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Cape Cod (house) : ウィキペディア英語版 | Cape Cod (house) :''This article refers to an architectural style. For other meanings of Cape Cod, see Cape Cod (disambiguation).'' A Cape Cod is a style of house originating in New England in the 17th century. It is a low, broad, frame building, generally a story and a half high, with a moderately steep, pitched roof with end gables, a large central chimney and very little ornamentation. Traditional Cape Cod houses were very simple: symmetrically designed with a central front door surrounded by two multi-paned windows on each side. Homes were designed to withstand the stormy, stark weather of the Cape. Modern Cape Cod architecture still draws from colonial designs. ==History== The Cape Cod style (and in turn its Colonial Revival descendant of the 1930s–50s) originated with the colonists who came from England to New England. They adapted the English Hall and parlor house, using local materials to best protect against New England's notoriously stormy weather. Over the next several generations emerged a 1- to -story house with wooden shutters and clapboard or shingle exterior. The Reverend Timothy Dwight IV (1752–1817), president of Yale University from 1795–1817, coined the term "Cape Cod House" after a visit to the Cape in 1800. His observations were published posthumously in ''Travels in New England and New York'' (1821–22).〔(Timothy Dwight, ''Travels in New England and New York'', William Baynes and Son, London, 1823 )〕
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