Octagon houses
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Octagon houses were a unique house style briefly popular in the 1850s in the United States and Canada. They are characterised by an
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al (eight-sided) plan, and often feature a flat roof and a veranda all round. Their unusual shape and appearance, quite different from the ornate pitched-roof houses typical of the period, can generally be traced to the influence of one man, amateur architect and lifestyle pundit Orson Squire Fowler. Although there are other octagonal houses worldwide, the term ''octagon house'' usually refers specifically to octagonal houses built in North America during this period, and up to the early 1900s.


History

Early examples, before Fowler: *
Poplar Forest Poplar Forest is a plantation and plantation house in Forest, Bedford County, Virginia. Founding Father and third U.S. president Thomas Jefferson designed the plantation, and used the property as both a private retreat and a revenue-generating pl ...
, Thomas Jefferson's private retreat and plantation house near Lynchburg, Virginia. * William Thornton's John Tayloe III House, more commonly called The Octagon House in Washington, D.C. After the White House was burned by the British during the War of 1812, President James Madison stayed in the Octagon House, and it was here that the Treaty of Ghent (ending the War of 1812) was signed. It is now the headquarters of the American Institute of Architects. While known as "The Octagon", it is worth noting that this particular building is not actually octagonal. Both houses are large brick buildings in the classical tradition. They may be seen as precursors, but are somewhat different from the Victorian octagon houses which are essentially domestic structures.


Orson Squire Fowler

The leading proponent of octagonal houses was Orson Squire Fowler. Fowler was America's foremost lecturer and writer on
phrenology Phrenology () is a pseudoscience which involves the measurement of bumps on the skull to predict mental traits.Wihe, J. V. (2002). "Science and Pseudoscience: A Primer in Critical Thinking." In ''Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience'', pp. 195–203. C ...
, the pseudoscience of defining an individual's characteristics by the contours of the skull. In the middle of the 19th century, Fowler made his mark on American architecture when he touted the advantages of octagonal homes over rectangular and square structures in his widely publicized book, ''The Octagon House: A Home For All, or A New, Cheap, Convenient, and Superior Mode of Building'', printed in the year 1848. As a result of this popular and influential publication, a few thousand octagonal houses were erected in the United States, mostly in the
Midwest The Midwestern United States, also referred to as the Midwest or the American Midwest, is one of four Census Bureau Region, census regions of the United States Census Bureau (also known as "Region 2"). It occupies the northern central part of ...
, the
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and in nearby parts of Canada. Fowler was not a professional architect.


Advantages of the octagon plan

According to Fowler, an octagon house was cheaper to build, allowed for additional living space, received more natural light, was easier to heat, and remained cooler in the summer. These benefits all derive from the geometry of an octagon: the shape encloses space efficiently, minimizing external surface area and consequently heat loss and gain, building costs etc. A circle is the most efficient shape, but difficult to build and awkward to furnish, so an octagon is a sensible approximation. Victorian builders were used to building 135 ° corners, as in the typical bay window, and could easily adapt to an octagonal plan.


Design principles

Fowler's ''The Octagon House'' is sometimes incorrectly referred to as a pattern book but the popularity of the book lies in the way Fowler suggested some general principles, and encouraged readers to invent the details for themselves. Only a few examples are offered, and apart from plans, the book has only two illustrations. Fowler first shows some methods of subdividing an octagonal floor plan. Next is ''Howland's octagonal plan'', a small house designed by 'Messrs. Morgan and Brothers, architects' which is similar to the
Norrish House The Claflin-Norrish House is a historic octagonal house located in Hastings, Minnesota, United States; a contributing property to the West Second Street Residential Historic District. The two-story home was built of limestone covered with stucc ...
illustrated below. There follows ''A description of the author's own residence'', now known as
Fowler's Folly Fowler's Folly, built during 1848–1853, was the octagonal home of Orson S. Fowler in Fishkill, New York. It was a "monumental" house for its time, with four stories and 60 rooms. an''Accompanying 10 photos, exterior and interior'' The house wa ...
, at Fishkill, of which more below. Finally, ''A superior plan for a good sized house'', which is a development of the Fishkill plans, apparently proposed by his engraver. The main feature of his plans is a desire to eliminate unnecessary circulation space, sometimes to the point that the main staircase is inconvenient, and the external veranda is the best way to get around the house. Other design proposals include: * Flat roof to collect rainwater, with
cistern A cistern (Middle English ', from Latin ', from ', "box", from Greek ', "basket") is a waterproof receptacle for holding liquids, usually water. Cisterns are often built to catch and store rainwater. Cisterns are distinguished from wells by t ...
s built-in to collect and distribute the water. * Rainwater filtering, using filter beds made up of alternating layers of sand and
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. * Central heating by distributing hot air from a
furnace A furnace is a structure in which heat is produced with the help of combustion. Furnace may also refer to: Appliances Buildings * Furnace (central heating): a furnace , or a heater or boiler , used to generate heat for buildings * Boiler, used t ...
in the
basement A basement or cellar is one or more floors of a building that are completely or partly below the ground floor. It generally is used as a utility space for a building, where such items as the furnace, water heater, breaker panel or fuse box, ...
. * Flues, air ducts and speaking tubes built into the thickness of walls. Built examples vary greatly in how much of this influence is apparent. Although built in brick, the Watertown house featured in this article is an almost perfect embodiment of many of Fowler's ideas.


