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Classic Cracker: Florida's Wood-Frame Vernacular Architecture

AUTHOR: Ronald W. Haase
ISBN: 156164014X

SHORT DESCRIPTION: - History of Florida wood-frame architecture, from the simplest "single-pen" homesteads to the latest homes at Seaside- The double-pen house, the classic dogtrot, the four-square Georgian, and the Cracker townhouse- Cracker homes take best...

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         Editorial Review

Classic Cracker: Florida's Wood-Frame Vernacular Architecture
- Book Review,
by Ronald W. Haase


From Book News, Inc.
Haase (architecture, U. of Florida) describes the vernacular architecture developed by farmers in Florida in the 1800s, accompanied by color photographs, and line drawings of floor plans, elevations, and construction techniques. Sprinkled with quotations by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings. Annotation copyright Book News, Inc. Portland, Or.


Book Description
In this visually delightful book, laced with quotations from one of the best chroniclers of Florida Cracker Life, Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, Ronald Haase takes us on an intimate tour of the utilitarian wooden structures constructed by early settlers in North Florida.


From the Inside Flap
Each region of our country has developed a distinctive architectural style. So it is with the old Cracker homesteads of Florida, whose sagging porches and rusting roofs are eloquent testimonials to a lifestyle that responded to its environment rather than fighting it. In this visually delightful book, laced with quotations from one of the best chroniclers of Florida Cracker life, Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, Ronald Haase takes us on an intimate tour of the utilitarian wooden structures constructed by early settlers in North Florida. These houses, raised high off the ground and surrounded by shady porches, responded both to the warm and sultry climate and to the very idea of living side by side with nature in such a beautiful environment. The technology with which they were built and the resulting modest but dignified forms reflected their rustic settings of tall pine scrub or hardwood hammock. Professor Haase traces the development of Cracker Architecture as it adapted to the changing lifestyles of Florida settlers throughout the 1800s.


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         Book Review

Classic Cracker: Florida's Wood-Frame Vernacular Architecture
- Book Reviews,
by Ronald W. Haase

Classic Cracker: Florida's Wood-Frame Architecture

FROM THE PUBLISHER

�Each region of our country has developed a distinctive architectural style. So it is with the old Cracker homesteads of Florida, whose sagging porches and rusting roofs are eloquent testimonials to a lifestyle that responded to its environment rather than fighting it.

In this visually delightful book, laced with quotations from one of the best chroniclers of Florida Cracker life, Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, Ronald Haase takes us on an intimate tour of the utilitarian wooden structures constructed by early settlers in North Florida. These houses, raised high off the ground and surrounded by shady porches, responded both to the warm and sultry climate and to the very idea of living side by side with nature in such a beautiful environment. The technology with which they were built and the resulting modest but dignified forms reflected their rustic settings of tall pine scrub or hardwood hammock.

Professor Haase traces the development of Cracker Architecture as it adapted to the changing lifestyles of Florida settlers throughout the 1800s.

SYNOPSIS

In this visually delightful book, laced with quotations from one of the best chroniclers of Florida Cracker Life, Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, Ronald Haase takes us on an intimate tour of the utilitarian wooden structures constructed by early settlers in North Florida.

FROM THE CRITICS

Michael Gannon

Nothing hand—built so distinguishes the old interior country settings of Cracker Florida as the wood—frame vernacular house. And no architectural historian has captured its essence more sensitively and comprehensively than Ronald W. Haase has done in this wonderful book. I recommend it to every reader of Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings stories and to every devotee of "the Other Florida".


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