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It must be noted that late 17th
and early 18th century construction of houses in Annapolis Royal was of a rural
style, as opposed to city homes in, say, New England. Such buildings would
normally be one and a half stories, and would be modest both on the outside and
the inside.
The rough to
smooth progression of architectural refinements to the floors, walls, doors,
and ceilings of houses can be seen throughout the Sinclair Inn. These changes
are the customary progression for most buildings over the past 300 years,
reflecting technological changes in styles and materials, as well as the
personal preferences and economic prosperity of owners.
Structure
Foundations were
usually of fieldstone, and of dry, or clay-mortared construction. In the case
of the Soullard House, there was no foundation, and the sill plates were set up
on the bare ground. The Skene House was moved and set on an existing
foundation.
Large handhewn
beams were shaped with a broadaxe, and set into the rock foundations. Wall
frames of handhewn stud timbers were strengthened with diagonal timbers of a
similar nature as the studs. Mortice and tenon joints and rough wooden pins
were used to join the corners. These joints would be cut with augurs, chisel
and mallet.
Rafters, plates
(horizontal timbers at the top of the wall on which the rafters rested) and
joists were handhewn, sometimes only minimally.
Exterior Finish
Once the studs
were in place, underboarding, which only became common in the latter part of
the 1600s, and which consisted of large sawn planks up to 21 inches in width,
was applied to the exterior of the building. Clapboards, which were the typical
final finish for the exterior wall, would then be applied to the underboarding.
Handmade nails would be used to attach both the underboarding and the
clapboards to the structure.
Interior Finish
The Soullard House
used no wall filling and relied on underboarding and clapboard. The Skene
House, however, and several other Annapolis Royal houses, relied on wattle and
daub, a mixture of clay and marsh grasses supported by horizontal staves, as a
wall filler.
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Various
authorities have concluded that the Sinclair Inn (and other early buildings in
Annapolis Royal) owes much of its origin to New England concepts. This is
particularly evident in the underboarding that was applied to the exterior of
the house frame prior to the daub and wattle being installed in the wall
cavities. The daub and wattle would be smoothed as much as possible, and in
some homes may have provided the final interior finish. A thin layer of clay
mixture may have then been applied to the walls.
Paint or wallpaper
was traditionally applied to the upper portion of interior walls. By the 1730s,
wallpapering had become quite common and was fairly widespread in New England.
It wasn't until after the 1760s, however, that the first papers were
commercially produced. By the 1840s, there were wallpaper shops supplying this
rising decorating trend. In this period, scenic papers were popular, as
interior decoration continued to follow contemporary styles.
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Plaster and Lath and Later Developments
Plaster and lath
became the most effective way of sealing the house from cold air, and also for
providing an attractive finish. Riven lath (the earliest type of lath, which
lasted until the late 1700s) was applied in a horizontal fashion to the wall
studs with small hand made nails, and the plaster was applied to the laths.
Initially, plaster
and lath were attached to the walls only, while ceilings were left open and
were white-washed. By the early 1700s, ceilings were being plastered. Plaster
walls and ceilings continued to be the norm, well into the 20th century.
The development of
new technologies allowed further changes to the ceilings here in the Sinclair
Inn. Over the years, plaster ceilings had become cracked and patched and were
no longer as attractive as they had once been. The wealthy had always been able
to afford beautifully moulded and patterned plaster ceilings, a process that
was beyond the means of most people.
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But, by the
beginning of the 1900s, the availability of thin stamped patterned metal sheets
or tin ceilings, (for sale in the local general store in many designs), allowed
many people to cover older plaster ceilings and create more sophisticated
interiors.
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Wainscoting
As plaster walls
became common, additional decoration of a room saw wainscoting applied on the
lower portion of the wall, especially in the parlor. The first wainscoting was
of horizontal broad pine boards on exterior walls and was capped with a chair
rail. On interior walls, it ran vertically from floor to ceiling, where it
formed a thin partition. It is likely that wainscoting was unpainted until
about 1700.
As time went on,
wainscoting became vertical pieces of board or raised panelling to the level of
the chair rail, with plaster walls above, on all walls. By the latter part of
the 1800s, wainscotting was commonly thin pine boards which were often
decorated by using graining techniques. This type of refinement slowly moved
from the parlor to other rooms.
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Stairway
The earliest
stairway was enclosed by vertical wainscoting from floor to ceiling, which then
developed into a more open construction with a handrail and balusters. The
diagonal treads at the bottom of the stairway would be framed into a large, but
simple, newel post that might reach from floor to ceiling. The sturdy newel
post soon was shortened, topped with a round knob, and balustors were
lathe-turned.
Doors
Early exterior and
interior doors were essentially of the same style - vertical boards with
horizontal supporting battens on one side. Exterior doors were much thicker and
heavier, sometimes having two thicknesses of board, and carried by strap
hinges. Interior doors were much lighter with H and HL hinges being common.
Both these types of hinges had largely disappeared by 1800.
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Joined and paneled doors were introduced about 1700. Mortice
and tenon joints were used in assembling this refined style of door. The
vertical members of the door were called stiles and the horizontal members were
called rails. The panels, initially four per door, were fitted within in these
pieces, and "float" there to allow for expansion and contraction. In
the early stages of joined doors, the primary face had the flat side of the
panel, and the secondary side had the feathered edge. Molding began to be
attached to the inside edges of the stiles and rails, and was often on both
sides of the door. Sometimes, though, only one side had molding.
By 1800, Georgian
and Federal doors with six panels became standard. By 1830, Greek revival style
moved to four or five panels. And by the end of the 1800s, the five-cross panel
door was developed, enduring for a full century. As its name implies, the door
had five panels of equal size arranged one above the other.
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In the early
twentieth century the introduction of plywood revolutionized the manufacture of
doors. Three ply panels became far more common than panels of solid wood. One
panel and two panel doors often had face veneers of birch or other hardwoods
and usually had stiles and rails of glued softwood cores, veneered in hardwood.
In the early decades of the twentieth century the "miracle" door was
highly popular. It was inexpensive, usually had stiles and rails of pine, and
within this framework was an inner frame that held a single plywood
panel.
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Fanlights
The fanlight was,
traditionally, a semi-circular window over the front entry way door. The window
was fretted with wooden spokes as glazing bars. It admitted light to an
otherwise dark hallway. Fanlights were typically evident in the Georgian
period, and as time progressed they became more decorative and more elliptical
in shape. They could be compared to the less graceful transom window over the
door. Later, fanlights were also used over windows. The Annapolis Heritage
Society's logo is based on the fanlight window.
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