A jerkinhead roof may also be called a jerkin head roof a half hipped roof a clipped gable or even a jerkinhead gable.
Roofs in the 1930s.
A 1930s home is probably one of the easiest properties to renovate and add value to.
A lug on the back allowed the tiles to hang on the lathing without nails or pegs.
These granules offered a wider range of col ors that could be combined to create a variegated appearance.
Usonian homes were the invention of famous modern architect frank loyd wright.
Typically the tiles were 14 15 long 6 7 wide with a curved butt.
Slate has long been a regionally prominent roofing material in the northeastern u s.
He first came up with the designs in the late 1930s.
The roof structure is typically ideal for converting the loft due to its height.
Slate roofs of quality j.
Many homeowners chose to modernize their houses by covering existing wood shingled roofs with asphalt shingles.
When the great depression hit the united states the variety in shape decreased but the want for differences in color increased.
Mission revival was a nod to the religious missions in the american.
Jerkinhead roofs are sometimes found on american bungalows and cottages small american houses from the 1920s and 1930s and assorted victorian house styles.
Mission revival also retained a measure of austerity that the more flamboyant spanish revival did not have.
Tiles roofs found in the mid 18th century moravian settlements in pennsylvania closely resembled those found in germany.
Williams slate co c.
The tile surface was usually scored with finger marks to promote drainage.
Wood shingle roofs began to wane in the 1920s in the face of newly developed asphalt shingles and calls for improved fire safety.
The popularity of asphalt roofing skyrocketed in the 20 s due mostly to the national board of fire underwriters push to eliminate wooden roofs.
Slate also became popular in the rest of the u s.
And nearby parts of canada because of the abundance of slate quarries in the area.
Their last flourish came in the late 1920s and 30s with the fad for tudor ish thatch effect roofs created by cleverly steaming and bending the shingles over a rounded frame.
The architectural styles of the 1920s and 1930s by cynthia mulcahy.
Green until the 1930s when manufacturers began using ce ramic granules.
Usonians with their flat roofs and large cantilevered overhangs were an effort to create a more affordable home than wright s earlier prairie style.