I think lots of us tend to look back on the homes where we grew up with nostalgia, recalling memories and reliving the past. Looking back, it sometimes seems we love a place even more after we’ve left it.
The house I grew up in was a stately Greek Revival built in 1840. Sided with neat white clapboards, the house had black shutters, seven steep gables and a front porch with delicately detailed pilasters that was long and very narrow, just wide enough to accommodate a wicker sofa and two rocking chairs. The house, with its symmetrical shape and generous double-hung six-over-six pane windows, was built for a sea captain named Charles Davis during the early days of the whaling era.
Several other sea captains and members of Captain Davis’s family built similar homes in the neighborhood, which became known as Davisville. The house was located a half-mile from the ocean in Falmouth, a Cape Cod town with sixty-eight miles of shoreline along Vineyard Sound and Buzzards Bay where, during the nineteenth century, many men made their living on the sea.
I loved that house from the minute my family moved in during the early 1980s. The house rambled with spacious, high-ceilinged rooms, some of which adjoined others. There was a hidden staircase. Closets had funny shapes: some were nothing more than a shallow band of shelves, while others were deep and dark, tucked under gables. The house had four chimneys and five fireplaces, including one in my room. Though the hearth had been sealed shut to prevent heat loss, the fireplace had a prominent mantel that I was especially proud of.
After Davis—a man I imagined having a handlebar mustache, potbelly and a pipe forever sticking out the side of his mouth—passed on, the Bakers moved in. They ran a dairy farm on the property. The farm’s hub was a big red barn with several rooms and two levels, with nooks and crannies that I was endlessly investigating.
Oh, how I imagined the past, wondering what a girl my age would have done on the property more than a century earlier. I envisioned the backyard with the flower gardens—which my mother so carefully tended to—and the vast lawn—which my father spent a good part of every summer weekend mowing—as pasture where cows and horses grazed. It thrilled me to think that my home had once been the center of such activity.
While Davis built the house with riches garnered on his far-flung whaling voyages, by the time my family moved in, the house was far from the grand place it had probably been considered during the nineteenth century. Hallways were narrow, the wide plank wood floors creaked and the central staircase was so steep I tumbled down it more than once as I attempted to take the stairs too quickly. The house, with its horsehair plaster walls, was drafty on winter nights and humid in the summer. Most of the antique windows couldn’t stay open on their own, needing to be propped open with miscellaneous household items: books, rulers or coffee cans.
Our house was different from my friends’ newer contemporary homes. Sure, I was envious at times of their wall-to-wall carpeting, their more modernized bathrooms, expansive back decks and finished basements—our cellar was a small, round room with brick walls and a dirt floor, with scarcely more than a ladder to access it.
But my house had something theirs didn’t: it had history. In it, I found the edges and corners of the past. While I discovered artifacts, including old coins, antique buttons and yellowed newspapers from the 1800s, much of the evidence of other eras—of the different lives lived in the house—came from the layers of wallpaper and paint, nicks in the woodwork and scratches on the window glass. Even the earth surrounding the house yielded up evidence in the form of marbles, old hinges and large cow bones. A photo taken after the Civil War shows two horse chestnut trees in the front yard as recently planted saplings. By the time I lived there those trees, whose branches I climbed and swung from, were taller than the house. That photo fascinated me; the trees reminded me that we were not the first to live in the house, nor would we be the last.
Following the Davises and the Bakers, two other families lived in the house before my family bought it. Over the years, the house grew, an ell was added to the back, the kitchen was enlarged and another wing was put in upstairs. Unsympathetic renovations made during the 1950s and 1960s had affected the home’s historic integrity. When my family moved in, my parents made a commitment to restore it. In particular, my father’s devotion to the house inspired me. An attorney who in another life might have been a carpenter, he spent his weekends laboring over the house. He, often with my mother at his side, did demolition, removed cabinets and tore down walls. He replastered and painted, stripped, sanded and stained floors, built a new hallway and removed the living room’s drop ceiling to reveal original hand-hewn beams. He repaired the porch, refinished countless old doors, replaced glass windowpanes and built a lovely brick patio in one weekend. During my childhood, there was always a project going on. There were times we lived with a layer of dust on everything for months. But after each project was completed, the house gleamed a little brighter, and our connection to it was deeper.