Masswall construction

Stacked board construction American historic carpentry is the historic methods with which wooden buildings were built in what is now the United States since European settlement. A number of methods were used to form the wooden walls and the types of ''structural carpentry' ...
was recommended in the first edition of ''A Home for All'' but the third edition of Fowler's book, printed in 1853, had a new subtitle: ''A Home For All, or The Gravel Wall and Octagon Mode of Building'', and was distinguished by Fowler's enthusiasm for concrete construction. He appears to be unaware that concrete has been in use since the Romans, attributing the discovery to a Mr. Goodrich of Janesville, Wisconsin, and crediting himself with developing and popularizing the technique. Fowler knew gravel and lime were available in unlimited quantities in the prairies and saw the "gravel wall" as offering a new, cheap and durable way of building. His house at Fishkill was built in concrete. The walls were built up a few feet at a time, by pouring a mixture of gravel and lime into timber shuttering. As the concrete cured, the shuttering could be taken down and moved up to the next level. Modern concrete is made using Portland cement, not lime, but the main difference is the universal use of steel reinforcing bars, which greatly increase the strength of the material, and make it possible to build concrete beams and floor slabs as well as walls. Fowler used large stones to reinforce corners, but he used no other reinforcement, and was therefore restricted to walls. The roof, floors and verandas are all of timber construction.


Fowler's Folly

To quote Fowler "...those studies which have eventuated in this work were instituted primarily in order to erect this very house". Construction began in 1848, the same year his book was first published, and took five years to complete. The house was large, to each side of the octagon or across, and built on a hilltop overlooking the Hudson River, where it could be seen for miles around. Fowler removed the top of the hill to create a level site and to provide material for his "gravel walls". This grand residence had four huge reception rooms which could be interconnected depending on the size of event, allegedly 60 rooms (counting small dressing rooms as well as proper rooms) and a glazed cupola rising to above ground. Fowler's favorite writing room was an internal room on the third floor, lit only from the cupola via a
fanlight A fanlight is a form of lunette window, often semicircular or semi-elliptical in shape, with glazing bars or tracery sets radiating out like an open fan. It is placed over another window or a doorway, and is sometimes hinged to a transom. Th ...
over the door. The house had no central staircase, so visitors entered one of the main rooms through a small lobby, while family and staff used the basement entrance. There are verandas all round the house at first-, second- and third-floor levels, linked by two outside stairs. The financial panic of 1857 led Fowler to rent out the house, which subsequently went through a series of owners. Fowler's Folly fell into disrepair, and finally - condemned as a public hazard - it was dynamited in 1897 by Fred C. Haight, demolition engineer for the city of Fishkill.


Surviving examples

Estimates vary but hundreds of these Victorian-era homes are still standing across the United States and Canada. One estimate puts the number at 2,077. Even in their heyday, octagon houses were never mainstream. The largest remaining octagon homes in the United States are Longwood in
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and the Octagon House in Watertown, Wisconsin. Both homes are open to the public. In Eastern Washington state one still sits where it was moved to in 1993 to Bridgeport, near the Columbia River. Fowler was influential, but not the only proponent of octagonal houses and other structures. There are also octagonal barns, schoolhouses, churches, and in Canada, octagonal " dead houses".


