5 For pent roofs, see Brunskill, Vernacular Architecture of the Lake Counties, 83; John and Jane Penoyre, Houses in the Landscape: A Regional Study of Vernacular Architecture (London, 1968), 139; K. R. Adey, “Seventeenth Century Stafford,” MH II (1974), 161. Also widespread from northern Staffordshire to Westmorland was the hooded roof; see, e.g., Some Westmorland Wills, 1686-1738 (Kendal, 1928), 5.
6 Penoyre and Penoyre, Houses in the Landscape, 139.
7 Many examples of these three-celled Quaker houses from Lancashire, the West Riding of Yorkshire, Cheshire and Derbyshire appear in Eric Mercer, English Vernacular Houses (London, 1975), 185, 220, 224, 227, 142, 146-47; for the Quaker plan in the Delaware, see Noble, Wood, Brick and Stone, I, 45; Henry Glassie, Pattern in the Material Folk Culture of the Eastern United States (Philadelphia, 1969), 56; Patricia Irvin Cooper, “A Quaker-Plan House in Georgia,” Pioneer America 10 (1978), 14-34; “Postscript to a Quaker-Plan House in Georgia,” Pioneer America 11 (1979), 143-50; Thomas T. Waterman, The Dwellings of Colonial America (Chapel Hill, 1950).
8 Brunskill, Vernacular Architecture of the Lake Counties, 53; Eleanor Raymond, Early Domestic Architecture of Pennsylvania (Exton, Pa., 1977).