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Show York: W.W. Norton, 1968), 349-350; Abbot Lowell Cummings, The Framed Houses of Massachusetts Bay, 1625-1725 (Cambridge : Harvard University Press, 1979), 22-23: Anthony N.B Garvan, Architecture and Town Planning in Colonial Connecticut (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1951), 81-85; J. Frederick Kelly, The Early Domestic Architecture of Connecticut (1924; reprint ed., New York: Dover, 1963), 6-7; and Whiffen, The Eighteenth Century Houses of Williamsburg, 56-57. 7. Upton, "Early Vernacular Architecture," 268-341; Glassie, Pattern in the Material Folk Culture of the Eastern United States, 52; Glassie, Folk Housing in Middle Virginia, 43-45, 51, 64-65; Glassie, "Types of the Southern Mountain Cabin, 349-353; and Doug Swaim, "North Carolina Folk Housing," in Carolina Dwelling, The Student Publication of the School of Design, 26, ed. by. Doug Swaim (Raleigh: North Carolina State University, 1978), 29-31. 11 8. Warren E. Roberts, The Lo Architecture of ·southern Indiana (in press). See also, Marsha 1, Fol k Architecture in Little Dixie, 39-46, 57-62; Montell and Morse, Kentucky Folk Architecture, 9-17; and Terry G. Jordan, Texas Log Buildings (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1975), 107-113. 9. Peter Michelsen~ Frilands Museet: The Danish Museum Village at Sorgenfri (Copenhagen: The National Museum of Denmark, 1973), 114-117. 1 10. See Robert M. Lillibridge, "Architectural Currents on the Mississippi River, Nauvoo, Illinois," Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, 19:3 (October 1960): 109-114. 11. See Pitman, "Nineteenth Century Folk Housing," 138-145, and Jennifer Eastman Attebury, 11 The Square Cabin: A Fol k House Type in Idaho," Idaho Yesterdays, 26:3 (Fal 1 1982): 25-31. 12. Glassie, 11 Types of the Southern Mountain Cabin," 353-361. 13. Glassie, Folk Housing, 47, 51; Glassie, Pattern, 49, 52-53, 78-79; and Howard Wight Marshall, 11 The 'Thousand Acres' Log House, Monroe County, Indiana, 11 Pioneer America, 3:1 (January 1971): 48-56. 14. Most of the Welsh immigrants iri the Sanpete Valley were miners from Glamorganshire in southern Wales. The area was heavily industrialized by the early nineteenth century and housing in the larger towns consisted mainly of row houses. The basic unit in the row house was the rectangular cabin form. See J.B. Lowe, Welsh Industrial Housing, 1775-1875 (Cardiff: National Museum of Wales, 1977). For a general study of Welsh traditional architecture, see Smith, Houses of the Welsh Countryside and particularly Smith 1 s Ty~e A, 437. 15. See Upton, "Early Vernacular Architecture, 11 54-55; Glassie, Pattern, 65-66; Glassie, Folk Housing, 75-79, 88; and M.W. Barley, English 243 |