Time Period:
1895-1930 (After the silver crash of 1893)
Names:
Foursquare, Double Decker, Double Cube, Denver Square, Prairie Box, Seattle Box, Box House,
(the one-story version was called the Classic Cottage)
Style:
Some times referred to as Post Victorian, Vernacular Design, Simplified Colonial Revival
Style Features included:
- box shape
- four room floor plan (later style was more open with built-ins & fireplaces)
- symmetrical
- two or more stories
- low hipped roof
- deep over hanging eaves with brackets, modillion, or classical frieze with dentils
- central attic (hipped or gable) dormer, at least one
- porch (full or partial width) with hipped roof supported by Doric columns or square posts
- brick, stucco, concrete block, clapboard, or wood shingle
- minimal decoration
- overall simplicity
Location:
All across the U.S. and parts of Canada.
Exterior Detailing Influences:
Craftsman, Italian Renaissance, Mission, Victorian, Colonial, Neoclassical, Prarie
Availability:
These homes were available in the United States at the turn of the century through the 1950's.
They were most popular 1910-1930.
Price:
Between $2,000.00 - $5,000.00
Function:
Boxy interior shape, roomy interiors for small city lots. Middle-class residences. |

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