Arts & Crafts / Shingle StyleIntro
Shingle Style 1874–1910
A rarefied style in the 19th century, it is one beloved today. Architects cherish its grand informality. Colonial Revivalists appreciate its simple forms and classical allusions; neo-Victorians exult in its embrace of Islamic and Japanese forms alongside Georgian. It is, as Vincent Scully put it, “the architecture of the American summer".

Shingle Style Example: This rambling, shingle-covered style was the result of an appreciation of New England colonial forms overlaid on the popular Queen Anne movement
Shingle Style has variously been described as the first modern American house style. Richardsonian Romanesque done in shingles instead of stone . . . the first wave of the Colonial Revival . . . a subset of the Queen Anne Revival. As a vernacular style self-consciously rendered by leading architects, it’s hard to pin down. It was born in New England but was popular in the Mid-Atlantic and influential in Chicago and, especially, on the West Coast. It’s informal and highly imaginative—a summer “cottage” style—nevertheless built for wealthy clients.
This
rambling, shingle-covered style was the result of an appreciation of
New England colonial forms overlaid on the popular Queen Anne movement,
with free use of Japanese, Moorish, and Art Nouveau motifs. At
Naumkeag, the grandest survivor, mahogany paneled formal rooms
downstairs—high-ceilinged, furnished in antiques—have a modern floor
plan, and a very unVictorian lack of ostentation despite their size.
Upstairs, bedrooms with netted bed canopies and cozy nooks are quaintly
papered.
Some examples are in the old English style of
Richard Normal Shaw’s vernacular Queen Anne Revival in England. But
many architect-designed and later examples are more obviously Colonial
Revival, with classical porch columns and Palladian windows. The
colonial motifs and extensive piazzas (porches) make them distinctly
American. In most, public rooms are anchored by a huge living hall with
a fireplace and an adjacent grand staircase.
Original Shingle
Style houses are rare: few were built and many of those, being summer
homes, have since burned, or been demolished or radically altered. But
the style’s influence is apparent in may late-19th-century suburbs,
where builders inspired by the well-publicized originals put up their
own, more modest versions.