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The chief executive also discussed civil defense and foreign trade with officials who flew from Washington to Cape Cod to meet with the president at the family compound. Bettmann - Getty Images 1963
The majority of resources were built from the 1910s to the 1960s and incorporate Queen Anne, Bungalow/American Craftsman, Tudorbethan, Colonial Revival, Cape Cod (house), Ranch-style house, and Commercial building styles of architecture. The earliest houses are scattered along Northern and Central boulevards; 1940 to 1950s Cape Cod and Ranch ...
A Cape Cod artist custom-carved this one-of-a-kind slate apron-front sink to incorporate Chatham, Massachusetts, local icons: a windmill, whale, lighthouse, and the word “riptide.” Get the Look:
The houses, which were in the Cape Cod and ranch house styles, sat on a seventh-acre (0.06 ha) lot. They had 750 square feet (70 m 2) with two bedrooms, a living room with a television and a kitchen with modern appliances, an unfinished second floor and no garage. [9]
The Kennedy Compound consists of three houses on six acres (2.4 hectares) of waterfront property in Hyannis Port, Massachusetts on Cape Cod. [2] [3] It was once the home of Joseph P. Kennedy Sr., an American businessman, investor, and diplomat; his wife, Rose; and their nine children, including U.S. President and Senator John F. Kennedy and U.S. Senators Robert F. Kennedy and Edward M. Kennedy.
Bob Vila -- Cape Cod-Style Architecture and Royal Barry Wills; Retro Renovation -- The Royal Barry Wills Cape Cod; Retro Renovation -- The first home that Royal Barry Wills built for his family, Melrose, Mass., 1920; Retro Renovation -- Images and documentation on the Springfield, Mass. Defense Housing Project designed by Royal Barry Wills.
$5,400,000 (1950) The Aladdin Company was a pioneer in the pre-cut, mail order home industry. ... Bungalow, Four-Square and Cape Cod homes. See also ...
He rejected not only the traditional New England styles of Cape Cod and Martha’s Vineyard, but also the sprawling, grandiose language of the mansions of The Hamptons. At the same time, decisively veering away from the architectural lexicon of 1950s suburbia—with its exterior paint, tidy lawns and fences—Gifford’s designs often had ...