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The Arkansas Post Museum includes the Refeld-Hinman home, a log-cabin dogtrot house built in 1877. [8] [9] Around 1820, the Jacob Wolf House in Norfork, was constructed. The two-story dogtrot home of a pioneer leader is the oldest known standing structure in the state.
It was built by William Thompson in 1816 [1] or 1819 [2] and typifies the double-pen dogtrot cabin style. It is built from timbers that were squared by hand using an adze and dovetailed together at the corners of the building. There are two main rooms on either side of an open passageway (the "dogtrot"), each served by a free-standing chimney ...
When he married Emma Toepperwein in February 1857, [3] he built a 1-story stuccoed dog trot double-pen cedar log cabin as their new home. [2] As the family grew, extensions were made to the cabin. [2] The dog trot house was added to the San Antonio project of the Historic American Buildings Survey in 1968. The survey noted that the 2-chimneyed ...
Elijah Oliver Cabin: 1866 Cades Cove Loop Rd./short trail "dog-trot" style cabin with detached kitchen Elijah Oliver stable: c. 1866 Cades Cove Loop Rd./short trail Elijah Oliver corn crib: c. 1866 Cades Cove Loop Rd./short trail Elijah Oliver chicken coop: c. 1866 Cades Cove Loop Rd./short trail Becky Cable House: 1879 Cades Cove Loop Rd.
The cabin is a sod-roofed double-pen or dog-trot style building with a room on either side of the central breezeway or "dog-trot." The form is Appalachian in origin. [7] No nails or metal fastenings were used in the cabin's construction. The cabin was reconstructed in 1956, resetting the wall logs after replacing the sill logs and rebuilding ...
The Bales cabin was a double cabin with a passageway known as a "dog trot" in between. Dog-trot cabins, which are fairly common throughout the southeastern U.S., typically involve two adjacent cabins with roughly 10 feet (3.0 m) in between, but with one continuous roof.
The Jenkins House started as a single-room log cabin and then was enlarged to a two-room log cabin with a "dog-trot" between rooms. A kitchen and dining "ell" was added in subsequent years, and finally, the dog-trot opening was enclosed as a hall, the house sided with clapboard , and a porch running the length of the building added to create ...
The Champ Grubbs House is a historic antebellum dog trot log cabin in rural Drew County, Arkansas. It is located on Ozment Bluff Road (now County Road 141), west of Arkansas Highway 172 and southwest of the county seat of Monticello. The single story log structure is estimated to have been built in 1859, and is one of the few such surviving ...