Dickinson House - 1740
- Building name: Dickinson House
- Designer/Architect: Samuel Dickinson
- Date of construction: 1740
- Location: Kent County, Delaware
- Style: Colonial
- Number of sheets: 5 sheets measuring 24" x 36"
Sheet List
- 2 Sheets of floor plans, 1/4" = 1'-0"
- 2 Sheets of elevations, 1/4" = 1'-0"
- 1 Sheet of sections, 1/4" = 1'-0"
This listing is for prints on 20# bond paper. It is for architectural drawings only. Any photos shown in the description are informational only and not included in this package.
Built in 1740 by Samuel Dickinson, it remained the ancestral home of the Dickinsons for many generations thereafter. John Dickinson, a member of the Continental Congress and author of the celebrated "Farmer Letters" lived and farmed here.
Please visit my other listings for many other drawings I am offering. I have house plans in wide variety of styles including Colonial, Craftsman, and Prairie, as well as plans of architects such as Frank Lloyd Wright, Irving Gill, Purcell & Elmslie and others.
SHIPPING: Your drawings are shipped to you, rolled, not folded, in a Priority Mail tube. This listing includes architectural prints ONLY. Any photos shown in the description are for information only and are NOT included in your purchase. Thanks.
IF YOU ARE PLANNING TO BUILD: These plans are not complete architectural drawings as might be required by your local permitting agency and do not contain all the structural, waterproofing and other details and information necessary for construction. But your local builder or architect should be able to adapt these drawings and add to them as necessary. What they do provide is accurate design information about a REAL Antebellum house, not a pseudo-historic tract house as you will find in the house plan magazines on your supermarket shelf
INTERNATIONAL BUYERS PLEASE NOTE: Orders shipped to addresses outside the USA may be subject to customs duties at their destination. The buyer is responsible for any such duties.
The original drawings from which these dimensionally accurate scans were made are kept at the Historic American Building Survey, in the Library of Congress. (CO007)