Design and variations

Within the central idea of the octagonal plan, these houses show a wide variety of both construction and outward form. They range from the modest two-storey Bevis-Tucker House, to the grandiose Armour-Stiner House (both are illustrated below). A full octagon house has eight equal sides, although slight variations in length are not unusual. In some cases the basic octagon is partially obscured by additions, either all round as at the Zelotes Holmes House, or by adding a functional wing out of sight at the rear. The
House of the Seven Gables The House of the Seven Gables (also known as the Turner House or Turner-Ingersoll Mansion) is a 1668 colonial mansion in Salem, Massachusetts, named for its gables. It was made famous by Nathaniel Hawthorne's 1851 novel ''The House of the Seven ...
in
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has gables on seven sides while the eighth side is extended to the rear. The
Richard Peacon House The Richard Peacon House, also known as the Octagon House, is an historic octagonal house located at 712 Eaton Street (formerly 2nd Avenue) in the Old Town district of Key West, Florida. It was built around 1885 for Richard Peacon (1840-1914), w ...
in
Key West, Florida Key West ( es, Cayo Hueso) is an island in the Straits of Florida, within the U.S. state of Florida. Together with all or parts of the separate islands of Sigsbee Park, Dredgers Key, Fleming Key, Sunset Key, and the northern part of Stock Isla ...
, appears to be a full octagon from the street but the rear portion is squared off. Fowler advocated the use of "gravel wall" construction for the walls. This was an experimental technique at the time, and although some were built that way, most octagon houses were built the same way as ordinary houses, of timber frame, brick or stone.


Planned community

A moral community headed by
Henry S. Clubb Henry Stephen Clubb (June 21, 1827 – October 29, 1921) was a British-American Swedenborgian, abolitionist, chartist, journalist and author, who was state senator for Michigan and founder and first President of the Vegetarian Society of Amer ...
tried to establish
Octagon City Octagon City is a ghost town in Allen County, Kansas, United States. It was a failed intentional community that was founded in 1856 about six miles (10 km) south of Humboldt, Kansas near the Neosho River. It was created by the Vegetarian ...
in 1856 in Kansas. It was intended to have an octagonal square with eight roads and octagonal farmhouses and barns. Most settlers had left after the winter.


