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Queen Anne
-- A sub-style of the late Victorian era, Queen
Anne is a collection of coquettish detailing and
eclectic materials. Steep cross-gabled roofs, towers,
and vertical windows are all typical of a Queen Anne
home. Inventive, multistory floor plans often include
projecting wings, several porches and balconies, and
multiple chimneys with decorative chimney pots.
Wooden "gingerbread" trim in scrolled and
rounded "fish-scale" patterns frequently graces gables
and porches. Massive cut stone foundations are typical
of period houses. Created by English architect Richard
Norman Shaw, the style was popularized after the Civil
War by architect Henry Hobson Richardson and spread
rapidly, especially in the South and
West.
"Reprinted from REALTOR®
Magazine January, 2004
(http://www.realtor.org/realtormag) with permission of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF
REALTORS®. Copyright 2004. All rights
reserved."
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QUEEN ANNE
(c.1885-c.1905)

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Queen Anne Style - The John Lind House -
New Ulm, MN

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c.1890,
Burlington Photograph taken by Thomas
Visser
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Queen Anne With
Turret

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San Francisco Queen
Anne

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Queen Anne houses have many of these
features:
Steep roof Complicated,
asymmetrical shape Front-facing gable One-story
porch that extends across one or two sides of the
house Round or square towers Wall surfaces
textured with decorative shingles, patterned masonry,
or half-timbering Ornamental spindles and
brackets Bay windows
About the Queen Anne
styleQueen Anne became an
architectural fashion in the 1880s and 1890s, when the
industrial revolution brought new technologies. Builders
began to use mass-produced pre-cut architectural trim to
create fanciful and sometimes flamboyant houses.
Not all Queen Anne houses are lavishly
decorated, however. Some builders showed restraint in
their use of embellishments. Still, the flashy "painted
ladies" of San Francisco and the refined brownstones of
Brooklyn share many of the same features.
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For information on buying or
selling east bay homes, please contact me at
510-429-4800 or send me a note on the Contact Joanne form.
Thank you, Joanne
P.S. Be sure to add us to your
favorite places.
~ Joanne L. Gardiner, Broker,
e-PRO Realtor
Advantage
Realty 3205 Whipple Road - Union City, California
94587
(510) 429-4800
San Francisco Bay
Area ~ San Francisco East Bay Real
Estate

web site: http://www.joannegardiner.com
Our primary realty
service areas in the San
Francisco Bay Area: Hayward, Castro
Valley, Fremont, Newark, Niles, San
Leandro, San Lorenzo, San Ramon, Sunol,
Oakland, Foster City, Burlingame, and San
Mateo.
The
types of real estate in which we specialize
are: single family homes, detached homes, attached
homes, duets, condominiums, townhomes, garden
homes, PUDs, manufactured homes, mobile
homes, income property, investment property,
tri-plexes, four-plexes, apartment
property, and special use properties such as
churches for sale.
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