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Antebellum |
DESCRIPTION:
Most ante-bellum houses, meaning there were built before the
outbreak of the Civil War, are the Federal style, as far as grand houses
are concerned. They are generally symmetrical and boxy. They have center
entrances on the front and rear, evenly spaced windows, gable roofs, and
end chimneys. Two good examples in Mecklenburg County are Cedar Grove
and Oaklawn. |
LOCAL EXAMPLES:
Cedar Grove
W. T. Alexander House |
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Craftsman Bungalow |
DESCRIPTION:
Bungalows were designed by the British for use in colonial India.
Therefore, they are fashioned for warm weather. The roofs are hipped,
thereby providing large attics for storage and for capturing the heat in
the summer. Windows are grouped for greater sunlight and for greater
ventilation. Bungalows have broad overhanging eaves, again to hold off
the heat, as well as big porches to sit on in the evening. The
Craftsman style, of which Bungalows are a subset, is characterized
by simplicity and lack of the fanciful ornamentation one finds in
Victorian homes. The Ratcliffe-Otterbourg House is an excellent local
example of a Craftsman Bungalow.
See a labeled diagram of a Craftsman Bungalow house... |
LOCAL EXAMPLES:
Jennie Alexander Duplex
John Baxter Alexander House
Charlotte Fire Station No. 6
G. G. Galloway House
Moore-Golden House
Lambeth-Gosset House
Myers Park Streetcar Waiting Station
Ratcliffe-Otterbourg House
VanLandingham Estate |
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Colonial Revival |
DESCRIPTION:
The Colonial Revival style became popular in the late nineteenth
century. It draws its inspiration from Georgian Colonial architecture.
Buildings of this type have strictly symmetrical facades and are usually
rectangular in plan with no or minimum projections. Eaves have classical
detailing. Windows are usually double-hung sash except when Palladian
windows are used for accent. The first house of this type appeared in
Newport, Rhode Island in 1885-86. C. C. Hook brought Colonial Revivalism
to Charlotte in the 1890's. His oldest Colonial Revival style house is
the Gautier-Gilchrist House on East Park Avenue in Dilworth. |
LOCAL EXAMPLES:
Thad Adams House
William Belk House
Walter Brem House
C. C. Coddington House
Duke Mansion
Gautier-Gilchrist House
Frank R. McNinch House
Villalonga-Alexander House
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Greek Revival |
DESCRIPTION:
Greek Revival denotes rectangular buildings that have no arches,
that depend upon large columns for support and ornamentation, and
usually have smooth exterior wall surfaces. These buildings feature
pediments attached to the basic boxy building. Many people would call
any building with large columns Greek Revival. It features a stronger
classical influence than antebellum, associations with American/Greek
democracy. |
LOCAL EXAMPLES:
Chairman Blake House
John Douglas House
Eumenean Hall (Davidson College)
Philanthropic Hall (Davidson College)
Hennigan Place
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Italianate |
DESCRIPTION:
Italianate houses draw their inspiration from villas in northern
Italy. They are squarish in shape, have low-pitched hipped roofs, large
windows, and broad overhanging eaves. An excellent local example would
be Ingleside. |
LOCAL EXAMPLES:
Berryhill House
Ingleside
McManaway House
Merchants & Farmers Bank Building
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Neoclassical |
DESCRIPTION:
This style became wildly popular at the end of the 1800s and the
beginning of the 1900s. It was inspired by the mammoth White City
of the
1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago. Its most distinctive
feature would be the lavish use of columns, usually Corinthian. Often
features a classical pedimented entry with an entablature above the
cornice line. Many Neoclassical buildings have windows grouped in twos
or threes, with the main floor having semicircular arched windows. An
excellent local example would be the Charlotte City Hall and the
Mecklenburg County Courthouse, both on East Trade St. |
LOCAL EXAMPLES:
Carnegie Library Building (Johnson C. Smith University)
Charlotte Fire Station No. 2
Gateway & Century Building
Hawley House
Hotel Charlotte
John Jamison House
Little Rock A.M.E. Zion Church
Saint Peter's Hospital
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Queen Anne |
DESCRIPTION:
This is one of the most popular high Victorian styles. Developed in
Great Britain and displayed at the Centennial exposition in
Philadelphia, the syle is characterized by great compexity. Irregular
massive, great variety of windows and sheathing material, complex roofs,
filigree -- these are just some of the qualities that make up Queen
Anne. An excellent local example would by the J. P. Carr House. The
Blakeney House is somewhat less ornate and would be called Country Queen
Anne, meaning that it was fashioned by a local carpenter. |
LOCAL EXAMPLES:
N. S. Alexander House
James A. Blakeney House
John P. Carr House
Crutchfield-Bomar-Brem House
Rev. George H. Detwiler House
Liddell-McNinch House
Lyles-Sims House
Mallonee-Jones House
Overcarsh House
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Tudor Revival |
DESCRIPTION:
Tudor Revival derives its inspiration from early England. These
buildings lavishly feature stone, ornate chimneys, half-timberings,
thick walls, dark interiors, and steep rooflines. An excellent local
example is the Hamilton-Jones House in Eastover. |
LOCAL EXAMPLES:
Craig House
Earle Sumner Draper House
Hamilton Jones House
Morrocroft
Bishop Edwin D. Mouzon House
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