Fred Price Bungalow | |
Location | 125 N. 1st, West, Paris, Idaho |
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Coordinates | 42°13′47″N111°24′12″W / 42.22972°N 111.40333°W |
Area | less than one acre |
Built | 1910 |
Architectural style | Colonial Revival |
MPS | Paris MRA |
NRHP reference No. | 83000272 [1] |
Added to NRHP | April 13, 1983 |
The Fred Price Bungalow, or Fred Price House, at 125 N. 1st West in Paris, Idaho was built in 1910. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983. [1]
It includes aspects of Colonial Revival style. [2]
It is a 1+1⁄2-story gable-fronted house, with a hip-roofed porch crossing its facade. The porch has square corner posts and thinner posts "inset a few feet", and a wrought-iron balustrade. Its lower story is shiplapped; above is a clapboard band and above that is an "apron" covered with fishscale-patterned shingles, and a horizontal wooden siding area with narrow vertical strips. [2]
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The Budge Cottage is a historic house located on Center Street in Paris, Idaho. The cottage was built in the late 1880s as a rental house for the locally prominent Budge family. The one-story cottage has a hall and parlor plan; while this design was quite common during the early settlement of Paris, it had been largely replaced by larger houses by the 1880s. The Budge Cottage is one of the more ornate hall and parlor cottages built in the city; its design features a gabled porch with turned posts and balusters and decorative moldings on the windows and under the eaves.
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The Ezra Allred Cottage was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982. See also Ezra Allred Bungalow.
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The Edward Welch House in Boise, Idaho, is a 2-story Bungalow designed by Tourtellotte & Hummel and constructed in 1912. The house includes a prominent gable above an outset, 2-story bay to the right of a projecting porch. The porch features two square columns rising on either side above a shed roof over the main entry. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in 1982.
The John Parker House in Boise, Idaho, is a 2-story bungalow designed by Tourtellotte & Hummel and constructed in 1911. The house features a sandstone foundation and brick veneer surrounding the first floor, with a half-timber second floor infilled with stucco. An outset front porch is a prominent feature, supporting a gabled roof by two square posts. The hip roof above the second floor includes a single dormer with battered, shingled sides. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.
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The Clara Hill House in Meridian, Idaho, is a 1+1⁄2-story Craftsman Bungalow constructed in 1919–20. The house features an enclosed porch facing North Main Street, with a front facing gabled dormer above and behind the porch. The lateral ridge beam extends beyond left and right dormered gables. First floor exterior walls are clad in weatherboard, and gable walls are covered in wood shingles. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2006.
The E.F. Hunt House in Meridian, Idaho, USA, is a 1½-story Craftsman bungalow designed by Tourtellotte & Hummel and constructed in 1913. The house has an unusual roof design, with a lateral ridgebeam extending beyond left and right gables, hip roofs on either side of a prominent, front facing gable, and a lower hip roof above a cross facade porch. Double notch rafters project from lateral eaves and from cantilevered window bays with shed roofs below the side facing gables. Narrow clapboard siding covers exterior walls. The front porch is supported by square posts with geometric, dropped caps. Tourtellotte & Hummel had used the square post decorations in other Bungalow houses, and a more elaborate example is found on the porch of the William Sidenfaden House (1912) in Boise. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.
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