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Show Farmhouse and Cottage, 70-71, 95-97. 16. Upton, 11 Early Vernacular Architecture, 11 and Glassie, Folk Housing, 75-77. 17. See Glassie, Pattern, 156; Marshall, Folk Architecture, 50-51; and Kniffen, 11 Folk Housing, 11 556. 18. See Austin E. Fife, 11 Stone Houses of Northern Utah, 11 Utah Historical Quarterly, 40:l (Winter 1972): 6-23; Richard C. Poulson, 11 Stone Buildings in Beaver City, 11 Utah Historical Quarterly, 43:3 (Summer 1975): 278-285; Pitman, 11 Nineteenth Century Folk Housing, 11 146-169; Carter, 11 Folk Design in Early Utah Architecture, 11 48, 51; and Linda Bonar, 11 Historic Houses in Beaver: An Introduction to Materials, Styles, and Craftsmen, 11 Utah Historical Quarterly, 51:3 (Summer 1983): 212-228. 19. See Carter, 11 Folk Design, 11 49-50, 54-55. 20. Marcus Whiffen, American Architecture Since 1780: A Guide to the Styles (Cambridge: The M.I.T. Press, 1981), 38-47. 21. In developing this classificatory system for the temple form house, I have been aided by the comments and criticisms of Dell Upton. 22. For a catalog of Greek Revival stylistic elements, see John J.-G. Blumenson, Identifying American Architecture (Nashville: American Association for Stat~ and Local History, 1977), 26-27. 23. Hamblin, Greek Revival Architecture, 259. 24. See Whiffen, American Architecture, 45-46; Hamblin, Greek Revival Architecture, 159-186; Pierson, American Buildings and Their Architects, 444-452; Glassie, Pattern, 129, 132-133; Kniffen, 11 Folk Housing," 558-559; and Leland M. Roth, A Concise History of American Architecture (New York: Harper and Row, 1979), 92-100. 25. See Rexford Newcomb, Architecture of the Old Northwest Territory: A Stud of Early Architecture in Ohio , Indiana, Illinois, Michi an, Wisconsin, and Part of Minnesota Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1950); Wilbur D. Peat, Indiana Houses of the Nineteenth Century (Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society, 1962), 35 - 41; and Pierce Lewis, "Common Houses, Cultural Spoor, 11 Landscape, 19:2 (January 1975): 15-17. 26. I have taken the double-parlor name from Pocius, Newfoundland's Southern Shore," 222-225. 11 Architecture on 27. See Upton, "Early Vernacular Architecture, 11 47-52; Mercer, English Vernacular Houses, 28-29; Henry Glassie, Passing the Time in Ballymenone (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1982), 330-331; and R.W. Brunskill, Illustrated Handbook of Vernacular Architecture (London: Faber and Faber, 1971), 100-101. 244 |