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Greek Revival
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Greek Revival Style
1835 to 1860

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By Peter Barr

Within a dozen years of the platting of Adrian by Addison J. and Sarah Deane Comstock in 1828, most settlers were tearing down their log cabins and erecting new homes in the Greek Revival style—a style rivaled only by the Italianate, which began to supercede the Greek Revival in Adrian in the 1850s.

The Greek Revival is a uniquely American style derived from the British Free Classic style, which is a blend of Renaissance and ancient Roman forms that were combined most famously in the United States Capital. The Commissioners of the District of Columbia chose the Free Classic style in large part so that the new nation’s public buildings would express, to use their words, “a grandeur of conception, a Republican simplicity, and that true elegance of proportion, which correspond to a tempered freedom excluding Frivolity, the food of little minds.” The same desire for simplicity and high-minded elegance is evident in the Greek Revival style, too.

The Greek Revival is visibly distinct from the Free Classic in that the Free Classic featured domes or rounded arches, while the Greek Revival avoided these curvilinear forms in favor of a more rectilinear style derived from Greek and Roman temples. Most homes in the style resemble ancient temples in that they have rectangular plans, low pitch gable roofs, and a broad plain frieze located just below the cornice. Almost without exception, they were painted white to resemble the principal material found on ancient temples: marble. (Little did they know that ancient temples had been painted with bright colors.) Although the vast majority of Greek Revival homes have no columns or pilasters at all, when they do they assume traditional Greek and Roman forms derived from the Doric, Ionic, Corinthian, or Tuscan orders.

The first Greek Revival home was designed by Ithiel Town in 1825: the Joseph Bowers House in Northampton, Massachusetts—a Roman temple with Ionic columns and transept wings. Less than a decade later, variations on Town’s design began to appear throughout the United States, especially in the new settlements opened up in 1825 by the Erie Canal, including Adrian.

So, if the Greek Revival style incorporates both Greek and Roman features, why is it called “Greek Revival”? Because the style’s name reflects Americans’ fascination with Greek history and culture in the second quarter of the nineteeth century. The so-called “Greek Fever” that swept through America at that time was prompted in large part by the Greek War of Independence, which was fought between 1821 and 1829, freeing the Christian Greeks from almost four hundred years of Muslim domination by the Ottoman Turks. Many Americans, having won their own independence in the Revolutionary War and the War of 1812, not only sympathized with the Greeks but also lent moral and financial support to the Greek revolutionaries. Many also immersed themselves in ancient Greek culture. It is perhaps no coincidence that Sarah Comstock named her first two children after characters in Greek mythology (Leander [b. 1827] and Helen [b. 1830]) and that she renamed her husband’s new settlement Adrian (previously called Logan) to honor the Emperor Hadrian, who was known as the “Greekling”.

Most Greek Revival homes in Adrian are wooden structures constructed without formal plans. Built by a team of laborers under the direction of a “joiner,” the structures were erected around heavy timber frames derived from local groves of trees, trimmed with an adz and cut into large beams and smaller boards at Addison Comstock’s lumber mill, which was built in 1826. Some timbers were recycled from primative log cabins. Because nails were expensive, the beams were held together with mortise-and-tenon joints, a technique that is sometimes referred to as post-and-beam construction.

Early on, all available men would join together to construct new buildings. Later on, specialists were called upon to erect new houses. The village’s first resident carpenter was Addison Comstock’s father-in-law, Isaac Deane, who in 1829 built and ran the Exchange Hotel, which accommodated immigrants until they could build their own homes. Then, in 1841, Charles Croswell, who would become Governor of Michigan in the 1870s, became an apprentice carpenter as a teenager, working for his uncle Daniel Hicks, building some of Adrian's oldest surviving Greek Revival homes.

By today’s standards, early Adrian must have seemed rather monotonous in its aesthetic uniformity. Yet, Greek Revival homes were built in Adrian with a wide variety of plans and details—expressing the era’s desire for social cohesiveness tempered by individuality. Indeed, several variations on the Greek Revival style appear in Adrian. The majority resemble the 1843 Governor Croswell House at 228 North Broad Street. This is a sub-style of the Greek Revival that is rarely found outside of Michigan, Ohio and western New York. In such houses, the short side of its temple-like structure typically faces the street and a low wing is attached to one side, set behind the main façade, providing additional room. Inside the front door, one would most often find a hallway and stair with a kitchen beyond. To one side one would typically find two large rooms: a parlor and a dining room. Bedrooms were placed in a half- or full-story above the parlor and dining room. A small number of Greek Revival homes, such as the Edwards House at 116 North Scott Street, are turned so the long side of the structure faces forward. Fewer still have a square plan and hipped roofs like the Choate House at 232 Dennis Street. Compared to most homes that were built in the second half of the nineteenth century, most are rather modest in size.

The exterior of these homes was typically covered in bevel siding, also known as clapboard or lap siding, in which the bottom, thick edge of one board overlapped the top thin edge of another board. However, compared to other communities, a relatively large number of the Greek Revival homes in Adrian are built of brick—first manufactured here in 1828 by Noah Norton. Certain details, such as glass and hardware for doors and windows, could be quite variable since they were most often imported from craftsmen in the East and trimmed according to designs found in popular Greek Revival carpenter guides and pattern books, which were written in the early 1830s by architects such as Asher Benjamin (first edition 1830) and Minard Lafever (first edition 1833).

The Greek Revival style lost favor after the Civil War, but never entirely disappeared. In the second half of the nineteenth century, the Greek Revival style evolved into what is commonly referred to as a “Michigan Farmhouse,” or a “front gable and wing,” which is a plain L-shaped two story white clapboard home with the main gable facing the street. At the same time a large, two-story, wingless variety of this late-Greek Revival style appeared that was better suited to city lots and often referred to as a “Homestead.” These houses are visually distinct in that the cornice on these later homes has often been simplified. They are also structurally different in that most were built using balloon-frame construction which required wire nails that became inexpensive in the 1850s.

Features to look for:

  • Rectangular plans have low pitched gabled roofs, with the gables along the short end; square plan have hipped roofs.
  • Some have attached wings.
  • Broad, plain white frieze boards under the cornice.
  • The frieze boards are often pierced by frieze windows, which are sometimes referred to as hopper windows or eyebrow windows. These allow for ventilation and light in the upper story.
  • The frieze windows are sometimes decorated with carved scrollwork.
  • Most often the gable is broken; i.e., the frieze is discontinuous along the gabled end.
  • Windows on the first floor are typically six-over-six, double-hung, often with proportions similar to the plan of an ancient temple.
  • They were originally painted white to resemble white marble.
  • Clapboard siding or brick exteriors are typical.
  • Balanced or symmetrical designs.




Governor Croswell House
228 North Broad, c. 1841-43
Click here to connect to a site about Croswell and his home


Holloway House
448 State Street, c. 1844
Click here for an essay about this home by Jill Connaughton


Kimball-Fee House
411 South Main, 1845


Tabor House
146 North Broad Street, c. 1847


Marvin Thompson House

416 North Broad Street
1849
Click here for an essay about this house by Robert Gordon


116 North Scott, 1840s


403 Dennis Street, c. 1850


451 Dennis Street, c. 1850


Chaloner House
113 North Scott Street, 1852


Choate House
232 Dennis Street, 1853
Click here for an essay about this house by Jessica Forrest


Merrick House
458 South Main Street, 1853


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