Queen Anne style architecture in the United States

The popularity of high Queen Anne style waned in the early 1900s, but some elements continued to be found on buildings into the 1920s, such as the wrap-around front porch (often L-shaped).Gabled and domestically scaled, these early American Queen Anne homes were built of warm, soft brick enclosing square terracotta panels, with an arched side passage leading to an inner court and back house.In the Shingle style, English influence was combined with the renewed interest in Colonial American architecture which followed the 1876 celebration of the United States Centennial.Some architects, in order to attain a weathered look on a new building, even had the cedar shakes dipped in buttermilk, dried, and then installed, to leave a grayish tinge to the façade.[citation needed] McKim, Mead and White and Peabody and Stearns were two of the notable firms of the era that helped to popularize the shingle style, through their large-scale commissions for "seaside cottages" of the rich and the well-to-do in such places as Newport, Rhode Island.
Queen Anne style Frank Wheeler Hotel in Freetown, Indiana
Queen Anne style rowhouses in the Adams Morgan neighborhood of Washington, D.C.
The former House and School of Industry at 120 West 16th Street in New York City
Simon C. Sherwood House (1884), Southport, Connecticut
William G. Harrison House , a Queen Anne cottage
Kragsyde , Manchester-by-the-Sea, Massachusetts (1883, demolished 1929), by Peabody and Stearns
Queen Anne Revival architectureFrank Wheeler HotelVictorian architectural stylesNew World Queen Anne Revival architectureSecond EmpireRichardsonian RomanesqueShingleEastlake movementQueen Anne style architectureEnglish BaroquegentryQueen AnneQueen Anne RevivalGothic RevivalSecond Empire styleBeaux-Arts styleJames Alldis HouseTorrington, ConnecticutrowhousesAdams MorganWashington, D.C.Bembridge HouseLong Beach, CaliforniaasymmetricalcantileveredpolygonalDutch gablespedimentedterra cottareliefdentilsbalustradesNew York CitySouthport, ConnecticutNorman ShawSidney V. StrattonAstral ApartmentsBrooklynE. Francis BaldwinBaltimore and Ohio Railroadterracottaoriel windowCarson MansionEureka, Californialumber baronsEastlakeColonial RevivalPalladian windowsWilliam G. Harrison HouseNashville, GeorgiawainscotingmantelsShingle style architectureShinglehouse, PennsylvaniaKragsydePeabody and StearnsWilliam Berryman ScottA. Page BrownPrinceton, New JerseyPrinceton Historic DistrictEastlake styleColonial American architectureMcKim, Mead and WhiteLow HouseManchester-By-the-Sea, MassachusettsGustav StickleyArts and Crafts MovementNational Park ServiceHistoricismRevivalismArt DecoArt NouveauArts and CraftsBaroque RevivalBeaux-ArtsNeo-ByzantineCarpenter GothicEgyptian RevivalFrench ProvincialGreek RevivalNeo-GrecMayan RevivalMoorish RevivalNeoclassicalNew ClassicalRenaissance RevivalChâteauesqueItalianatePalazzo styleRococo RevivalRomanesque RevivalFrenchEuropeanNorth AmericanSpanish Colonial RevivalSwiss chalet styleVernacularHenry II styleHenry IV styleLouis XIII styleLouis XIV styleLouis XV styleLouis XVI styleNeoclassicismDirectoire styleEmpire styleLouis Philippe styleBelle ÉpoqueBiedermeierGründerzeitJugendstilNazi architectureResort styleRundbogenstilAdamesqueBristol ByzantineEdwardian BaroqueGeorgian RevivalIndo-Saracenic RevivalJacobethanNeo-PalladianRegencyScottish BaronialTudor RevivalBlack-and-white RevivalMycenaean RevivalStile UmbertinoTraditionalist SchoolDragon styleNational Romantic styleGustavian styleNordic ClassicismNeo-ManuelineNeo-MudéjarSoft Portuguese styleZakopane StyleRomanian RevivalNeoclassical RevivalRussian RevivalStalinistSerbo-Byzantine RevivalAmerican RenaissanceCollegiate GothicDutch Colonial RevivalFederal styleGreco DecoJeffersonianMediterranean RevivalMission RevivalPueblo RevivalPolish cathedral styleTerritorial RevivalArchitecture of the United StatesBuildersPuebloColonial and post-colonialCreoleFirst PeriodDutch ColonialFrench ColonialSpanish ColonialTerritorialFederalAntebellumVictorianStick styleStreamline ModerneAmerican CraftsmanAmerican FoursquareCalifornia bungalowChicago SchoolGoogieInternational stylePrairie SchoolPre-warPWA ModerneSarasota School of ArchitectureRusticBlobitectureBrutalistDeconstructivismDingbatEarthshipHigh-techMid-century modernModernNeo-eclecticNeo-futurismNeomodernNew Classical architecturePostmodernShed styleTiny-houseUsonianAdirondackBarabaraCape CodCentral-passage houseChickeeCorn cribCowboy churchCritical regionalismDogtrot houseEarth lodgeHall and parlor houseI-houseLog cabinLonghousesMoki stepsPlank housePlatform moundQuiggly holeRamadaSaltboxShotgun houseSipapuSkyscraperSod houseSweat lodgeTemplesTown squareWigwamAtlantaBostonBuffaloChicagoColumbusDetroitHoustonJacksonvilleKansas CityLas VegasLos AngelesNew OrleansPhiladelphiaPortlandSan AntonioSan FranciscoSeattleSpokaneSt. LouisCaliforniaHawaii