16 For the hall-and-parlor house see Allen G. Noble, Wood, Brick and Stone; The North American Settlement Landscape (2 vols., Amherst, 1984), 48-49; Paul E. Buchanan. “The Eighteenth Century Frame Houses of Tidewater Virginia, in Charles E. Petersson, ed., Building in Early America (Radnor, Pa., 1976), 54-73; Dell Upton, “Toward a Performance Theory of Vernacular Architecture: Early Tidewater Virginia as a Case Study,” Folklore Forum 12 (1979), 170.

17 Durand, A Huguenot Exile in Virginia, 119.

18 Raymond B. Wood-Jones, Traditional Domestic Architecture in the Banbury Region (Manchester, 1963).

19 Specially helpful is the work of Cary Carson: “The ‘Virginia House’ in Maryland,” MDHM 69 (1974), 185-96; “Segregation in Vernacular Buildings,” Vernacular Architecture 7 (1976), 24-29; also Lorena Walsh in MDHM 67 (1972).