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Architecture and Interior Design: An Integrated History to the Present

 

First Edition

 

Chapter 35

 

Stick, Queen Anne

 

1880s – 1910s

 

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Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved

 

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1

 

Stick, Queen Anne

 

Stick Style architecture combines medieval half-timbered buildings with new balloon framing construction method

 

Wooden planks or sticks form decorative surface patterns

 

Uniquely American

 

Does not have corresponding interior or furniture style

 

Queen Anne originates in England, attempt to create an image of home, tradition, & middle-class comfort

 

Combines elements from the 16th, 17th, & 18th centuries

 

Americans translate it into wood

 

Does not have corresponding interior or furniture style

 

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2

 

Concepts

 

Stick Style influenced by the Picturesque, historicism, Gothic Revival theory

 

Models: English picturesque suburban architecture; late Gothic vernacular in England, France & Germany; Swiss chalets; board & batten cottages of A. J. Davis & A. J Downing

 

English Queen Anne: no strong conceptual basis

 

Eclectic: elements from English vernacular, Elizabethan, Tudor; Japanese; 17th & early 18th centuries

 

1890s Queen Anne applied to anything not Gothic Revival

 

American Queen Anne: English Queen Anne image of home & ancestry appealing

 

Victorian vernacular: common or folk version of the style

 

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3

 

35.1

 

Architectural and Interior Details: Stained glass window and doorway screen, 1870s-1880s; Texas.

 

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Architecture

 

Stick Style: emerges on U. S. East Coast during the 1850s

 

More popular in pattern books than practice

 

Definitive characteristic: stickwork or flat boards in geometric patterns in panels; around windows & doors, roof brackets; porch supports

 

English Queen Anne, interest in Stuart & Georgian periods, rejection of morality of Gothic

 

18th century: red brick, sash windows, & shutters; 17th century: gables, pediments, white trim, & prominent coves; English vernacular: half-timbering, pargework, overhangs, casement windows; irregularity

 

American Queen Anne first architect designed; later builder style

 

Opening planning; variety in form, materials, textures, windows, roofs; towers; prominent chimneys

 

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5

 

35.2

 

New Jersey State Building, International Centennial Exhibition, 1876; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Stick Style.

 

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35.3

 

Allied Assurance Company, 1–2 St. James Street, c. 1882; Pall Mall, London, England; Richard Norman Shaw. Queen Anne.

 

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Long Description:

 

The building has slender columns and a semicircular projecting porch with six double-hung windows. Pediments over windows have lintel with keystone, string course layer on every floor, corniced finely at the top, and a row of posts hides low pitched roof, emphasis on symmetrical balance. The roofline has large curved windows.

 

7

 

35.4

 

Hotel del Coronado, 1886–1888; Coronado California. Queen Anne.

 

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Long Description:

 

The hotel has the creation of a spectacular five-story castle-like structure replete with Queen Anne-style design aesthetics. On the ocean, the corner is a pavilion, northward along the ocean, and terraced grass on the beach. The dining wing projects at an angle from the corner of the court and be almost detached to give total value to the view of the ocean, bay, and city.

 

8

 

35.5a

 

John N. A. Griswold House, 1862–1864; Newport, Rhode Island; Richard Morris Hunt. Stick Style.

 

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Long Description:

 

The building has three floors. It has three steeply pitched in a row with chimneys on top and the second floor contains glass windows rectangular in shapes same as the second floor. The ground floor has entrance and glass windows with one entrance on the left corner, another on the left corner, and plants hanging on the roof.

 

9

 

35.5b

 

John N. A. Griswold House stair hall, 1862–1864; Newport, Rhode Island; Richard Morris Hunt. Stick Style.

 

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35.6

 

Leys Wood, 1866-1869; Sussex, England; Richard Norman Shaw. Queen Anne.

 

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35.7

 

Mark Twain House, c. 1874; Hartford, Connecticut; Edward Tucker Potter. Stick Style.

 

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35.8a

 

Watts Sherman House, 1874-1875; Newport, Rhode Island; Henry Hobson Richardson. Queen Anne.

 

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Long Description:

 

The house has a tall chimney and a variety of roof designs. It has a horizontal band of windows, small window panes, half timbering, and shingles accent facade. The main facade has a partial width porch for entry, a brownstone on the lower wall, and an asymmetric arrangement of the facade.

 

13

 

35.8b

 

Floor plan and stair hall, Watts Sherman House, 1874–1875; Newport, Rhode Island; Henry Hobson Richardson. Queen Anne.

 

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Long Description:

 

The first story has gran­ite ash­lar with higher sto­ries of brick, shin­gle, and half-timbered stucco, diamond-panel win­dows grouped in long, hor­i­zon­tal bands, and five mas­sive red brick chim­neys. The roof is steeply gabled, with a broad sin­gle gable in front and mul­ti­ple sharp to the rear, all orig­i­nally shin­gled in wood.

 

14

 

35.9

 

Carson House, 1884–1886; Eureka, California; Samuel Newsom and Joseph C. Newsom. Queen Anne or Eastlake.

 

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Long Description:

 

The house has an asymmetrical facade, dominant, overhanging eaves, and geometrical towers. It has dutch gables, including the primary entrance area, a second-story porch, or balconies. It has pedimented porches and differing wall textures, such as patterned wood shingles shaped into varying designs, including resembling fish scales, terra cotta tiles, relief panels, or wooden shingles over brickwork, and horizontal bands of leaded windows.

 

15

 

35.10

 

Eldridge Johnson House (The Pink House), 1892; Cape May, New Jersey. Victorian Vernacular.

 

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Interiors

 

Stick Style: no corresponding interior style

 

Some have stickwork; others fashionable revivals

 

Queen Anne house interiors do not replicate 18th century

 

Revival styles, Aesthetic or Arts & Crafts Movements

 

Particularly in England,18th century characteristics: classical columns; pediments; low relief plasterwork; classical motifs; wall paneling

 

Common practice: each room a different style

 

Masculine styles for dining rooms & halls; feminine ones in parlors & morning rooms

 

Newly introduced living halls used as living rooms, entrance halls; circulation spaces

 

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17

 

35.12

 

Dining room, published in Decoration and Furniture of Town Houses, 1881; by Robert William Edis. London and New York City. Queen Anne.

 

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35.13

 

Parlor, Davis House, 1890s; Richmond, Texas. Victorian Vernacular.

 

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35.14

 

Mantel, late

 

century; United States. Queen Anne.

 

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35.15

 

Wall designs and color schemes; published in Painting and Decorating, c. 1898; by Walter Pierce, London.