Examples of octagon houses

The following are examples of the 'true' octagon houses and the range of design variations to be found. File:Bevis Tucker House-076750pv.jpg, Modest timber frame house with a flat roof. Bevis Tucker House,
Chelsea, Massachusetts Chelsea is a city in Suffolk County, Massachusetts, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, United States, directly across the Mystic River from the city of Boston. As of the 2020 census, Chelsea had a population of 40,787. With a total area of just 2.46 s ...
. File:Akron octagon house.jpg, Large timber frame house, pitched roof and lantern, veranda all round. Arched windows and window shutters add to the decorative effect. The
Rich-Twinn Octagon House The Rich-Twinn Octagon House built in 1849 is an historic octagonal house located at 145 Main Street in Akron, New York. It is one of three known octagon houses in Erie County, New York and was "meticulously restored" prior to its 1994 nomina ...
in Akron, New York. File:Estabrook Octagon House, Hoosick Falls, NY.jpg, Stucco Estabrook Octagon House,
Hoosick Falls, New York Hoosick Falls is a village in Rensselaer County, New York, United States. The population was 3,501 at the 2010 census. During its peak, in 1900, the village had a population of approximately 7,000. The village of Hoosick Falls is near the center ...
(built 1853-1854) File:Octagon House (Barrington, IL) 01.JPG, Modest sized but decorative timber frame house, seen here painted in 'heritage' colors which may reflect the original color scheme. Octagon House,
Barrington, Illinois Barrington is a village in Cook County and Lake County, Illinois, United States. The population was 10,722 at the 2020 census. A northwest suburb of Chicago, the area features wetlands, forest preserves, parks, and horse trails in a country-s ...
(built 1860). File:OctagonHouse-Sparland.jpg, Plain brick house with no decorative features except a modest front veranda.
Robert Waugh House The Robert Waugh House, also known as the Sparland Octagonal House, is located in the Marshall County, Illinois, Marshall County village of Sparland, Illinois, on a steep hillside overlooking the Illinois River. The house has been listed on the N ...
, Sparland, Illinois (built in 1886). File:WilcoxOctagonHouse 2008-06-19 cropped sm030.jpg, Perfectly octagonal brick house with veranda, pitched roof and lantern.
Wilcox Octagon House __NOTOC__ The Wilcox Octagon House is a historic home in Camillus, New York, USA, that was built in 1856 and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983. It was the farmhouse home of Isaiah Wilcox, who had a farm. It is an oct ...
, Camillus, New York (built 1856). File:MMCritesOctagonHouse2003.jpg, Brick house with, unusually, the timber frame second floor built into the roof structure.
Gregg-Crites Octagon House The Gregg-Crites house, also known as the M. M. Crites house, is an octagon house located in Circleville, Ohio, on Route 23 just south of town. It was built by George Gregg between 1855 and 1856 and now owned by The Roundtown Conservancy. It ...
in Circleville, Ohio (built 1855–56). File:Feusier Octagon House (San Francisco).JPG, A similar arrangement of masonry ground floor and timber frame second floor, but built in a decorative style typical of San Francisco. Feusier Octagon House, San Francisco, California (built 1857). File:West 2nd Homes-Norrish.jpg, Severely plain house, limestone walls finished with cement render. Features are typical of Fowler's influence: all-round veranda, flat roof and central lantern.
Norrish House The Claflin-Norrish House is a historic octagonal house located in Hastings, Minnesota, United States; a contributing property to the West Second Street Residential Historic District. The two-story home was built of limestone covered with stucc ...
,
Hastings, Minnesota Hastings is a city mostly in Dakota County, Minnesota, of which it is the county seat, with a portion in Washington County, Minnesota. It is near the confluence of the Mississippi River, Mississippi, Vermillion, and St. Croix River (Wisconsin-M ...
(built between 1857 and 1858). File:Wallingford Octagon House.JPG, An even plainer house, although well-proportioned, with no veranda, just a front porch. Octagon house, Wallingford, Connecticut (built 1850s). File:McElroy Octagon House (San Francisco).jpg, Concrete house – Fowler's "gravel wall" construction – with cement render scored to look like masonry.
McElroy Octagon House The McElroy Octagon House, also known as the Colonial Dames Octagon House, is a historic octagonal house now located at 2645 Gough Street at Union Street in the Cow Hollow neighborhood of San Francisco, California. It is listed as a San Franc ...
, San Francisco, California (built 1861). File:Zelotes Holmes House, 619 East Main Street, Laurens (Laurens County, South Carolina).jpg, Another example of concrete construction. A variation on the pure octagon plan, with square wings extending on four sides. Zelotes Holmes House, Laurens, South Carolina (built 1859). File:Armour-Stiner House.jpg, Large ornate house, with a level of decoration more usually associated with public buildings. Originally more modest in conception, the house was built in 1860 and the dome was added during 1872–1876.
Armour–Stiner House The Armour–Stiner House is an octagon-shaped and domed Victorian-style house located at 45 West Clinton Avenue in Irvington, in Westchester County, New York. It was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1976. and   It is the only kn ...
,
Irvington, New York Irvington, sometimes known as Irvington-on-Hudson,Staff (ndg"The Irvington Gazette (Irvington-On-Hudson, N.Y.) 1907-1969"Library of Congress is a suburban village in the town of Greenburgh in Westchester County, New York, United States. It is loca ...
.


Case study: Watertown Octagon House, Wisconsin

Although one of the largest, the Watertown house is midway between the grandest and most modest surviving examples. It is well documented, has been carefully restored, and is open to the public as a museum.


History

Construction was completed 1854. The house fell into disuse and was taken over by the newly founded
Watertown Historical Society The Watertown Historical Society is a nonprofit organization dedicated to preserving the social, commercial and cultural heritage of Watertown, Connecticut, and the surrounding Litchfield County, Connecticut Litchfield County is in northwester ...
, and opened to the public in 1938. It is still owned by the Society.


