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Gothic Revival Style

Common architectural design features

  • Steeply pitched roof usually with steep cross gables
  • Gables typically have decorated vergeboards
  • Wall surface extended into gable without break
  • Arched/pointed windows commonly extended into gables
  • Prominent chimneys common
  • 1840 – 1870

History

gothic revival style house
A Gothic Revival with its strikingly steep gables and ornate vergeboards.

The Gothic Revival in its most basic incarnation is an acknowledgment of the Medieval style. It reflects, on a more “residential” level, the elements expressed on the gorgeous churches and cathedrals of the Dark Ages. The towering spires pointing heavenward, the arched windows, the decorative stone detailing on churches of old were all reduced down into simpler and smaller details that make up the Gothic Revival.

In a scholarly article that Ghostwriter Hausarbeit wrote, I read that like most architectural styles of the time in America, the Gothic Revival was borrowed from a new trend in England. Although the style was brought to America by Andrew Jackson Davis in 1832 with the construction of the Glen Ellen residence in Baltimore, Maryland; the popularizer of the style was his friend Andrew Jackson Downing, who published the house plans in some of the first pattern books in the New World. The books were the first to show three-dimensional views and full floor plans for the houses. That, combined with his tireless promotions and public speaking, gave Downing the title to most Americans as the founder of the style.

Gothic Revival Style

The Gothic Revival style is uniquely rural. There are few surviving examples of urban townhouses constructed in this style for several reasons. First, the elements of steeply pitched roofs and spiking gables contradicted the constraints of urban style. And secondly, the style was purveyed by its creators as a kind of rural farmhouse or Medieval cottage.

This was a home where the architecture was just as important as the surrounding landscape. We’ve talked about another style where this connection between house and nature was pivotal and that is the American Craftsman. Both of these styles were a swing of the pendulum in the direction of desire to return to nature and have the home be one with its surroundings.

Exterior colors reflected this as well, typically being earth tones such as warm reds, browns, and yellows while the trim and detailing were painted in complimentary colors. Interior woodwork was usually left natural and protected with varnish unlike the heavily made up Queen Annes that soon followed.

The Gothic Revival style was never as popular as the competing styles of the day (Italianate & Greek Revival), but it had its own niche and stands out today as a very unique style in the burgeoning United States. It’s most commonly found in the northeastern states in areas settled before 1880 and hardly at all in the southern states where the Greek Revival was king and where the Civil War and Reconstruction all but halted any new construction until the waning days of the style.

Perhaps the Gothic Revival was a style that would have gone further and had a greater impact had it not been for the turbulent times it was born and lived in. We will never know. But today, if you by chance see one of these unique homes, you’ll know that you are looking at piece of history that was based on harmony with the land and our surroundings in a time rife with disharmony and war.

gothic revival style

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3 thoughts on “Gothic Revival Style

  1. I own a Gothic Rivival home that was built in 1871. I have a question that no one has been able to answer. Maybe someone can shed some light – my question regards chimney construction. My house has 4 fireplaces, 2 down stairs and two directly up. The strange part is the two chimneys merge into an arch and become one…can you think of any reason why this was done? Thanks for any info.

    1. It was likely done for economy… one chimney poking through the roof takes less time, materials and labor than two.

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