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It wouldn't be too much of an exaggeration to say that people think of stone houses when they think of Bucks County - although there are numerous examples in Hunterdon County NJ as well. Since major roads from Philadelphia to New York passed through this region, there was a considerable population that settled here. They used building materials most readily at hand, the
The earliest settlers tended to build their first houses out of native timber. These old log structures went up quickly, with squared timbers and notched corners, and the chinks - or gaps between the logs - were filled with sticks, horsehair, mud and straw. After a while, concentration could be on more permanent structures.
Most stone houses can be dated to the 18th century. The older stone houses, simple of line, solid and sturdy, fit into the landscape so well that they seem as much a part of the countryside as the fields and trees. They look as though they have grown out of the very soil - and they have, for the stone from which they were built was usually taken directly from the surrounding fields: hence fieldstone. Stone houses were rarely built after 1850 in this region, when so easier methods of construction came into common use.
The 21st century buyer is enamored by the look of exposed fieldstone, but the traditional stone house was often covered with a coat of stucco, or plaster to
Many of the stone houses in the area were originally small, two story farmhouses with two rooms on the main floor and two rooms on the upper floor, with a pie-shaped or winding staircase in the corner. Additions were completed over the generations, which would explain an extra-thick interior wall (originally an exterior wall). Many of these houses have two front doors. One of the front doors led to the parlor, which was kept pristine and rarely used except for special occasions. The other door would lead to the keeping room, where the family cooked, ate, and generally lived.
Southeastern Pennsylvania is the only part of the United States that commonly built houses of stone. These homes are a great part of our heritage in the Delaware River Valley, and people who live in them tend to view themselves as caretakers of historic treasures.
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