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To: ArmyTeach
Redux. Land Between the Lakes in Tennessee has an 1820s demonstration settler's farm (well worth a visit), complete with ‘dogtrot’ log house. Some arsonist in the 1980s thought it would be a hoot to burn it down. It was devastating. Within a week someone had donated a dogtrot still standing on his property and it was being ferried to the site.
* dogtrot - a log house built in stages. The settler started with a small log house and as he prospered he built a second log house and connected the two with a covered, open porch - where the dog slept.
11 posted on 04/04/2010 6:51:26 PM PDT by ArmyTeach ( ...speak true, right wrong, follow the King Tennyson)
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To: ArmyTeach
Some arsonist in the 1980s thought it would be a hoot to burn it down.

We have those types here in AK too! The Park Service goes around burning down old cabins out in the bush for 'public safety'. Ones they deem acceptable to keep, they get to use.
13 posted on 04/04/2010 6:55:50 PM PDT by proud_yank (Socialism - An Answer In Search Of A Question For Over 100 Years)
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To: ArmyTeach

That may be an accurate description of a “dogtrot” in some instances, but it actually is an historic building style brought over by German speaking people in the colonial era, known in this part of North Carolina as a “German double pen.” The form was used for both barns and houses. Of those used as houses, they eventually came to be two stories in the case of more prosperous owners, and the open area between, the “dogtrot,” was enclosed, becoming an entry hall. Some remaining in existence have porches on both stories.

A third log structure was built in proximity to the main structure for use as a kitchen; the very real threat of fire meant it needed to be at something of a remove. But, rain, cold, etcetera, combined with improved stoves and means of containing the threat of fire led to this separate kitchen being attached to the main house, first by another “dogtrot” or breezeway, then being enclosed. All of this eventually morphed into the classic center hall colonial.

My fourth great grandfather served in the Revolution, and returned home to NC to marry his bride, he being of English descent, but his wife to be being of German descent. Her father was prosperous by the standards of the time, and gave them two hundred acres and a fine, two story, German double pen house, constructed of chestnut logs, close to three feet in diameter. This house, first occupied in 1781, stood and was continually occupied until 1980, when it burned due to a lightning strike. It was quite a loss, being literally irreplaceable.


19 posted on 04/04/2010 11:03:22 PM PDT by RegulatorCountry
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