First Period

In American colonial architecture and design, the First Period was the time period of approximately 1626 through 1725. There are more houses constructed by America's earliest settlers in Essex County, Massachusetts than anywhere else in the country. First Period's successor is the Colonial Georgian Period.

Fairbanks House, built from 1637 to 1641, is the oldest surviving timber frame house in America
Gedney and Cox Houses circa 1665 and located at 21 High Street, near the intersection of Summer Street in the Chestnut Street District in Salem, Massachusetts.

Characteristics

Among other characteristics, First Period houses have a steeply pitched roof, a slightly asymmetrical plan, and a central chimney. The First Period house is distinguished from later houses by its exposed (often decorated or chamfered) frame in the interior. Some early windows in modest houses may have had no glazing, but the standard First Period window, until at least 1700, was the diamond-paned casement. No example of this type of window survives in situ; all current examples date to (at the very earliest) the late 19th century. Multiple-light, sliding sash windows started to appear around 1700, and by about 1750 had supplanted the earlier type.

gollark: Anyway, the current implementation (7.1) is Python/JS frontend, but this is kind of æ so I want to carcinize it, particularly since I rethought major aspects of the design.
gollark: That looks far too short to be CommonMark-compliant.
gollark: I'm not writing my own Markdown parser because no.
gollark: The problem is that no programming languages/libraries are sufficient to capture the sheer glory of my vague design ideas.
gollark: Minoteaur has been in development for 3 years and rewritten 6.1 times.

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.