1702 | 66 |
| Old Philadelphia Court House. 1707 | 67 |
| Merion Meeting House, Pennsylvania. 1695 | 74 |
| Moravian Sisters’ House, Bethlehem, Pa. c. 1748 | 75 |
| The Saal, Ephrata, Pa. | 75 |
| Adam Thoroughgood House, Princess Anne County, Va. c. 1740 | 88 |
| Governour Eden House, Edenton, N.C. | 88 |
| House at Yorktown, Va. | 89 |
| “Hospital” House, Yorktown, Va. | 89 |
| House of Hon. John Blair, Williamsburg, Va. | 98 |
| Carey House, Williamsburg, Va. | 98 |
| Royall House, Medford, Mass. 1732 | 99 |
| Lee House, Marblehead, Mass. 1768 | 99 |
| Royall House. West Doorway | 100 |
| Royall House. Doorway in West Parlour | 100 |
| Lee House. Banquet Room | 101 |
| Lee House. Stairway | 101 |
| Lee House. Fireplace | 104 |
| Lee House. Wall Paper | 104 |
| Macphaedris-Warner House, Portsmouth, N.H. 1723 | 105 |
| Dummer Mansion, Byfield, Mass. c. 1715 | 105 |
| Doorway, Dummer House | 108 |
| The Lindens. Stair and Hall. c. 1770 | 109 |
| Wentworth House. Hall and Stair | 109 |
| Parson Williams House, Deerfield, Mass. 1707 | 112 |
| Van Cortlandt House, Van Cortlandt Park, N.Y. | 113 |
| Philipse Manor House, Yonkers, N.Y. 1683 | 116 |
| Fraunce’s Tavern, Broad Street, New York City | 117 |
| Window Detail, Van Cortlandt House | 118 |
| Philipse House, near Tarrytown, N.Y. | 118 |
| Waynesborough, Paoli, Pa. 1724 | 119 |
| Graeme Park, Horsham, Pa. 1721 | 119 |
| Graeme Park, South Front | 120 |
| Hope Lodge, Whitemarsh Valley. 1723 | 120 |
| Great Parlour, Graeme Park | 121 |
| Hallway, Hope Lodge | 121 |
| Whitby Hall, North Front, Kingsessing, Philadelphia. 1754 | 128 |
| Stairway, Whitby Hall | 128 |
| Whitby Hall, South Front | 129 |
| Mantel Detail, Whitby Hall | 129 |
| Cliveden, Germantown, Philadelphia. 1761 | 140 |
| Mantel in Parlour, Mount Pleasant, Philadelphia. 1761 | 141 |
| The Woodlands, South Front. Philadelphia, c. 1770 | 141 |
| The Woodlands, North Front | 146 |
| The Highlands, Whitemarsh Valley, Pa. 1796 | 146 |
| Homewood, near Baltimore | 147 |
| Harwood, Annapolis. 1774 | 160 |
| Brice House, Annapolis. 1740 | 160 |
| Shirley, James River, Va. | 161 |
| Westover, James River, Va. | 161 |
| Carter’s Grove, Va. 1728 | 164 |
| Andalusia on the Delaware, Pennsylvania. 1794-1832 | 165 |
| Old Maritime Exchange, Philadelphia | 165 |
| Andrew Safford Porch, Salem, Mass. | 176 |
| Interior Doorway, Nichols House, Salem, Mass. | 176 |
| The Capitol at Washington | 177 |
| Girard College, Philadelphia | 177 |
| Window Detail, House in Philadelphia | 180 |
| Door Detail, House in Philadelphia | 180 |
| State House, Philadelphia, South Front. 1733 | 181 |
| Hallway, State House, Philadelphia | 181 |
| Faneuil Hall, Boston. 1741 | 188 |
| Independence Room, State House, Philadelphia | 188 |
| Old State House, Boston | 189 |
| Bulfinch State House, Boston | 194 |
| New York City Hall | 194 |
| Old Pine Street Market, Philadelphia | 195 |
| Carpenters’ Hall, Philadelphia | 195 |
| Pennsylvania Hospital, Philadelphia | 204 |
| Black Horse Inn Yard, Philadelphia | 204 |
| Bruton Parish Church, Williamsburg, Va. 1714 | 205 |
| Old South Church, Boston. 1730 | 210 |
| King’s Chapel, Boston | 210 |
| Christ Church, Philadelphia. 1727 | 211 |
| St. Peter’s Church, Philadelphia. 1761 | 211 |
| Gloria Dei (Old Swedes), Philadelphia. 1700 | 220 |
| St. Luke’s Church, Smithfield, Va. 1632 | 220 |
| Old Ship Church, Hingham, Mass. | 221 |
| Sleepy Hollow Church, Irvington, N.Y. | 221 |