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・ Michael Sadowsky
・ Michael Sagmeister
・ Michael Sahl Hansen
・ Michael Sak
・ Michael Saks
・ Michael Saks (mathematician)
・ Michael Salafia
・ Michael Salazar
・ Michael Salcman
・ Michael Salgado
・ Michael Salinger
・ Michael Salomon
・ Michael Salter
・ Michael Salu
・ Michael Salvatori
Michael Salyer Stone House
・ Michael Salzhauer
・ Michael Sam
・ Michael Sampson
・ Michael Sams
・ Michael Samson-Oje
・ Michael Samuel
・ Michael Samuels
・ Michael Samuels (academic)
・ Michael Samuels (director)
・ Michael San Nicolas
・ Michael Sanchez
・ Michael Sandberg, Baron Sandberg
・ Michael Sanderling
・ Michael Sandle


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Michael Salyer Stone House : ウィキペディア英語版
Michael Salyer Stone House

The Michael Salyer Stone House is located on Blue Hill Road (Rockland County Route 23) in Orangetown, New York, United States. It was built in the late 18th century.
Unusually for Rockland County, its gambrel roof has clapboard siding in the upper gable apexes, a feature normally found farther north, in Colonial stone houses in Ulster County. It is possible that this may be due to Huguenot influence.〔 In 2002, it and its well were listed on the National Register of Historic Places.〔 Today it serves as a local historical museum.
==Buildings and grounds==

The house is on the west side of Blue Hill, south of its intersection with Sickletown and Convent roads, east of the village of Pearl River. It occupies an lot overlooking Lake Tappan, a reservoir on the Hackensack River shared by New York and New Jersey, across the road. To the west and south is the Blue Hills Country Club golf course, buffered by woods. The land along Blue Hill to the north is also wooded, ending at some other residences along Sickletown.〔
From the west bound the land slopes down sharply, then gently, to the lake at the east. The house is on a small cleared section at the roadside with a lawn. A driveway to the south becomes a circular parking area. To the northwest is the old well and a frame shed.〔
The house itself is a one-and-a-half-story five-by-two-bay structure of rough-cut rectangular sandstone units on a rubblestone foundation. A small one-story frame kitchen wing projects from the north end of the west (rear) elevation. The centrally located main entrance on the east has a small stone porch with wooden benches backed by simple square balustrades on either side. Two bulkhead doors on the north and south corners of that elevation provide exterior access to the basement.〔
The slate-shingled gambrel roof is pierced by brick chimneys at the ends and three shed dormer windows on either elevation. Its wide overhanging eaves on the east and west elevations flare outwards; on the north and south it is flush. Clapboard is used in the gable apexes.〔
On the east (front) facade the blocks are laid in a Flemish bond pattern. The two windows flanking the main entrance have paneled wooden shutters; all and the doorway are topped with splayed brick lintels. On the sides the stonework reverts to a more random pattern. The north has two windows on either story; the south one on the first floor, with shutters, and two on top.〔
The main entrance is a recessed paneled wooden door with a radiating-muntin rectangular transom on top. It opens into a central hall that runs the depth of the house to the rear entrance, a heavy planked Dutch door with top light. Many original finishings remain, such as wall plaster, wide-plank flooring, moldings and architraves.〔
On the north is a parlor, the largest room in the house, covering the full depth of the building. It has a fireplace with Federal style mantel and built-in cupboard. The south parlor has a similar fireplace, and the room to the west is now the bathroom.〔
Stairs lead from the north parlor to the second floor, which also has a central hall. Its western end was converted into another bathroom. There are two bedrooms on either side of the hall.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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