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The Saltbox
a New England Original
Salt was a valuable commodity in Colonial America. To prevent
it from caking, colonists kept salt in a wooden box with a
slanted, hinged lid and hung it by the fireplace.
The saltbox-style house represents an architectural form that
originated in Colonial New England. It earned its name because
of its resemblance to the saltboxes colonists hung by their
fireplaces. This particular architectural style was born out
of the need to expand a house to accommodate a growing family.
Colonists found a simple way to expand a rectangular 1-1/2-
or two-story house: build a single-story addition across the
rear. The resulting extended rear slope of the gable roof
is a defining feature of a saltbox.
Our nation’s second president, John Adams, was born
and reared in a saltbox in Quincy. The house was built in
1650 and modified in 1720. Now part of Adams National Historical
Park, the house is open to the public for tours. Local examples
of early saltboxes include the Hoxie House (c. 1675) in Sandwich,
the Jethro Coffin House (c. 1686) on Nantucket and the Josiah
Dennis Manse (c. 1736) in Dennis. All are museums, and all
are open to the public for tours.
In architectural terms, saltboxes are frame houses having
two stories in front and one in back and a pitched roof with
unequal sides—short and high in the front and long and
low in the rear. The front of the house is flat, and the rear
roofline is steeply sloped. The saltbox of the 17th century
was built around a large central chimney with a massive fireplace
used for heating and cooking. The exterior siding usually
consisted of unpainted clapboard, while the roof consisted
of hand-split wooden shingles. Saltboxes today are often painted.
Houses in 17th-century New England generally fall into three
design categories, according to Hugh Morrison’s Early
American Architecture: the one-room plan, the two-room plan
and the added lean-to plan. The majority of New England’s
early settlers were hard-working, thrifty, middle-class English
people. Their houses in the colonies imitated the styles they
had become familiar with in their English villages.
The cottages that the Pilgrims built in Plymouth reflect the
one-room plan. Generally, the front door opened into a small
vestibule, known then as a “porch,” with a steep
staircase up against a large chimney. The main room was a
combination living-dining-cooking room, called the “keeping
room” or “hall.” The staircase led to one
large sleeping room upstairs, which was either under sloping
rafters or in a full-fledged second story. Examples of these
one-room cottages can be seen today at Plimoth Plantation
museum.
The two-room plan is simply the one-room plan with a parlor
added on the other side of the chimney and front entry. Upstairs
were two sleeping rooms. This house style is sometimes referred
to as the “I” house.
The added lean-to plan resulted
from an addition to the back of the house, with roof rafters “leaning” from
one-story eaves at the back against the top of the wall
of the main house. The lean-to seldom had the same roof
pitch as the main house. The added space contained the
kitchen and a bedroom.
Either added or original, lean-tos
became common in New England. And because of the short roof
pitch in front and long pitch sweeping close to the ground
in back, these houses became known as saltboxes. They were
favored in New England until about 1830, when Georgian and
Greek Revival styles came into vogue. In the 1800s, the saltbox
became popular in the South, where it is referred to
as a “cat’s slide.”
The saltbox-style house
enjoyed a resurgence in popularity in the mid-20th century
in New England and beyond, when homeowners sought to replicate
Early American architecture. Today saltboxes can be found
in such far-flung locations as California, Oregon and Texas.