Thirty years later, my parents still live there; their devotion to it is as strong as ever. Indeed, the house cultivated my love of historic architecture. My experience living in that gracious Greek Revival with its creaky floors taught me to realize the stories that houses can tell us—what they can reveal or lead us to surmise about prior inhabitants and the eras of the past. I can’t help but notice historic homes on the streets of Cape Cod. I’ll slow as I pass them, taking in their exterior details, looking for clues about their origins, imagining what the circumstances were when they were built.
Old houses cause us to consider the past, to look back while moving forward with our lives. The way houses were built, the materials they consist of, details of moldings and staircases, front entryways, roof pitches, shutters, paint colors and window fenestration all account for something. There were reasons and influences behind these choices. This book attempts to identify and explore them.
It is my fascination with and curiosity about historic architecture, combined with Cape Cod’s wealth of historic houses, that led to this book. Abundant as it is, the region’s historic architecture is underappreciated. It is well known, even to people who have never been to this sandy peninsula, that the Cape is quite a pretty place, astounding even, with its broad white sand beaches, serene salt marshes and bucolic village greens. Tiny shacks line old country roads, and sea grass rustles with the ocean breeze. Named Cape Cod by the English explorer Bartholomew Gosnold for the vast schools of codfish he found in the waters surrounding the land, the Cape’s timeless landscape has been appreciated since Henry David Thoreau first wrote about it in 1860. The region’s residential architecture, however, has been somewhat under the radar.
Cape Cod has a rich vernacular heritage, an array of eclectic and intriguing architecture that represents the region’s different eras. From Provincetown at the northern tip to the village of Woods Hole all the way at the other end, the houses of Cape Cod encompass an extensive range of styles. The book’s first chapter depicts the region’s original spare and functional one-and-a-half-story houses built between the mid-seventeenth century and the early nineteenth century and later coined the “Cape Cod” style. The earliest settlers, a simple, hardworking folk, constructed the weathered gray homes with steeply pitched roofs out of massive hewn oak timbers using the post-and-beam method. Houses, anchored by large central chimneys, were intended to be basic shelters with few rooms and devoid of ornamentation—inhabitants were not concerned with impressing their neighbors.
In the next chapter, the Cape’s transition from a desolate enclave to a prosperous maritime community in the mid-nineteenth century is explored. It was an era of optimism and wealth, and successful whaling ship captains and merchants built stately homes as testaments to their affluence. Unlike the prior era’s Cape Cod–style houses, these homes—Georgians, Greek Revivals, French Second Empires—were intended to draw attention to themselves with graceful exterior details, including front doors with filigreed fanlights, intricate porticos and towers. The interiors were designed to offer residents comfort and to showcase high-class furnishings collected on the captains’ voyages to exotic locales. This new style involved new concepts of living for Cape Cod residents. Multiplication of rooms led to increased specialization; there were separate rooms for sleeping, cooking, dining and socializing.
Among the assortment of homes built during the nineteenth century were Carpenter Gothic cottages built by Methodist camp-goers who attended annual summer religious revivals at various Cape Cod locales. Heavily influenced by Victorian architecture and a variant of the Gothic Revival style, Carpenter Gothic design, detailed in Chapter 3, emphasized verticality and was characterized by scrolled ornaments, lacy “gingerbread” trim and unique jigsaw decorations. Intended to be seasonal homes, these cottages were harmonious with the purposes of the camp meetings. They seemed almost religious in nature. With a chapellike appearance, they appeared to be tiny churches. As time went on, the cottages became increasingly colorful and whimsical. Eventually, the Carpenter Gothic style, along with the similar but more mature Gothic Revival style, became prevalent beyond campgrounds in other areas of the Cape.