Construction and innovations

* The plan is a octagon, with a veranda all round at first- and second-floor levels. * The house is built on stone foundations, with external walls of brickwork thick. * The central square is made up of two leaves of brickwork with a cavity, which is used for chimney flues and warm air ducting, to heat rooms without fireplaces. The double wall eliminates the need for projecting
chimney breasts A chimney breast is a portion of a chimney which projects forward from a wall to accommodate a fireplace. Typically on the ground floor of a structure, the masonry extends upwards, containing a flue which carries smoke out of the building through a ...
. * The battlement effect at the top of the cupola is actually the four chimneys. * A furnace in the basement heats water, and warm air is ducted into the twelve main rooms, i.e. those adjoining the central square. * An elegant spiral staircase links all the floors. It is self-supporting on the inside and built into the walls on the outside of the stairwell. There is also a servants' staircase. * The house has a flat roof, sloping gently towards the center. * Rainwater from the roof was collected in a reservoir at third-floor level, and overflows into a cistern next to the kitchen in the basement. * Publications regularly state the house has 57 rooms; however this includes every closet and passage. The number of habitable rooms is 29, including the octagonal room in the cupola. * Despite having 15 bedrooms there is just a single bathroom.


Architectural style

The house was inspired by Fowler's book, and is a good example of his theories put into practice. Features which are directly linked to his ideas, apart from the octagonal plan, are the central spiral staircase, symmetrical arrangement of rooms with interconnecting doors, the verandas running all round the building, and the flat roof surmounted by a cupola. In accordance with Fowler's theories, the detailing is relatively plain for the period. Openings are simply framed by moldings. The covered verandas lack excess detail, having modest turned
balustrade A baluster is an upright support, often a vertical moulded shaft, square, or lathe-turned form found in stairways, parapets, and other architectural features. In furniture construction it is known as a spindle. Common materials used in its con ...
spindles and supporting posts. The decorative effect of the house comes from the basic design features: the octagonal shape and the external verandas. There are four generously sized rooms on each floor, nearly 18 foot square, with connecting doors all round. The subsidiary rooms are less satisfactory, being triangular. The arrangement of rooms is rigidly the same on all floors because the partition walls are of brickwork, so they must stack one above the other. The central spiral stair is compact, but leaves one side of the house without direct access to the landings, so there are bedrooms only accessible through another bedroom - in the worst case, through two other bedrooms. The drawbacks of this arrangement are again a legacy of Fowler's influence, an unwillingness to sacrifice spaciousness in the rooms to sensible circulation arrangements. Fowler's own house had external staircases and the verandas were used for circulation and access to the rooms.


Record drawings

Below are drawings of the Watertown Octagon House dated March 28, 1935, prepared by the Historic American Buildings Survey. At that time the verandas were missing, removed when they became dangerously rotten. The survey drawings are a reconstruction of the house as it was originally built. Image:Watertown Octagon House-plans.png, Ground floor (basement) and first floor plans. Image:Watertown Octagon House-upper plans.png, Second and third floor plans. Image:Watertown Octagon House-elevation.png, Front elevation. Image:Watertown Octagon House-details.png, Exterior details: front door and windows. Image:Watertown Octagon House-details2.png, Interior details: the main spiral staircase, door casings and base boards. Image:Watertown Octagon House-240085v.jpg, Photograph, possibly as early as 1856, showing the house in its original state.


See also

*
List of octagon houses This is a list of octagon houses. The style became popular in the United States and Canada following the publication of Orson Squire Fowler's 1848 book ''The Octagon House, A Home for All''. In the United States, 68 surviving octagon houses ar ...
* List of octagonal buildings and structures


References


Further reading

* Baker, John Milnes. ''American House Styles: A Concise Guide.'' NY: W. W. Norton & Company, 2002. * Puerzer, Ellen L. ''The Octagon House Inventory.'' Eight-Square Publishing, 2011. * Rempel, John I.''Building with Wood''. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1967. * Schmidt, Carl F. ''The Octagon Fad.'' 1958. * Schmidt, Carl F. and Philip Parr. ''More About Octagons.'' 1978. * Goncalves, Eliseu. ''The Octagon in the Houses of Orson Fowler.'' Nexus Journal, vol 13, nº 2. Basel: Springer/ Birkhauser, 2011. * Fowler, Orson S. with a new Introduction by Madeleine B. Stern. "The Octagon House: A Home For All" Dover Publications, 1973.


External links

{{commons category, Octagon houses
Northeast Journal: Fowler's Folly, Fishkill, NYOctagon House Inventory, by Robert Kline, a retired engineer living in Grand Rapids, MIOldhouseweb: Octagon House: 1850-1860The Octagon in the Houses of Orson Fowler
House styles American architectural styles Architecture related to utopias