Stick style

Stick style

The Stick style was a late-19th-century American architectural style, transitional between the Carpenter Gothic style of the mid-19th century, and the Queen Anne style that it had evolved into by the 1890s. It is named after its use of linear "stickwork" on the outside walls to mimic an exposed half-timbered frame.

Stick Style People (First 18 people) - Page 0

William Sidney Porter House

William Sidney Porter House

Museum in Austin, Texas

Ziller House

Ziller House


William Westerfeld House

William Westerfeld House


Samuel Hoffman Jr. House

Samuel Hoffman Jr. House

Building in Davenport

Chelsea Station

Chelsea Station


Charles G. Curtiss Sr. House

Charles G. Curtiss Sr. House


Ephraim and Emma Woodworth . . .

Ephraim and Emma Woodworth . . .


Henry Hirshfeld House and Cottage

Henry Hirshfeld House and Cottage

Home in Austin, Texas

Ephraim and Emma Woodworth Truesdell House

Ephraim and Emma Woodworth Truesdell House

Place

Edgar Allen Poe House

Edgar Allen Poe House


Vinson House

Vinson House

Rogers, Arkansas

Mt. Airy

Mt. Airy


Neilson House

Neilson House


Lee Hall Depot

Lee Hall Depot


Villa Mira Monte

Villa Mira Monte


Murray Hill Station

Murray Hill Station


Monte Cristo Cottage (Boyhood home of playwright Eugene O'Neill)

Monte Cristo Cottage (Boyhood home of playwright Eugene O'Neill)


Saint Paul AME Coatesville

Saint Paul AME Coatesville

Church in Coatesville, Pennsylvania