Train travel made Cape Cod a much more accessible destination. By the time rail service was available in most of the region’s towns in the 1870s, Cape Cod had begun to evolve into a summer resort for the well-to-do. Throughout the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, affluent businessmen from Boston and New York took advantage of the prospering economy and built lavish summer estates for their families. Chapter 4 depicts the architecture of the “golden age,” an era when mansions were built in large measure. The structures represented a variety of styles—Italianate, English-style country manors, Shingle style and Queen Anne. The houses were of grand scale and design, intended not only to provide a relaxing summer respite for the families who owned them but also to be showplaces worthy of high-class entertaining. Many mansions were designed by lauded architects and were equipped with the era’s most modern conveniences: electricity, plumbing, gas heating and elevators, along with billiard rooms and art galleries. Interiors had rich details, hand-carved mantels and moldings, and materials were of the highest quality: marble fireplace surrounds, imported wood paneling, gilt lighting fixtures. Laid out on expansive grounds, these houses had rolling lawns and ornamental gardens.
About the turn of the twentieth century, summer painting colonies began sprouting up on the Outer Cape, primarily in Provincetown, which evolved into a bustling art community, luring creative types from all over the country. Artists, writers, poets and playwrights flocked to the area seeking inspiration and both camaraderie and solitude. Chapter 5 provides a sharp contrast to the previous chapter’s depiction of the region’s opulent mansions with insight about the rustic shacks interspersed among the dunes of Provincetown near the Peaked Hill Bars Life Saving Station that many writers and artists took to inhabiting starting in the 1920s. The shacks, situated along a three-mile stretch of incredible dunes anchored by a thin layer of beach grass from Race Point to High Head in Truro, were first built in the 1800s by the Humane Society in conjunction with lifesaving efforts. By the 1920s and 1930s, when noted creatives—including Eugene O’Neill, Jackson Pollack and e.e. cummings—took to the dunes, shacks varied slightly in size and design, but all were rustic and weathered, devoid of electricity, running water and toilets, with no modern conveniences whatsoever. That would not change over the ensuing decades.
The years following World War II represented an important architectural era on the Outer Cape. In the 1940s and 1950s, the area attracted acclaimed Modernist European architects who had made their way to the United States, including Marcel Breuer, Serge Chermayeff, Paul Weidlinger and Olav Hammarstrom. The architects built summer cottages in the area, discovering that the Cape was an ideal place to experiment with their designs. They were enticed by the region’s pristine environment and undeveloped land that was available for modest sums. The small houses they built, which tended to be of cubic shapes with flat roofs, were humble in budget, materials and environmental impact. They were airy and informal, with few frills, exemplifying the concept that a lot of material things were not necessary to live happily.
Chapter 7 takes a look at the Cape’s present-day residential architecture, at the forms houses have taken over the last several decades. Architects offer insight about how homes built in recent years have been influenced by historic styles as well as how they have embraced innovative design techniques, elements and materials. Additionally, the chapter examines the various reasons why and how people build homes on Cape Cod today. It also addresses the current state of historic residential architecture: how it can be preserved while making structures comfortable for contemporary living.
Finally, the last chapter of the book serves as a guide to be used by those who are interested in seeing some of the region’s examples of historic architecture, identifying various houses that are open to the public as museums and pinpointing areas worth seeking out.
Architecture is an eloquent expression of who we are. It depicts our history. What we build is as revealing as the stories we write or the legislation we pass. Indeed, the regional vernacular of Cape Cod, from its seventeenth-century origins throughout the following centuries, tells the story of a rare and wonderful community that has experienced significant cultural changes. Once a desolate enclave inhabited by farmers, Cape Cod became a hub for maritime activity and evolved into a wealthy summer playground, attracting seafarers, artists, religious types and modern innovators at various points along the way. The diverse expression of house styles found along Cape Cod’s main thoroughfares and winding back roads reminds us of the region’s evolution and also helps us to understand the influences of the different eras and to imagine what the lives of those who lived here long ago might have been like.